Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Timeline of British history (1700–1799)" ¶ 88
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1755 and Fort
During the sixth and final colonial war, the French and Indian War, the military conflicts in Nova Scotia included: Battle of Fort Beauséjour ; Bay of Fundy Campaign ( 1755 ); the Battle of Petitcodiac ; the Raid on Lunenburg ( 1756 ); the Louisbourg Expedition ( 1757 ); Battle of Bloody Creek ( 1757 ); Siege of Louisbourg ( 1758 ), Petitcodiac River Campaign, Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign ( 1758 ), St. John River Campaign, and Battle of Restigouche.
* 1755 – French and Indian War: the French surrender Fort Beauséjour to the British, leading to the expulsion of the Acadians.
He captured nearby Fort Beauséjour in 1755 and is also known for his roles as second-in-command at the Plains of Abraham, for capturing Martinique, as Governor of New York and also for his participation in the Great Upheaval.
In 1755, nearby Fort Beausejour was captured by English forces under the command of Lt. Col. Robert Monckton.
The 1755 British capture of Fort Beauséjour on the border separating Nova Scotia from Acadia was followed by its policy to deport the French inhabitants.
Braddock ( with George Washington as one of his aides ) led about 1, 500 army troops and provincial militia on an expedition in June 1755 to take Fort Duquesne.
Colonel Monckton, in the only true British success that year, captured Fort Beauséjour in June 1755, cutting the French fortress at Louisbourg off from land-based reinforcements.
In 1755, following the Battle of Lake George, the Marquis de Vaudreuil, the governor of the French Province of Canada, sent his cousin Michel Chartier de Lotbinière to design and construct a fortification at this militarily important site, which the French called Fort Carillon.
Construction on the star-shaped fort, which Lotbinière based on designs of the renowned French military engineer Vauban, began in October 1755 and then proceeded slowly during the warmer-weather months of 1756 and 1757, using troops stationed at nearby Fort St. Frédéric and from Canada.
They constructed Fort Ashby in 1755, which is the last standing unit in the chain of forts built under the orders of George Washington.
General Edward Braddock's expeditionary march to Fort Duquesne crossed through this area in 1755 on the way to Fort Cumberland.
Fort Bridgman, Vernon, was burned in 1755, a casualty of the French and Indian War.
Later, as a Colonel in 1755, he was to accompany General Braddock on the old Indian Trail that ran through the valley on his way to Fort Cumberland.
North of the mountain ridge known as Cape Horn, near the Connecticut River, are the remains of Fort Wentworth, built by the New Hampshire Militia in 1755 during the French and Indian War.
The Braddock Expedition, particularly his crossing of the Monongahela River on July 9, 1755 at this place, led to the British general's own fatal wounding and a sound defeat of his troops who had been moving against the French at Fort Duquesne.
In 1755, Colonel George Washington gave orders to build a stockade and fort ( Fort Ashby ) on the eastern side of Patterson Creek.
St Clair accompanied Braddock on his ill-fated march on Fort Duquesne and his disastrous defeat on July 9, 1755.
In spring 1755, Washington returned to the area to prepare for General Edward Braddock's attack on Fort Duquesne ( commonly referred to as Braddock's March ).
The French, who had started construction on Fort Carillon in 1755, used it as a launching point for the successful siege of Fort William Henry in 1757.
The British defeated France in Acadia in the Battle of Fort Beausejour ( 1755 ) and then Île Royale ( Cape Breton Island ) ( which also administered Île Saint-Jean ( Prince Edward Island ) with the Siege of Louisbourg ( 1758 ).
In 1755, General Edward Braddock led an expedition against the French Fort Duquesne, and although they were numerically superior to the French militia and their Indian allies, Braddock's army was routed and Braddock was killed.
In July 1755, Clive returned to India to act as deputy governor of Fort St. David at Cuddalore.
They speak of his 1755 efforts to help British Redcoats led by Braddock in their march to defeat the French at Fort Dusquesne ( in today's Pittsburgh ).

