The
Kingdom of
Great Britain
was one of the leading participants
in the Seven Years
War which lasted between 1754 and 1763. Britain
emerged from the war as the world's leading
colonial power having gained a number of new
territories at the
Treaty of
Paris in 1763 and established itself as the pre-eminent
naval power at sea.
The war
started poorly for Britain, suffering several defeats to France in North
America during 1754-55 and losing Minorca
in
1756. The same year Britain's major ally Austria
switched
sides and aligned itself with France
and Britain
was hastily forced to conclude a new alliance with Frederick the Great's Prussia. For the next seven years these two
nations were ranged against a growing number of enemy powers led by
France. After a period of political instability, the rise of
a government headed by the
Duke of Newcastle and
William Pitt provided Britain
with firmer leadership allowing it to consolidate and achieve its
war aims.
In 1759
Britain enjoyed an Annus
Mirabilis with success over the French
in Canada, America,
Germany and India. In 1761 Britain also came into conflict
with Spain.
The following year they captured Havana
and Manila
, the western
and eastern capitals of the Spanish
Empire and repulsed a Spanish invasion of
Portugal. By this time the Pitt-Newcastle Ministry had
collapsed, Britain was short of
credit and the generous peace terms offered
by France and its allies were accepted.
Through the crown, Britain was allied to the
Electorate of Hanover and
Kingdom of Ireland who both effectively
fell under British military command throughout the war. It also
directed the military strategy of its various colonies around the
world including
British America.
In
India
British possessions were administered by the
East India
Company.
Background
The last major conflict in Europe the
War of the Austrian
Succession had ended in 1748 with the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle,
following a bloody war which had left large parts of
Central Europe devastated. The peace terms
were unpopular with many, however, as they largely retained the
status quo - which led the people of
states such as France, Britain and Austria to believe they had not
made sufficient gains for their efforts in the war. By the early
1750s many saw another major war as imminent, and Austria was
preparing its forces for an attempt to retake
Silesia from
Prussia.
The British Prime Minister, the
Duke
of Newcastle, had acceded to the Premiership in 1754 following
the sudden death of his brother
Henry
Pelham and led a government made up largely of
Whigs. Newcastle had thirty years experience as a
Secretary of
State and was a leading figure on the diplomatic scene.
Despite
enjoying a comfortable majority in the House of
Commons
he was extremely cautious and vulnerable to attacks
led by men such as William Pitt, leader of
the Patriot Party. Newcastle
fervently believed that peace in Europe was possible so long as the
old system and the
alliance with Austria prevailed and
devoted much of his efforts to the continuance of this.
One of the major concerns for the British government of the era was
colonial expansion. During the eighteenth century the British
colonies in North America had become
more populous and powerful - and were agitating to expand westwards
into the American interior. The territory most prized by the new
settlers was the
Ohio Country, which
was also claimed by France. As well as having economic potential,
it was considered strategically key. French control of that
territory would block British expansion westwards and eventually
French territory would surround the British colonies, pinning them
against the coast. A number of colonial delegations to London urged
the government to take more decisive action in the Ohio
dispute.
War in North America
Initial skirmishes (1754-55)
The
Ohio country located between
Britain’s
Thirteen Colonies and
France's
New France saw France and
Britain clash.
In 1753 the French sent an expedition south
from Montreal
that began
constructing forts in the upper reaches of the Ohio River. In 1754 the Province of Virginia sent the Virgina Regiment led by George Washington to the area to assist in
the construction of a British fort at present-day Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
, but the larger French force had driven away a
smaller British advance team and built Fort Duquesne
. Washington and some native allies ambushed a
company of French scouts at the Battle of
Jumonville Glen
in late May 1754. In the skirmish the French
envoy
Joseph
Coulon de Villiers de Jumonville was left dead, leading to a
diplomatic incident.
The
French responded in force from Fort Duquesne, and in July
Washington was forced to surrender at the Battle of
Fort Necessity
. Despite the conflict between them, the two
nations were not yet formally at war.
Braddock Expedition (1755)
The government in London, realising that the existing forces of
America were insufficient, drew up a plan to despatch two
battalions of
Irish regular
troops under General
Edward Braddock
and intended to massively increase the number of Provincial
American forces.
A number of expeditions were planned to give
the British the upper hand in North America including a plan for
New
England
troops to capture Nova Scotia
. The largest operation was a plan for
Braddock to dislodge the French from the
Ohio Country.
In May
1755 Braddock's column blundered into an enemy force composed of
French and Native Americans at the Battle of
the Monongahela
near Fort Duquesne
. After several hours fighting the British
were defeated and forced to retreat with Braddock dying shortly
afterwards of his wounds. The remainder of his force returned to
Philadelphia and took up quarters intending no further action that
year.
The
French remained in control of the Ohio
Country, although the expedition to remove the French from
Nova
Scotia
was successful. In the
Great Expulsion that followed 12,000
French-speakers were forced to emigrate.
When news of the Braddock disaster reached Britain it caused a
massive wave of public outcry over the government's poor military
preparation. The government appointed
William Shirley as the new
Commander-in-Chief in North America, and planned an even greater
series of operations for the following year.
Further struggles in North America (1756-58)

Map showing the 1750 possessions of
Britain (pink), France (blue), and Spain (orange) in North
America.
Britain and France continued to clash with increasingly large
forces. Despite the inhabitants of the British colonies hugely
outnumbering those of
New France - they
were unable to exert this advantage partly due to a successful
campaign by the French to recruit
Native American allies
who raided the unprotected frontier of the
Thirteen Colonies. The British raised
regiments of local
Provincial
troops, and shipped in more regular forces from Britain and
Ireland.
