Any war that is not known to people (no books, no movies, etc.) is known as a "forgotten war." The Revolutionary War of 1776 overshadowed the French and Indian War. WW2 overshadowed WW1; Korea was overshadowed by the Vietnam War.
French & Indian War
French & Indian War
The site of the final battle of the French and Indian war (also known as the Seven Years war) was Montreal.
The French and Indian War was a war between the French and Indians
the colonist won the french indian war
The French & Indian War.
It has a lot of other names: The Seven Years War, The Fourth Intercolonial War, The Great War for the Empire, The Forgotten War. In Canada, it is known as the War Of Conquest.
French & Indian War
French and Indian War. Beginning in 1754, it lasted nearly nine years, but did not take place on international soil until 1756. Therefore, it is known as the Seven Years War to others. In America, it is known as the French and Indian war.
French and Indian War
French and Indian war.
French & Indian War
In North America, the war that promptly followed the French and Indian War was Pontiac's Rebellion, although it is little remembered today. The American War of Independence is the more well known military conflict that came after the French and Indian War.
French & Indian War
According to Historians, the French were known to have owned the land west of the Mississippi before the French and Indian War.
The French and Indian War was the North American conflict in a larger imperial war between Great Britain and France known as the Seven Years' War. The French and Indian War began in 1754 and ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763.
In the U.S., this war is generally known as the "French and Indian War"; that is its name. The war, occurring from 1654 to 1763, was between the British and the French, supported by American Indians. But this war was part of a broader conflict of the time known primarily as the Seven Years' War. The British and the French refer to the war of that name, encompassing the North American component ("French and Indian War") without naming that portion specifically.