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Military personnel killed in the French and Indian War (1754–1763). Pages in category "Military personnel killed in the French and Indian War" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
The French and Indian War (1754–1763) was a theater of the Seven Years' War, ... He was killed and approximately 1,000 British soldiers were killed or injured. [55]
The Bloody Springs massacre was an attack by Lenape warriors on homesteads in what is now Berks County, Pennsylvania, on October 1, 1757, during the French and Indian War. The Spatz family and other settlers were killed at a spring near modern-day Strausstown, Pennsylvania, causing the water to run red with the blood of the family. The story of ...
During the First Fox War, French troops alongside their Indian allies killed around 1,000 Fox Indians men, women and children in a five-day massacre near the head of the Detroit River. 1,000 (including warriors) [93] 1712 Tzeltal rebellion Chiapas, Mexico A number of Maya communities in the Soconusco region of Chiapas rose in rebellion. +1000 ...
In one of the most notorious incidents of the French and Indian War, Montcalm's Indian allies violated the agreed terms of surrender and attacked the departing British column, which had been deprived of ammunition, as it left the fort. They killed and scalped numerous soldiers and civilians, took as captives women, children, servants, and ...
The Hochstetler massacre was an attack on a farmstead at the Northkill Amish Settlement in September or October 1757, in which three Amish settlers were killed and three others taken into captivity. The attack was one of many assaults by French-allied Native American warriors on Pennsylvania settlements during the French and Indian War.
The St. Francis Raid was an attack in the French and Indian War by Robert Rogers on St. Francis, near the southern shore of the Saint Lawrence River in what was then the French province of Canada, on October 4, 1759. Rogers and about 140 men entered the village, which was reportedly occupied primarily by women, children, and the elderly, early ...
Small French and Native American war bands skirmished with Braddock's men during the march. Braddock Road trace near Fort Necessity, Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, at Fort Duquesne, the French garrison consisted of only about 250 French marines and Canadian militia , with about 640 Native American allies camped outside the fort.