Despite
these increased forces Britain continued to fare badly in the
battle for control of the Ohio Country and the nearby Great Lakes
. After losing the Battle of Oswego
they were forced to retreat and abandon their fort
there. This was followed by the fall of Fort William
Henry
and the massacre that followed. News of this
disaster sent a fresh wave of panic around the British colonies,
and the entire militia of New England was mobilised overnight -
deterring the French from pushing home their advantage from
pressing southwards. A British
attempt to take Louisbourg in
1757 failed due to bad weather and poor planning. By this point
the war in North America had reached a stalemate, with France
broadly holding the advantage - as it held possession of the
disputed
Ohio territory but lacked
the strength to launch an attack on the more populous British
coastal colonies.
One of the most significant geopolitical actions of the time was
the slow movement towards Imperial unity in North America started
by the
Albany Congress, although a
Plan of Union proposed by
Benjamin Franklin was rejected by
delegates.
War in Europe (1756-59)
Stately Quadrille
Britain had been allied to Austria since 1731, and the co-operation
between the two states had peaked during the
War of the Austrian
Succession when
Maria
Theresa had been able to retain her throne with British
assistance. Since then the relationship had weakened - as Austria
was dissatisfied with the terms negotiated by Britain for them at
the
Treaty of
Aix-la-Chapelle. Prussia had captured
Silesia from Austria during the war and Austria
wanted British help to recover it. Sensing that it would not be
forthcoming, the Austrians approached their historical enemies
France and made a defensive treaty with them - thereby dissolving
the twenty five year
Anglo-Austrian Alliance.
Alarmed by the sudden switch in the
European Balance of Power the
British made a similar agreement with
Prussia at the
Westminster Convention. By doing this
Newcastle hoped to rebalance the two sides in Central Europe - and
thereby make a war potentially mutually destructive to all. This he
hoped would stop either Austria or Prussia making an attack on the
other and would prevent an all-out war in Europe. This would allow
Britain and France to continue their colonial skirmishes without
formal war being declared in Europe.
Frederick the Great had a number of
supporters in London, including
William Pitt who welcomed the
rapprochement between Britain and Prussia. The
Dutch Republic, a long-standing ally of
Britain, declared their neutrality in the wake of the Westminster
Convention and had no active participation in the coming
conflict.
Fall of Minorca
As the
war in Europe appeared to become more inevitable, the Newcastle
government took steps to try and reclaim the initiative - and make
sure that the strategic island of Minorca
was secured
before it fell into French hands. A relief expedition was
despatched under Admiral
John Byng to save
it. However, once he arrived in the Mediterranean Byng found an
equally-sized French fleet and an 15,000-strong army
besieging the fortress.
After fighting an
indecisive battle he withdrew to
Gibraltar
, and Minorca subsequently fell. Formal war
was finally declared in May 1756, nearly two years after the two
countries had first clashed in Ohio.
Byng was recalled to Britain and
court-martialled. There was violent public
outrage about the loss of Minorca, mostly directed against
Newcastle. He tried to deflect the blame by emphasising the alleged
cowardice of Byng. After being tried by his peers, the Admiral was
eventually executed by firing squad for “not doing his utmost“. By
that time Newcastle and his government had fallen. It was replaced
by a
weaker administration
headed by the
Duke of Devonshire
and dominated by
William
Pitt.
Prussian Alliance
The major
war in continental Europe that the British had hoped to avoid
exploded in August 1756 when Frederick the Great attacked and overran
the Austrian ally Saxony
.
Having occupied it he then launched a similarly bold invasion of
Bohemia. In both cases the Prussians caught
their Austrian enemies by surprise, and had used this advantage to
full effect, capturing major objectives before Austrian troops had
been fully
mobilised.
Having besieged Prague, an Austrian counter-attack
and a defeat at the Battle of Kolin
forced the Prussians back.
Britain found itself bound by the Westminster Convention and
entered the war on the Prussian side. Newcastle was deeply
reluctant to do this, but he saw that a Prussian collapse would be
disastrous to British and Hanoverian interests. The
Anglo-Prussian Alliance was
established, which saw large amounts of subsidy given to Prussia.
Some supporters of
George II were strong
advocates of support for Prussia, as they saw it would be
impossible to defend his realm of Hanover if they were to be
defeated. Despite his initial dislike of Frederick, the King later
moved towards this viewpoint.
British intervention on the Continent
Within a
short time Prussia was being attacked on four fronts, by Austria
from the
south, France
from the
west, Russia
from the
east and Sweden
from the north. Frederick fought defensive
actions trying to blunt the invaders, losing thousands of men and
precious resources in the process. He began to send more urgent
appeals to London for material help on the continent.
When the war with France had commenced, Britain had initially
brought Hessian and Hanoverian troops to defend Britain from a
feared
invasion scare. When the
threat of this receded, the German soldiers were sent to defend
Hanover along with a small contingent of British troops under
Duke of
Cumberland, the King's second son. The arrival of British
troops on the continent was considered a rarity, as the country
preferred to make war by using its
naval
forces. As with the Prussians, Cumberland's army was initially
overwhelmed by the sheer scale of the French attacks. Following the
disastrous
Battle of Hastenbeck
Cumberland was forced to sign the
Convention of Klosterzeven by
which Hanover would withdraw from the war - and large chunks of its
territory would be occupied by the French for the duration of the
conflict.
Prussia was extremely alarmed by this development and lobbied hard
for it to be reversed. In London too, there was shock at such a
capitulation and Pitt recalled Cumberland to London where he was
publicly rebuked by his father, the King, and forced to relinquish
his commission. The terms of Klosterzeven were revoked, Hanover
re-entered the war - and a new commander was selected to command
the Allied Anglo-German forces. The
Duke of Brunswick was a
brother-in-law of Frederick the Great, and had developed a
reputation as a competent officer.
