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Table of Contents


CHAPTER 1
The Conquest
CHAPTER 2
The Revolt of Pontiac and the American Invasion
CHAPTER 3
The Coveted Pacific Coast
A New Stage for European Struggles
Early Explorations of the Northwest Coast
The Vikings of the North Pacific
New Spanish Explorations
Enter Cook and the British
Spanish Reaction
Russian, British and Spanish Plans
The Nootka Incident
The Nootka Crisis
Garrison Life at Nootka
Vancouver and Bodega Y Quadra
The Evacuation of Nootka
From Sea to Sea
CHAPTER 4
The Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812
CHAPTER 5
Demobilization
CHAPTER 6
The Royal Navy, Ruler of the Seas
CHAPTER 7
A Decade of Turbulence
APPENDIX A
The British Armed Forces
APPENDIX B
Daily Life of Soldiers and Officers
APPENDIX C
Uniforms and Arms
APPENDIX D
Reference

    
CHAPTER 3 The Coveted Pacific Coast

    
    
A New Stage for European Struggles ( 2 pages )

    
    
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A Spanish Ocean
    
    
    
As the wars were fought between the French and the British, and then the British and the Americans, the territories to the west of the Prairies remained uncharted.  No one had yet crossed the continent, neither by land across the Rocky Mountains - which were deemed impenetrable - nor by ship through the enigmatic Northwest Passage.  In the eighteenth century, however, a series of events would propel the northwestern part of the North American continent onto the world scene.  The great powers almost went to war to maintain their geostrategic interests in this part of the globe, which in the end would become the Canadian Pacific coast.

Until the eighteenth century, the Pacific Ocean was virtually unknown, few explorers having dared to venture there.  In the sixteenth century, the Spanish established colonies on the Pacific coast of America, as well as in the Philippines, in the Far East.  They thus inaugurated the first regular trans-Pacific link with their famous "Manila galleons," which shuttled between Manila in the Philippines and Acapulco, Mexico.  Little by little, the Spanish began to consider the Pacific their own domain, because they controlled the whole western coast of America from Cape Horn in Chile to northern Mexico.  The Spanish settlements dotting this immense coastline were never threatened, except perhaps by a few pirates or particularly daring buccaneers, and there were no other European colonies along the coast.

    
    
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  Last Updated: 2004-06-20 Top of Page Important Notices