Sixty Years' War

Sixty Years' War
Part of the American Indian Wars and the Second Hundred Years War

A 1755 map of the Great Lakes region
Date1754–1815
Location
Result Forced displacement and assimilation of Native nations
Belligerents
1754–1763
 Great Britain
British America
1754–1763
 Kingdom of France
 New France
1763–1766
Warriors from numerous American Indian tribes
Various Native tribes
1775–1782
 Great Britain
Kingdom of Great Britain Loyalists
1775–1782
 United States
 Spain
1785–1795
Northwestern Confederacy
Kingdom of Great Britain Province of Quebec (until 1791)
Kingdom of Great Britain Lower Canada (1791–1795)
1785–1795
 United States
Chickasaw
Choctaw
1812–1815
 United Kingdom
 Upper Canada
 Lower Canada
Tecumseh's Confederacy
Six Nations
1812–1815
 United States
Choctaw
Cherokee
Chickasaw
Seneca

The Sixty Years' War (French: Guerre de Soixante Ans; 1754–1815) was a military struggle for control of the North American Great Lakes region, including Lake Champlain and Lake George,[1] encompassing a number of wars over multiple generations. The conflicts involved the British Empire, the French colonial empire, the United States, and the Indigenous peoples of the Americas. The term Sixty Years' War is used by academic historians to provide a framework for viewing this era as a whole, rather than as isolated events.[2][3]

  1. ^ Skaggs 2001, p. 4.
  2. ^ Skaggs 2001, p. 1.
  3. ^ Skaggs 2001, pp. XVIII–XIX.