He set about trying to rally the German
troops under his command, by emphasising the extent of the
atrocities committed by the French troops who had occupied Hanover,
and launched a counter-offensive in late 1757 driving the French
back across the Rhine
.
Despite several British attempts to persuade them, the
Dutch Republic refused to join their former
allies in the war and remained neutral. Pitt at one point even
feared that the Dutch would enter the war against Britain, in
response to repeated violations of Dutch neutrality by the
Royal Navy. Similarly the British were wary of
Denmark joining the war against them, but Copenhagen followed a
policy of strict neutrality.
Change of government
In London the Pitt-dominated administration had fallen after just
six months because of a lack of support in parliament. A period of
political stalemate followed, with no real direction to the British
war effort. It became apparent that the only way a serious war
administration could be put together was by an alliance of leading
figures. In 1757 a partnership was formed between the Duke of
Newcastle and William Pitt - despite their years of enmity.
Newcastle became the head of the administration as Prime Minister,
with control of public finances, while Pitt became Secretary of
State and
de facto war minister with control of much of
British military strategy. Other leading figures such as
Henry Fox and the
Duke of Bedford were also
given positions in the administration.
The new government's strategic thinking was sharply divided. Pitt
had been a long-term advocate of Britain playing as small a role on
the European continent while concentrating their resources and
naval power to strike against vulnerable French colonies. Newcastle
remained an old-school Continentalist - who believed that the war
would be decided in Europe, and was convinced that a strong British
presence there was essential. He was supported in this view by
George II.
A compromise was eventually established in which Britain would keep
troops on the European continent under the command of the
Duke of Brunswick, while Pitt
was given authority to launch several colonial expeditions.
He sent
forces to attack French settlements in West
Africa and the West
Indies
, operations which were tactically successful and
brought financial benefits. In Britain a popular surge of
patriotism and support for the government
resulted. Pitt formed a
triumvirate to
direct operations with
George Anson in command of the
navy and
John Ligonier in charge of
the army. A
Militia Act was
passed to create a sizable force to defend Britain which would free
up regular troops for operations overseas.
Naval "Descents"
The British had received several requests from their German allies
to try and relieve the pressure on them by launching diversionary
operations against the French. Pitt had long been an advocate of
amphibious strikes or "descents" against the French coastline in
which a small British force would land, capture a settlement,
destroy its
fortifications and
munitions supplies and then withdraw. This
would compel the French to withdraw troops from the Northern front
to guard the coast.
After an
urgent request from Brunswick Pitt was able to put his plan into
action, and in September 1757 a
British raid was launched against Rochefort
in Western
France. For various reasons it was not a success, but
Pitt was determined to press ahead with similar raids. Another
British expedition was organised under
Lord Sackville.
A landing in St Malo
was partially successful, but was cut short by the
sudden appearance of French troops - and the force withdrew to
Britain. Pitt organised a third major descent, under the
command of
Thomas Bligh. His
raid on Cherbourg in August 1758 proved to
be the most successful of the Descents, as he burnt ships,
munitions and destroyed the fortifications of the town. However an
attempt in September to do the same at St Malo ended with the
Battle of St Cast and the British
withdrawing with heavy casualties.
This proved to be the last of the major
landings attempted on the French coast - though the British later
took control of the Belle Île
off the coast of Brittany
which was used as a base for marshalling troops and
supplies. The raids were not financially successful and were
described by
Henry Fox
as being "like breaking windows with
guineas". From then on the British
concentrated their efforts in Europe in Germany.
Indian Campaign (1756-58)
Britain
and France both had significant colonial possessions in India
and had been
battling for supremacy for a number of years. The British
were represented by the
British East India Company (EIC)
who were permitted to raise troops. The collapse of the
long-standing
Mughal Empire brought
the clash between the two states to a head, as each tried to gain
sufficient power and territory to dominate the other. The 1754
Treaty of Pondicherry which
ended the
Second Carnatic War
had brought a temporary truce to India, but it was soon under
threat. A number of smaller Indian
Princely States aligned with either Britain
or France.
One of the most assertive of these Princes
was the pro-French Nawab of Bengal,
Siraj ud-Daulah, who resented the
British presence in Calcutta
. In 1756 he had succeeded his grandfather
Alivardi Khan who had been a staunch
British ally. By contrast he regarded the
British East India Company as an
encroaching threat.
Calcutta
On 20
June 1756 the Nawab's troops stormed Fort William
capturing the city. A number of the British
civilians and
prisoners of war were
locked in the small guard room in what became known as the
Black Hole of Calcutta. After the
death of many of them, the atrocity became a popular rallying call
for revenge.
A force from Madras
under the
command of Lieutenant Colonel Robert
Clive arrived and liberated the city, driving out the Nawab's
troops. The
Third Carnatic
War that followed saw Britain ranged against the Nawab and
France. Clive consolidated his position in Calcutta, and made
contact with one of the Nawab's chief advisors
Mir Jafar attempting to persuade him and other
leading Bengalis to overthrow the Nawab. After the British ambushed
a column of the Nawab's troops which was approaching Calcutta on 2
February 1757, the two sides agreed the
Treaty of Alinagar which brought a
temporary truce to Bengal.
Plassey
Despite the agreement at Alinagar neither side was content with the
status quo. The British felt that if they did not assert their
position, the French would become the dominant power in Bengal.
Siraj ud-Daulah was fearful of being forced to accept British
suzrainty. His position was weakened by his unpopularity with his
own subjects, and the threat of other military enemies to the west.
