288 26 35MB
English Pages 467 Year 1899
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FRANCIS PARKMAN'S WORKS yOLUME FOURTEEN
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The
Conspiracy of Pontiac and
The IndianWar after the
Conquest of Canada BY
FRANCIS PARKMAN IN
TWO
VOLUMES
Volume One
TORONTO GEORGE K MORAXG COMPANY iif
Limited
1899
Entered according to Act of Congress,
in the
year 1870,
By Francis Parkman, I
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
I
Copyright i8gjy i8g8y
By
Little, Brown, and Company.
Copyright, i8g8y
By Grace
P.
Coffin and Katherine All
I
S.
Coolidge.
rights reserved.
I
S!3ntbcrsttp IDress:
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A.
TO
JAItED SPARKS,
LL.D.,
iprrsiDtnt ot Hjarbarti tHnifarrBftg,
THESE VOLUMES ARE DEDICATED AS A TESTIMONIAL OP
HIGH PERSONAL REGARD,
AND A TRIBUTE OP RESPECT POR HIS DISTINGUISHED SERVICES TO
AMERICAN HISTORY.
'
!
i
PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION.
I
CHOSE the subject of
book as affording
this
better opportunities than any other portion of
American history for portray mg the Indian character
;
and
I
and
have never seen In the nineteen
reason to change this opinion. years that have passed since the published, a considerable
forest life
first
amount
edition
was
of additional
come to light. This has been carefully collected, and is incorporated in the present edition. The most interesting portion of this new material has been supplied by the Bouquet and Haldimand Papers, added some years ago material has
to
the
manuscript collections of
Museum. letters
some
Among them
from
officers
official,
are
the
several
British
hundred
engaged in the Pontiac war,
others
personal and familiar, af-
fording very curious illustrations of the events of the
day and of the characters of those engaged
PREFACE TO THE SIXTH EDITION.
Vlll
Among
in them. light,
some are
the facts which they bring to
sufficiently startling
;
as, for ex-
ample, the proposal of the Commander-in-Chief to infect the hostile tribes with the small-pox, '^'
and that
of a distinguished subordinate
to take revenge
an unrestricted
officer
on the Indians by permitting sale of
The two volumes
rum.
of the present edition
have
been made uniform with those of the series " France and England in North America." I
hope to continue that
series to the period of the
extinction of French
power on
this continent.
" The Conspiracy of Pontiac " will then form a sequel
;
and
its
introductory chapters will be,
in a certain sense, a