French and Indian War

  • The Governer

    The Governer
    In 1753, Governor of Virginia dispatched the young George Washington to the upper Ohio to warn the French away from the valley.
  • Washington Returns

    Washington Returns
    Washington returned with troops to seize the region's most strategic point, the Forks of the Ohio at modern Pittsburg, defeated a French detachment and was defeated in turn the French ad their India allies forced his surrender at Fort necessity on July 3.
  • Washington returned with troops

    Washington returned with troops
    To seize the region's most strategic point, the Folks of the Ohio at modern Pittsburgh
  • Sandy Creek

    Sandy Creek
    Lewis's orders were to march toward the Ohio via "Sandy Creek" (Big Sandy River) and destroy the Shawnee villages in southern Ohio. III-disciplined, poorly supplied, and unlucky in the weather and scarcity of game they encountered, this Sandy Creek expedition struggled forward for nearly a month in February-March 1756 before turning back in a state of near-starvation and mutiny
  • The Seven Years' War

    In Europe the conflict was called the Seven Years' War (1756-1763), but its Ohio Valley phase cannot be dated. Although commonly dated to 1754, the war may have started as early as 1752, when the French destruction of a pro-British Miami village in western Ohio helped to bring the Shawnees, Delawares, and other Ohio Indians into the French orbit.
  • John Forbes drove the the French away

    John Forbes drove the the French away
    From the Forks of the Ohio, present Pittsburgh, and established Fort Pitt there.