He began to take steps to drive the British out of Bengal
entirely.
On 23 June 1758 the Nawab led a force of 50,000 into the field.
Ranged against them was a much smaller Anglo-Indian force under the
command of
Robert Clive. The Nawab was
weakened by the betrayal of
Mir Jafar who
had concluded a secret pact with the British before the battle -
and refused to move his troops to support the Nawab. Faced with the
superior firepower and discipline of the British troops - the
Nawab's army was routed. After the battle
Siraj ud-Daulah was overthrown and executed
by his own officers, and Mir Jafar succeeded him as Nawab. He then
concluded a peace treaty with the British.
Mir Jafar himself subsequently clashed with the British for much
the same reasons as
Siraj ud-Daulah
had. He conspired with the
Dutch East India Company to try and
oust the British from Bengal and in 1759 invited them to send
troops to aid him. The defeat of the Dutch at
Battle of Chinsurah resulted in Britain
moving to have Jafar replaced with his son-in-law, who was
considered more favourable to the EIC. One of the most important
long-term effects of the battle was that the British received the
diwan - the right to collect taxes in
Bengal which was granted in 1765.
French East India Company
The
French presence in India was led by the French East India Company
operating out of its base at Pondicherry
. Its forces were under the command of
Joseph François Dupleix
and
Lally, a Jacobite.
The veteran Dupleix had been in India a long time, and had
established a key rapport with France's Indian allies. Lally was
more newly arrived, and was seeking a swift victory over the
British - and was less concerned about diplomatic
sensibilities.
Following the
Battle of
Chandalore when Clive attacked a French trading post the French
were driven completely out of Bengal. In spite of this they still
had a major presence in central India, and hoped to regain the
power they had lost to the British in southern India during the
Second Carnatic War.
Annus Mirabilis (1759)
Apart
from a few isolated victories, the war had not gone well for
Britain since 1754 and in all theatres except India
and North
America (where Pitt's strategy had led to important gains in 1758)
they were on the retreat. British agents received
information about a planned French invasion which would knock
Britain out of the war completely. While France starved their
colonial forces of troops and supplies to concentrate them on the
goal of total strategic supremacy in Europe, the British government
agreed to continue their policy of shipping their own troops to
fight for total victory in the colonies—leaving Britain to be
guarded by the large militia that had existed since 1757.
Madras
Following Clive's victory at Plassey and the subjugation of Bengal,
Britain had not directed large resources to the Indian theatre. The
French meanwhile had despatched a large force from Europe to seize
the initiative on the subcontinent.
The clear goal of this force was to
capture Madras
, which had
previously fallen to the French in
1746.
In
December 1758 a French force of 8,000 under the Comte de Lally descended on
Madras, bottling up the 4,000 British defenders in Fort St
George
. After a hard-fought three-month siege the
French were finally forced to abandon their attempt to take the
city by the arrival of a British naval force carrying 600
reinforcements on 16 February 1759. Lally withdrew his troops, but
it was not the end of French ambitions in southern India.
West Indies
One of Pitt's favoured strategies was a British expedition to
attack the
French West Indies,
where their richest sugar-producing colonies were situated. A
British naval force of 9,000 sailed from Portsmouth in November
1758 under the command of
Peregrine
Hopson.
Using Barbados
as a staging point, they attacked first at
Martinique
.
After
failing to make enough headway, and losing troops rapidly to
disease, they were forced to abandon the attempt and move to the
secondary target of the British expedition Guadeloupe
. Facing a race against time before the
hurricane season hit in July, a landing was forced and the town of
Basse Terre was shelled. They looked in
severe danger when a large French fleet unexpectedly arrived under
Bompart, but on 1 May the
island's defenders finally surrendered and Bompart was unable to
prevent the loss of Guadeloupe.
Orders
arrived from London concerning an assault on St Lucia
but the commanders decided that such an attempt was
unwise given the circumstances. Instead they moved to
protect Antigua
for any possible attack by Bompart, before the bulk
of the force sailed for home in late July.
Battle of Minden
Since early 1758 the British had contributed increasingly large
number of troops to serve in Germany. Pitt had reversed his
previous hostility to British intervention on the continent, as he
realised that the theatre could be used to tie down numerous French
troops and resources which might otherwise be sent to fight in the
colonies.
Brunswick's army had enjoyed enormous
success since winter 1757, crossing the Rhine
several
times, winning the Battle of Krefeld
and capturing Bremen
without a
shot being fired. In recognition of his services Parliament
voted him £2,000 a year for life. By April 1759 Brunswick had an
army of around 72,000 facing two French armies with a combined
strength of 100,000.
The French had occupied Frankfurt
and were using it as their base for operations,
which Brunswick now attempted to assault. On 13 April
Brunswick lost the
Battle of Bergen
to a superior French force and was forced to retreat.

Battle plan of Minden
The
French pursued Brunswick slowly, capturing the strategic town of
Minden
which could
potentially be used to stage an invasion of Hanover.
Brunswick was pressured into action by this threat, the French
command was also eager to end the campaign with a swift victory to
free up troops which would allow them to take part in the proposed
Invasion of Britain. On the night of the 31 July, both commanders
simultaneously decided to attack the other outside Minden. The
French forces reacted hesitantly when faced with Germans in front
of them as dawn broke, allowing the Allies to seize the initiative
and counter-attack. However one column of British troops advanced
too quickly and soon found itself attacked on all sides by a
mixture of cavalry, artillery and infantry which vastly outnumbered
them. The British managed to hold them off, sustaining casualties
of a third. When they were reinforced with other troops, the Allies
broke through the French lines and forced them to retreat. The
British cavalry under Sackville were ordered to advance, but he
refused apparently in indignation at his treatment by Brunswick,
though this was at the time popularly attributed to cowardice on
his part. In the confusion, the French were allowed to escape the
battlefield and avoid total disaster.