1755 and Beauséjour
Fort Beauséjour was captured by the British in June, 1755.
The British established Fort Lawrence in 1750 at Beaubassin and eventually defeated the French, Mi ' kmaq and Acadians in the Battle of Fort Beauséjour in 1755.
; Battle of Fort Beauséjour ( 1755 )
Fort Beauséjour () was built by the French during Father Le Loutre's War from 1751 – 1755 ; it is located at the Isthmus of Chignecto in present-day Aulac, New Brunswick, Canada.
In 1755, Fort Beauséjour became the scene of a significant battle in the war as well as the site of beginning the Expulsion of the Acadians.
Fort Beauséjour and cathedral ( 1755 )
On June 4, 1755 the British conquest of all of France's North American territory began when a force of British regulars and New England militia attacked Fort Beauséjour from Fort Lawrence under command of Lt. Col. Robert Monckton.
The British-led force took control of Fort Beauséjour by June 16, 1755, after which they changed its name to Fort Cumberland.
On June 4, 1755 the British conquest for all of France's North American territory began when a force of British regulars and New England militia attacked Fort Beauséjour from Fort Lawrence under command of Lt. Col. Robert Monckton.
The British-led force took control of Fort Beauséjour by June 16, 1755, after which they changed the name to Fort Cumberland.
Beginning June 3, 1755, a British army under Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Monckton staged out of nearby Fort Lawrence, besieged the small French garrison at Fort Beauséjour with the goal of opening the Isthmus of Chignecto to British control.
Won from the French in the Battle of Fort Beauséjour in 1755, the fortifications had been minimally garrisoned by the British after the Seven Years ' War and abandoned in 1768.

1755 and Acadia
In 1755, when French-speaking settlers of Acadia in Canada's Maritime were driven into exile by British forces, many took up residence in rural Louisiana.
Pierre Part was founded by Acadian French settlers after the Great Upheaval of 1755, during which much of the French population of Acadia was expelled by its British conquerors.
Within Acadia and Nova Scotia, Father Le Loutre's War ( 1749 – 1755 ) began with the British founding of Halifax.
The Acadians, the francophone inhabitants of Acadia ( modern Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and northern Maine ), were expelled from their homeland between 1755 and 1763 by the British.
In 1755, he furnished the supplies for the expedition of Governor William Shirley to Acadia.

1755 and is
* 1755 – Samuel Johnson's A Dictionary of the English Language is published in London.
They continued throughout the Annapolis Valley until the British-ordered expulsion of Acadians in 1755 which is memorialized at Grand Pré in the eastern part of the valley.
The first occurrence of the phrase blue law so far found is in the New-York Mercury of March 3, 1755, where the writer imagines a future newspaper praising the revival of " our Connecticut's old Blue Laws ".
* 1755 – The second Eddystone Lighthouse is destroyed by fire.
* 1755 – Moscow University is established on Tatiana Day.
* 1755 – Laredo, Texas is established by the Spaniards.
The story is often told that in 1755, Nathaniel Gilbert, while convalescing, read a treatise of John Wesley, " An Appeal to men of Reason and Religion " sent to him by his brother Francis.
* 1755 – Lisbon earthquake: In Portugal, Lisbon is destroyed by a massive earthquake and tsunami, killing between sixty thousand and ninety thousand people.
It is Edwards ' most famous written work, and is widely studied by Christians and historians, providing a glimpse into the theology of the Great Awakening of c. 1730 – 1755.
Although Penn began operating as an academy or secondary school in 1751 and obtained its collegiate charter in 1755, it initially designated 1750 as its founding date ; this is the year which appears on the first iteration of the university seal.
There is a picture by Jean Baptiste Oudry ( 1686 – 1755 ) of " Misse ", one of two English whippets presented to Louis XV, in the Washington National Gallery and another, with her companion, " Turlu ", by the same artist in the Musée National de Fontainebleau.
* 1755: The tallest wooden Bodhisattva statue in the world is erected at Puning Temple, Chengde, China.
* November 1 – 1755 Lisbon earthquake: In Portugal, Lisbon is destroyed by a massive earthquake and tsunami, killing 60, 000 – 90, 000 people.
is: 1755
with his formula, which is equal to Euler's formula from 1755:
The earliest Spanish rendering of Cherokee, from 1755, is Tchalaquei.
Extreme value theory is used to model the risk of extreme, rare events, such as the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.
Because the nature of what is erotic is fluid, early definitions of the term attempted to conceive eroticism as some form of sensual or romantic love or as the human sex drive ( libido ); for example, the Encyclopédie of 1755 states that the erotic " is an epithet which is applied to everything with a connection to the love of the sexes ; one employs it particularly to characterize ... a dissoluteness, an excess ".
One possibility is that Messier simply wanted to have a larger catalogue than his scientific rival Lacaille, whose 1755 catalogue contained 42 objects, and so he added some bright, well-known objects to boost his list.
Usually, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's play Miss Sara Sampson, which was first produced in 1755, is said to be the earliest Bürgerliches Trauerspiel in Germany.

0.229 seconds.