[A School History of the United States by John Bach McMaster]@TWC D-Link bookA School History of the United States CHAPTER VI 2/8
It was settled in the early years of the seventeenth century at Port Royal (now Annapolis, Nova Scotia), at Mount Desert Island, and on the St.Croix River. NEW FRANCE was the drainage basin of the St.Lawrence and the Great Lakes.
As far back as 1535 Jacques Cartier explored the St.Lawrence River to the site of Montreal.
But it was not till 1608 that a party under Champlain made the first permanent settlement on the river, at Quebec. The French settlers at once entered into an alliance with the Huron and Algonquin Indians, who lived along the St.Lawrence River.
But these tribes were the bitter enemies of the Iroquois, who dwelt in what is now central New York, and when, in consequence of this alliance, the French were summoned to take the warpath, Champlain, with a few followers, went, and on the shore of the lake which now bears his name, not far from the site of Ticonderoga, he met and defeated the Iroquois tribe of Mohawks in July, 1609. The battle was a small affair; but its consequences were serious and lasting, for the Iroquois were thenceforth the enemies of the French, and prevented them from ever coming southward and taking possession of the Hudson and the Mohawk valleys.
When, therefore, the French merchants began to engage in the fur trade with the Indians, and the French priests began their efforts to convert the Indians to Christianity, they were forced to go westward further and further into the interior. [Illustration: EUROPEAN CLAIMS AND EXPLORATIONS 1650] Their route, instead of being up the St.Lawrence, was up the Ottawa River to its head waters, over the portage to Lake Nipissing, and down its outlet to Georgian Bay, where the waters of the Great Lakes lay before them (see map on p.
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