Despite the widespread praise for the conduct of the British
troops, their commander Sackville received condemnation for his
alleged cowardice and was forced to return home in disgrace. He was
replaced by
Marquess of
Granby. The victory proved crucial, as Frederick had lost to
the Russians at
Kunersdorf.
Had Brunswick been defeated at Minden Hanover would almost
certainly have been invaded and the total defeat of Prussia would
have been imminent. In the wake of the victory, the Allies advanced
pushing the French backwards and relieving the pressure on the
Prussians.
Failed invasion
The central plank of France's war against Britain in 1759 was a
plan to invade Britain, authored by the French chief minister
Duc
Choiseul.
It was subject to several changes, but the
core was that more than 50,000 French troops would cross the
English
channel
from Le
Havre
in flat-bottomed boats and land at Portsmouth
on the British coast. Aided by a
Jacobite rebellion - they would then
advance on London and force a peace agreement on the British,
extracting various concessions and knocking them out of the war.
The British became aware through their agents of the scheme and
drew up a plan to mobilise their forces in case of the invasion. In
an effort to setback the invasion, a British
raid was launched against Le Havre which
destroyed numerous flat-boats and supplies. In spite of this, the
plans continued to progress and by Autumn the French were poised to
launch their invasion.
Following naval defeats at Quiberon and Lagos, and with news of the
Allied victory at Minden the French began to have second thoughts
about their plan, and in late Autumn cancelled it. The French did
not have the clear sea they hoped for the crossing, nor could they
now spare the number of troops on the continent. There were also
seen as a number of flaws in the plan including the fact that
claims of the number of Jacobite supporters were considered wildly
optimistic.
The campaign was considered a last throw of the dice for the
Jacobites to have any realistic hope of
reclaiming the British throne.
After the campaign the French soon abandoned
the Stuarts entirely, withdrawing their support, and forcing them
to take up a new home in Rome
.
Many of the
Highland communities that had
strongly supported the Jacobites in 1715 and 1745 now had regiments
serving in the British army, where they played a key role in
Britain's success that year.
Naval supremacy
By 1759 the
Royal Navy had expanded to a
new height of 71,000 personnel and 275 ships in commission, with
another 82 under ordinance.
During the war the British had instituted a
new system of blockade, by which they
penned in the main French fleets at anchor in Brest
and Toulon
. The
British were able to keep an almost constant force poised outside
French harbours. The French inability to counter this had led to a
collapse in morale amongst French seamen and the wider
population.
The French government had devised a plan that would allow them to
launch their invasion.
It required a junction of the two French
fleets in the English
Channel
, where they would be able to cover a major
invasion. However in August 1759 the French Mediterranean
Fleet under Admiral
La Clue left harbour and
was destroyed at the
Battle of Lagos
near Portugal. This left only the Channel Fleet at Brest under
Conflans.
When he tried to break free of the
British blockade in November, he was run down and attacked by the
British under Admiral Hawke at the
Battle of
Quiberon Bay
. This victory left the British in almost
total command of the seas, compounded by the effective use of naval
forces in the West Indies, Canada and India.
A small French force
under Thurot did manage
to land on the Irish coast, and menace Belfast
before being force to withdraw and being destroyed
by a Royal Navy squadron in the Irish Sea.
The year
was rounded out by the news of Wolfe's victory at Quebec
.
However while 1759 was acclaimed as Britain's 'Annus Mirablis', for
the Prussians the year had had been as disastrous as it had been
successful for the British. Prussia's armies had suffered a string
of defeats and lost large numbers of casualties. At times Prussia
veered close to total collapse and was now heavily dependent on the
continued British financial assistance.
Conquest of Canada (1758-60)
Louisbourg
Following the failure of the British to take Louisbourg in 1757, a
second attempt was planned in 1758 and command given to General
Jeffrey Amherst.
Although
Louisbourg did not control entry to the St Lawrence
River
, it could not simply be bypassed, and the British
had decided it had to be taken out before they could proceed
further. After a 44 day siege, the city finally capitulated.
One of the figures who benefited most from the campaign was a young
British Brigadier
James Wolfe. He so
impressed Pitt that he was promoted and given command of future
expeditions in Canada. Despite their victory at Louisbourg, the
British decided to wait for the Spring before heading further up
the St Lawrence. In the meantime the river was extensively charted
by a naval officer,
James Cook, later to
be famous as an explorer. Despatches carrying news of the victory
sparked euphoria in Britain, and was celebrated by numerous
bonfires.
Quebec
The key
to British strategy in North America involved taking Quebec City
—the capital and largest city of New France. This was to be
achieved by the descent of a massive force up the St Lawrence
River
. Simultaneously an Anglo-American force would
march from New York to capture Fort Carillon
and possibly Fort Niagara
as well. While many, particularly Pitt and
the American inhabitants, hoped that Canada could be annexed—others
hoped it might be a bargaining chip to offset potential British
losses in Europe. By the time the French realised the scale of the
British intentions in Canada, it was too late to send assistance to
Quebec. The French government hoped that
Louis-Joseph de Montcalm,
New France's military commander, would be able to
resist for the next year, after which they would send troops to his
aid.
Wolfe arrived outside Quebec on 28 June. For much of the rest of
the summer, he probed the defences of the city, trying to find a
way through. Montcalm constantly frustrated him, shifting his own
troops about in response. The cat-and-mouse game between the two
Generals reached a climax towards the end of the summer. If Wolfe
could not capture the city he would likely be forced to withdraw in
the face of the hostile Canadian winter.
