Taken from Montreal Rampage.com |
Another change affecting New France was that the English as well as some of the French entrepreneurs were not interested in maintaining good relations with the native inhabitants and in fact were disrupting the patiently constructed inter-cultural affiliation that Champlain and his supporters believed was essential to the success of their colonial project. Selling alcohol and firearms to the Indians was lucrative for the traders but disastrous to the Indians. Moreover, the diseases that came along with each new wave of settlers were also devastating to the various groups of indigenous people who contracted them.
It's a pity that Champlain died, somewhat unexpectedly, at the time he did, in 1635. Had he lived a few more years he might have been able to see Quebec through the transitional period between kings, kept the English from taking Maine and other French held territory, and kept relations with and among the Indians peaceful. It's hard to say, however, whether that arrangement would have lasted much longer anyway with all the colonists' arriving and filling up the area with their farms and towns. Eventually, the Indians would have seemed to be encroaching rather than the other way around.
All in all, I enjoyed learning about this period in history, especially as it relates to my own family's history. I realized how little I knew about the founding of New France, and now appreciate the complexity of the events of the early years of the seventeenth century and the extraordinary character of the man who was largely responsible for making it all happen.
Richard Ford Photo by Daniel Erath |
No comments:
Post a Comment