Queen Anne’s War And Its Impact On Deerfield

Details

Author
Charlene Galenski, Kathleen Klaes, Lynne Manring
Topic/Subject Area
Military, Wars, Battles; Native American
Historical Era
Colonial settlement, 1620–1762
Grade Level
Elementary (K–5), Middle School (6–8)
Creation Date
2000
Last Revision Date
2024

About This Lesson

Summary and Objective

Unit Central Question:

How did the cultural characteristics, beliefs, attitudes, behaviors, and economic conditions of the French, English, and Indians contribute to the growth of inter-group hostilities, fighting, and attacks in the late 17th and early 18th centuries?

Key Content Ideas Taught in this Lesson and Teacher Background

For more information, read:
Teacher Background essay Queen Anne’s War

Intended Learning Outcomes:

Understandings

Students will understand that:

  1. the nature and details (the “who, where, what, when, why, and how”) of The War of Spanish Succession (Queen Anne’s War).
  2. the ways this European war affected events in North America and in Deerfield.
  3. that rather than establish settlements and farms like the English, French men used the land to become trappers and traders, and they established business relationships with the Indians. They also served as soldiers and priests on the land they called New France. 
  4. that a variety of factors influenced the weakening and displacement of the Pocumtucks. These factors included death by diseases such as measles and smallpox, attacks by the Mohawks, and English acquisition of Pocumtuck lands.
  5. why the Pocumtucks no longer had access to their land and what happened to them as a result.
Skills

Students will:

  1. learn to do research on the internet using search engines.

Materials & Resources

Primary and Secondary Sources:
  1. Web sites found using relevant key words (e.g. Queen Anne’s War; War of Spanish Succession; Canada History; Habitant; New France; Virtual Museum of New France.)
  2. Excerpts about Queen Annes War from History of Deerfield, Vol. 1, by George Sheldon.
Other:
  1. Nuthatch’s Dilemma
  2. Student notebooks
  3. Queen Anne’s War graphic organizers: Part 1 and Part 2

Teaching Plan

In Preparation for Teaching
  1. Copy and distribute key words for web site research, or copy materials from web sites (if students do not have access to computers), the excerpt from The History of Deerfield, Nuthatch’s Dilemma and the Queen Anne’s War Graphic Organizers: Part 1 and Part 2
Activities

Activity 1Queen Anne’s War and life in New France

  1. Ask students to research Queen Anne’s War and life in New France on the web using the key words listed on the materials list and the excerpt from the History of Deerfield. They should take notes on who, where, what, when, why and how. They should also take note of how it relates to New England and especially Deerfield. Discuss.
  2. Work with the class to complete the graphic organizer to help students develop the understandings listed in Intended Learning Outcomes (understandings), above.

Activity 2Nuthatch’s Dilemma

  1. Distribute Nuthatch’s Dilemma. Have students read it and answer the following questions:
    • What do you do on Sundays (the Sabbath)? In the early 18th C. (early 1700s), why might it be considered wrong to travel, work, or shoot a gun on Sunday?
    • Was it fair to fine the Pocumtucks for traveling on the Sabbath or for getting drunk? Why? What is wrong with getting drunk?
    • What does Queen Anne’s War have to do with Nuthatch?
    • Do you know what beliefs Nuthatch was talking about taking on? Should she do it? Why or why not?
    • Rather than leave the area, what else might the Pocumtucks have done? What might have happened in each case?
  2. Ask students to write a letter to Nuthatch giving her advice about her dilemmas.
Assessment

Use students’ graphic organizer and advice letters to Nuthatch to assess the degree to which students achieved the intended learning outcomes for this lesson.