An attempt to land on
the Montmorency
was beaten back at the Battle of
Beauport
, and almost proved disastrous. Wolfe now
searched for another place to land and make his attack. On 12
September the British learned of a convenient landing spot, and
Wolfe moved his army there at night.
The following day the
Battle of
Quebec
took place. It proved to be a decisive
British victory, in which both Wolfe and Montcalm were killed. The
British then took over the city.
The
British were further cheered by the news that Amherst had taken Fort
Carillon
(after which it was renamed Fort Ticonderoga, as it
is known today) and a second expedition had captured
Fort Niagara
. The French and their native allies were now
under increasing pressure, compounded by guerrilla activities
spearheaded by their
Mohawk allies and
Rogers' Rangers. Despite the
celebrated victory at Quebec, the campaign was not over—the French
still had significant forces at large in North America swelled by
refugees from the surrounding countryside. The following spring the
French regrouped and launched an attempt to retake Quebec.
The
Battle of
Sainte-Foy
took place on 28 April 1760 and proved even
bloodier than the previous battle. Though the French won the
battle, the British were able to retreat into Quebec and withhold
it against a siege that lasted for a fortnight.
Montreal
The
arrival of British ships and reinforcements ended the French
offensive and forced them to retreat in the direction of Montreal
. The British pursued, capturing parts of the
city on 1 September 1760 after encountering only light resistance.
The last French army under
Lévis was finally
forced to surrender on 6 September 1760 when a second British army
under Amherst arrived from the south following the
Battle of the Thousand
Islands, and an attempt at French reinforcement was stopped in
the naval
Battle of the
Restigouche.
The British had responded to the French challenge in North America
by striking at the heart of
New France.
Though it had been a long and costly series of campaigns, it proved
to be one of the most successful of Pitt's policies. While a modest
French presence remained in
Illinois and
Louisiana the fighting served to end
any significant French military threats in North America for
good.
Victory in India (1760-61)
Wandiwash
Pondicherry
Pondicherry's capture proved to be a decisive moment in the
long-term battle for control in India. After this point
French India was confined only to a handful of
trading posts stretched along the coast, while Britain moved into
the interior extending their control by alliances and conquest
eventually creating the
British Raj.
By the
end of 1761, the French were fearful that the British forces in
India were preparing to strike at the island of Mauritius
, and made no effort to try and reverse their losses
in India.
War in Europe (1760-62)
1760 marked a major milestone in British strategy, caused by the
death of
George II. His
grandson
George III was
much less committed to a British role in Germany which he saw as
unnecessary. He also disliked Newcastle and Pitt describing them as
"knave" and a "snake in the grass", and elevated his former tutor
Earl of Bute into a
senior role in the cabinet. The dovish Bute soon clashed with Pitt
over various aspects of British policy. Bute did give his assent to
Pitt's plan for a British expedition to
capture the island of Belle Île in
1761.
West German campaign
After his victory at Minden
the Duke of Brunswick continued
to lead the Anglo-German army which received increasing resources
and reinforcements from Britain. Brunswick was now facing several
large French armies under the overall command of
Victor-François, 2nd
duc de Broglie which tried to envelop the west German frontier.
The
French still hoped to offset their losses to the British in other
parts of the globe by capturing Hanover
- which could be used as a bargaining chip in any
peace negotiations. The French continued to invest large
numbers of troops - which were badly needed elsewhere.
In 1761 Brunswick won
another major victory over Broglie at the Battle of
Villinghausen
.
The French made a final attempt to invade Hanover in 1762 which was
defeated at the
Battle of
Wilhelmstahl. Brunswick then went on the attack, driving the
French southwards and
capturing
Cassel before the war was halted by an
armistice.
End of the Prussian Alliance
Bute began to champion the idea that Britain should disentangle
itself from the German war, and suggested to
Frederick the Great that he might make
peace with Austria by giving them back
Silesia. Frederick rejected the proposal, although
Prussian fortunes were at a low ebb by 1761 following defeats on
several fronts. Debates began in London about cancelling all
British subsidies to Frederick entirely.
By early
1762 - despite the success of Brunswick's army in Western Europe -
Russian troops were poised to capture Berlin
and a
partition of Prussia was actively planned. Frederick was spared by
the sudden death of
Empress
Elizabeth of Russia, who was succeeded by the pro-Prussian
Peter III. He was an ardent
admirer of Frederick and immediately switched Russia from an enemy
of Prussia to an ally - withdrawing his troops from Berlin and
sending them against the Austrians. This dramatically shifted the
balance of
power in Europe - suddenly handing Frederick the initiative. He
recaptured
Silesia and forced Austria to the
negotiating table.
War with Spain (1762)
Through careful diplomacy and the influence of a pro-British
Spanish Prime Minister
Ricardo Wall,
Spain had remained neutral through most of the war. However, with
the accession of
Charles III to
the throne Spanish foreign policy began to change. Charles was
alarmed by the British conquest of the French Empire in North
America, and feared his own Empire would be Pitt's next target. He
concluded the
Bourbon Family
Compact with France, offering them practical support.
With evidence of growing Franco-Spanish co-operation, Pitt
suggested it was only a matter of time before Spain entered the
war. The prospect of war with Spain shattered the cabinet unity
which had existed up to that point. Pitt strongly advocated a
pre-emptive strike which would allow them to capture the annual
plate fleet, denying Spain of its
vital resources of wealth which were shipped in. The rest of the
cabinet refused, and Pitt resigned. In spite of this war with Spain
swiftly became unavoidable, and on 4 January 1762 Britain duly
declared war on Spain. Almost immediately, British ships under
Admiral
Charles
Saunders moved to
blockade
Cadiz one of the most important Spanish naval bases.
