"General Wolfe Climbing the heights of Abraham on
the Morning of the Battle of Quebec”. Ink and Watercolour by R. Caton Woodville
(1906)
The Battle of
Quebec, alternatively known as the Battle of the Plains of Abraham commenced on
September 13th 1759. It was part of the Seven Years War fought between the
empires of France and Britain on North American soil.
Led by James
Wolfe, who at 32 was the youngest general in the British Army, the British
scored a decisive victory. The battle is notable for many reasons including the
fact that both commanding generals of the opposing armies, Wolfe and the French
Louis-Joseph, Marquis de Montcalm, died on the first day of fighting.
The British
victory, part of what became the Annus
Mirabilis, not only secured Quebec, it consolidated Britain’s domination of
the area that later became the nation of Canada.
For some
however, Wolfe’s death may not have been merely the demise of a young and
talented general, but with hindsight, the loss of someone who would have had
the wits and the guile to have outmanoeuvred the resourceful George Washington
during his rebellion against the British crown in the colony of America.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2018)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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