Canada's History

The Plains of Abraham: Battlefiel­d 1759 and 1760 by Hélène Quimper, translated by Katherine Hastings Baraka Books, 148 pages, $24.95

- — M.C. Reid

Looking back with the benefit of twenty-first century hindsight, it seems inevitable that New France would have fallen, sooner or later. The French faced insurmount­able problems of distance and population.

Its colonies centred around Quebec, Acadia, and Louisiana were too far apart to easily support or protect each other. And, while New France had forged alliances with several Indigenous nations, it was still terribly outnumbere­d: Its total combined population of about sixty-nine thousand French settlers paled in comparison to the more than 1.2 million British colonists living in the Thirteen Colonies. The French settlers were neither supported nor appreciate­d by French King Louis XV and his court.

Years of battles and skirmishes between the forces of France and Britain culminated in the 1759 siege of Quebec. The British spent the summer trying, and failing, to take the crown jewel of New France. Only a last- ditch stealth mission — and the surprise appearance of the British army on the Plains of Abraham outside the fortificat­ions of Quebec — managed to turn the tide of battle against the French.

With The Plains of Abraham: Battlefiel­d 1759 and 1760, the National Battlefiel­ds Commission, a federalgov­ernment agency, has created a detailed and well-illustrate­d guide to this turning point in world history. Created in collaborat­ion with historian Hélène Quimper, The Plains of

Abraham is a great starting point for readers wishing to know more about a crucial battle that decided the fate of eighteenth-century North America.

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