Portugal
The most
pressing issue in the war with Spain was a threatened invasion of
Portugal
. Portugal, although a historic British ally,
had remained neutral through most of the conflict. By early 1762
they were drawn into the war with the
First Cevallos expedition and a
likely target of Spain.
Portugal's long border with Spain was
considered vulnerable and easy to overrun rather than the more
complex efforts a siege of the British fortress of Gibraltar
would require. Spanish forces began massing
on the Portuguese border, ready to strike. Britain moved swiftly to
support their Portuguese allies, shipping in supplies and officers
to help co-ordinate the defence.
The
original Spanish plan was to take Almeida and then to advance towards the
Alentejo and Lisbon
, but they
switched their target to Porto
as it
would strike more directly at British commerce. Under the direction
of the Marquis of Sarria Spanish
troops crossed from Galicia
into Northern
Portugal capturing several towns. However the thrust
against Porto stalled in difficult terrain and due to the flooding
of the River
Esla
. British troops began arriving that summer
with 6,000 coming from Belle Île
under Lord Loudoun and a
further 2,000 from Ireland. Spain invested and
captured the border fortress of
Almeida.
A British counter-attack led by John Burgoyne captured the Spanish town
Valencia de
Alcántara
. French forces began to arrive to support
the Spaniards, but like their allies they began to suffer high
levels of attrition through disease and desertion. In November with
problems with their lines of supply and communication the Bourbon
allies withdrew and sued for peace. Despite the large numbers of
forces involved, there had been no major battles.
Cuba
In June
1762 British forces from the West Indies landed on the island of
Cuba
and laid siege to Havana
.
Although they arrived at the height of the fever season, and
previous expeditions against tropical Spanish fortresses such as
Cartagena had failed
because of extremely high casualty rates to diseases, the British
government was optimistic of victory - if the troops could catch
the Spanish off-guard before they had time to respond. The British
commander
Albermale ordered a
tunnel to be dug by his sappers so a
mine
could be planted under the walls of the city's fortress. British
troops began to fall from disease at an alarming rate, but they
were boosted by the arrival of 4,000 reinforcements from
America. On 30 July Albermale ordered the
mine to be detonated, and his troops stormed the fortress.
With Havana now in their hands, the British lay poised to strike at
other targets in the
Spanish main
should the war continue for another year. However, they had
suffered 1,800 deaths and more than 4,000 casualties during the
siege - almost entirely from disease - and for the moment set about
consolidating their hold on the countryside around Havana.
During
the year of British occupation, commerce in Havana boomed, as the
port was opened up to trade with the British Empire rather than the
restricted monopoly with Cadiz
that had
existed before.
Philippines
Almost as
soon as war had been declared with Spain, orders had been
despatched for a British force at Madras
to proceed
to the Philippines
and invest Manila
.
A 1,700
strong force under William Draper set off
from India in late July, arriving in Manila Bay
in September 1762. They had to move swiftly
before the
monsoon season hit. On 6
October the British stormed the city, capturing it. A large amount
of plunder was taken from the city after the
Battle of Manila. The British occupied a
portion of the Philippines and governed it. Because news of the
colony's capture didn't reach Europe until after the Treaty of
Paris - no provision was made regarding its status.
The Spanish eventually agreed a £4million pound payment to the
British known as the
Manila Ransom in
exchange for the return of the city. British forces eventually
departed from the Philippines in 1764 after a two year
occupation.
Other campaigns
Senegal
One of the earliest schemes Pitt had for colonial expeditions was
in
West Africa where France had several
lucrative but strategically unimportant bases. He was fighting
against a great deal of scepticism in the British government, which
saw Europe as the main venue of warfare and all other theatres as
costly distractions. As an initial test of his strategy Pitt gained
support for a British expedition proposed by a New York merchant
Thomas Cumming to take the French
trading station at
Fort Louis on
the
Senegal River which they did with
relative ease, carrying back a large amount of plunder to Britain.
Subsequent expeditions also took out French
posts at Gorée
and on the
River
Gambia
.
Martinique
Despite
taking Guadeloupe
in 1759, the British attempt to occupy Martinique
that year had ended in failure. In 1761 a
fresh scheme to attack the
French
West Indies was drawn up and Martinque was
successfully taken
by a British force in February 1762. Many of the local planters
and merchants welcomed the troops, as they had seen the prosperity
that British occupation had brought to neighbouring Guadeloupe.
This was
followed up by the capture of the islands of Saint Lucia
, Grenada
and Saint Vincent
.
Newfoundland
In a final attempt to try and gain some advantage against the
British, the French managed to slip an expedition through the
British blockade and head towards
Newfoundland, considered valuable
because of its large
fishery. The small
British garrison was swiftly overwhelmed and the French believed
they could use Newfoundland as a bargaining counter to extract the
return of several of their own territories. General Amherst
responded by despatching a force of men from New York under his
younger brother
William Amherst to
recapture the island.
They managed to defeat a French force at the
Battle of
Signal Hill
on 15 September 1762, forcing the total
capitulation of the French expedition three days
later.
Britain during the war
Demographics
Peace Treaty
Negotiations

The participants of the Seven Years'
War by 1762.
Blue: Great Britain, Prussia,
Portugal with allies.
Green: France, Spain, Austria,
Russia, Sweden with allies.
By 1763 the British government had an extreme shortage of money,
though not as severe as that facing the French government. The
collapse of the alliance with the Prussians ended that costly
involvement, and by late 1762 the war around the world was winding
towards a close. In Britain the new
Bute
Ministry had taken full control of government, following the
departure of Newcastle in March 1762 after a power struggle. The
government agreed to an armistice and began fresh negotiations with
the French in Paris directed by the
Duke of Bedford.
In Britain the negotiations that proceeded to the peace agreement
proved hugely controversial. Strong opposition, led principally by
Newcastle and Pitt, was raised against the terms which were
perceived to be exceedingly lenient towards France and Spain. A mob
went so far as to attack a carriage carrying
George III in protest at the
alleged betrayal. Nonetheless Bute felt the war needed to be
brought to an end, and the terms on offer were reasonable.
Britain
held a dominant position at the negotiations, as they had during
the last seven years seized Canada, Guadeloupe
, Martinique
, Dominica
, Pondicherry
, Senegal
and Belle Île
from the French and Havana
and Manila
from the
Spanish. Only one British territory, Minorca
, was in
enemy hands. Despite suffering a year of defeats, Spain was
prepared to fight on—something which their French allies were
opposed to. Bute proposed a suggestion that France cede her
remaining North American territory of
Louisiana to Spain to compensate Madrid for
its losses during the war. This formula was acceptable to the
Spanish government, and allowed Britain and France to negotiate
with more legroom.
Terms of the Peace Agreement
Having
severed their connection with the Prussians the previous year, the
British negotiated a separate peace to the Prussians - dealing with
their two principal adversaries France
and Spain
.
Britain received formal control of
New
France, while handing back Martinique and Guadeloupe. The
British were handed all of mainland North America west of the
Mississippi River.
In the wake of Britain's territorial expansion Sir
George Macartney
observed that Britain now controlled "
a vast Empire, on which
the sun never sets".
Despite
France's losses, Choiseul was satisfied not to have been forced to
hand over more territory in the Caribbean
and was delighted that he had been able to maintain
a French presence in Newfoundland guaranteeing continued
access to the valuable fishery there.
A separate peace agreement between Austria and Prussia was
concluded at the
Treaty of
Hubertusburg on 15 February.
Legacy and Aftermath
The number of casualties suffered by British forces were
comparatively light, compared to the more than a million fatalities
that occurred worldwide.
France and Spain both considered the treaty that ended the war as
being closer to a temporary armistice rather than a genuine final
settlement, and William Pitt described it as an "armed truce".
Britain customary massively reduced the size of its armed forces
during peace time, but during the 1760s a large military
establishment was maintained -- intended as a deterent against
France and Spain. The Bourbon powers both sent agents to exame
Britain's defences believing that a successful
Invasion of Britain was an essential
part of any war of revenge.
The British victory in the war sowed some of the seeds of Britain's
later conflict in the
American War of Independence.
American colonists had been delighted by the huge swathes of
North America that had now been
brought under formal British control, but many were angered by the
Proclamation of 1763, which was
an attempt to protect
Native American territory
- and prevent European settlement. Similarly the issue of
quartering the British regular troops became a
thorny issue, with colonists objecting to their billeting in
private homes. Events such as these contributed to a drift apart
between the British government and many of its subjects in the
Thirteen Colonies.
The war had also brought to an end the "Old System" of alliances in
Europe, in which Britain had formed grand coalitions against
Franco-Spanish ambitions in Europe. In the years after the war,
under the direction of
Lord Sandwich, the
British did try and re-establish this system - but European states
such as Austria and the Dutch Republic now saw Britain as a
potentially greater threat than France and did not join them while
the Prussians were angered by what they considered a British
betrayal in 1762. Consequently when the War of Independence turned
into a global war between 1778-83, Britain found itself arrayed
against a strong coalition of European opponents without a single
major ally. France and Spain had both hoped to avenge themselves on
the British, and the surrender of a British army at
Saratoga provided this.
See also
References
- Anderson p.124-28
- McLynn p.
- Anderson p.62-65
- Anderson p.67-71
- Anderson p.98-109
- Anderson p.111-14
- McLynn p.35-36
- Anderson p.208-09
- Browning p.164-66
- Simms p.403-04
- Anderson p.125-29
- Carter p.2
- Browning p.232-235
- Rodger Command of the Ocean p.264-66
- Browning p.236
- Rodger Command of the Ocean p.266-67
- Anderson p.176-77
- Browning p.242
- McLynn p.256
- Anderson p.211-22
- McLynn p.259
- McLynn p.259-60
- McLynn p.240
- Rodger. Command of the Ocean p.268
- Simms p.446
- Keay p.282-95
- McLynn p.170-71
- McLynn p.388
- McLynn p.183
- McLynn p.104-105
- McLynn p.105-108
- McLynn p.109-115
- Anderson p.314-315
- McLynn p.116
- Dull p.122-123
- McLynn p.264
- McLynn p.265
- McLynn p.266-67
- McLynn p.279-81
- McLynn p.238
- McLynn p.233
- McLynn p.236-37
- Longmate p.180-81
- Simms p.463-64
- West p.250-54
- Anderson p.377
- Simms p.475-76
- McLynn p.50-53
- Anderson p.344
- McLynn p.219
- McLynn p.219-222
- Anderson p.391-96
- Anderson p.398-99
- Anderson p.400-09
- Hibbert p.27
- Anderson p.496
- Anderson p.495
- Anderson p.492-94
- Anderson & Cayton p.124-25
- Browning p.280-82
- Anderson p.487-90
- Anderson p.497
- Anderson p497-98
- Anderson p.498
- Anderson p.498-99
- Anderson p.499-501
- Anderson p.501-02
- Rodger Command of the Ocean p.286-87
- Simms p.555
- McLynn p.99
- Anderson p.306
- McLynn p.100-121
- Anderson p.483-84
- Simms p.502
- Insert footnote text here
- Longmate p.183-85
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