Sunday April 20 – Seven thousand French troops start to recapture Quebec.
Monday April 28 – Murray's 7,714 troops retire to the Citadel, after fighting the Canadiens outside the walls of Quebec. The French prepare to besiege.
Friday May 9 – The belligerents, of each nationality, expect a fleet bringing troops and supplies. An approaching frigate proves to be British.
Thursday May 15 – Two more British war-ships arrive. The British win a naval battle near Quebec.
Saturday September 6 – Amherst arrives at Montreal.
September 6 to September 7 – A council of war, at Montreal, favors capitulation.
Monday September 8 – Amherst's, Murray's, and Haviland's commands, around Montreal, are about 17,000.
The articles of capitulation are agreeable to the French, except that they do not concede "all the honors of war" or "perpetual neutrality of Canadiens."
De Levis threatens to retire to St. Helen's Island and fight to the last; but the Governor orders him to disarm.
Fall of Montreal and surrender of Great Lakes and Ohio Valley French forts to English. Lord Jeffery Amherst starts a "get tough with Indians" policy, including the first biological warfare --smallpox-infested blankets. Amherst granted some Seneca (originally his allies) lands to his officers. Odawa chief Pontiac (and the Delaware Prophet) organize a resistance preaching return to traditional Indian customs. The 1761 draft Proclamation (to English governors), and the Royal Proclamation of 1763 (with a large Indian country in what's now the U.S. Great Lakes/Midwest) were part of the English Crown's attempt to mollify the Indians. Neither proclamation of undisturbed Indian lands was followed by settlers or the Crown.
The British Conquest. General James Murray is appointed first British military governor of Quebec.
Merchant at Quebec City expects no sale of goods shipped in "untill some decisive blow is struck[...]to open[...]a free Commerce with the Inhabitants"[10]
Ursulines' agent in France regrets he's not able to send them assistance they need, but glad British "are making a very humane use of their victory"[11]
^"George I". Official web site of the British monarchy. 30 December 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
^"George III". Official website of the British monarchy. Royal Household. 31 December 2015. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
^John Knox, "1760. January, from the 1st. to the 6th."An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North-America, for the Years 1757, 1758, 1759, and 1760; Vol. II, pg. 238. (See also summary of winter effort to cut thousands of cords of wood, and description of dogs and men hauling wood and water from lower to upper town, plus print of "Newfoundland Dog") Accessed 9 March 2022
^John Knox, "1760. January 16th. to the 20th."An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North-America, for the Years 1757, 1758, 1759, and 1760; Vol. II, pgs. 246-7. (See failure and end of ladder practice; see also that deserter says one dollar "would induce even the Officers[...]of the miserable French army to follow my example," and also that Montrealers are in good spirits though necessities are expensive and troops on short rations) Accessed 10 March 2022
^(John) Dobson, "May 16 and 17 (1760)"Chronological Annals of the War; From Its Beginning to the Present Time (1763), pgs. 126-7. Accessed 7 March 2022 (See details)
^Letter of John Gray (June 9, 1760), Collection Centre d'archives de Québec. (See also daily market established where locals sell soldiers fish, veal, dairy etc.) Accessed 9 March 2022
^"Letter of Father Alain de Launay to the Reverend Mother Depositary of the Ursulines of Quebec" (Paris, April 19, 1760), The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents; Vol. LXXI (1901). http://moses.creighton.edu/kripke/jesuitrelations/relations_71.html (scroll down to Page 29) Accessed 9 March 2022
^Letter of Lord Colville (September 12, 1760), Miscellaneous Correspondence, in Prose and Verse, pg. 531. (See details of this action on July 9) Accessed 7 March 2022
^Letters of Maj. Gen. Amherst (August 26 and September 8, 1760), Miscellaneous Correspondence, in Prose and Verse, pgs. 526-30. (See this source and this source for further details; see also 1760 painting of British taking French ship on upper St. Lawrence) Accessed 7 March 2022
^Letter of Brig. Gen. Murray (August 24, 1760), Miscellaneous Correspondence, in Prose and Verse, pgs. 530-1. Accessed 7 March 2022 (See also Murray warns priests not to meddle, and defenders not to allow "savages" to attack, and also Knox' assessment of relative wealth along upper St. Lawrence)
^General Orders (September 9, 1760), Miscellaneous Correspondence, in Prose and Verse, pg. 567. (See Amherst's refusal to negotiate capitulation because of encouragement of "savages to perpetrate the most horrid and unheard of barbarities in the whole progress of the war;" see also visual allegory of Canada surrendering its crown to King George III; and also Huron-British Treaty of 1760) Accessed 7 March 2022
^Article XLVII, "Articles of Capitulation between[...]Amherst [and] Vaudreuil[....]," The London Gazette Extraordinary (October 6, 1760), 7th pg., Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Accessed 16 April 2022
^John Knox, September 14, 1760An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North-America, for the Years 1757, 1758, 1759, and 1760; Vol. II, pgs. 453-5. (See also his long descriptive tour of entire St. Lawrence River and Gulf) Accessed 14 March 2022
^"Placart de Son Excellence Monsieur le Général Amherst" (French with English translation; September 22, 1760), Documents Relating to the Constitutional History of Canada, 1759-1791 (1907), pgs. 31-3. (See also on next pages "Ordinance Establishing Military Courts") Accessed 16 March 2022
^Thomas Foxcroft, "An Acquisition this" Grateful Reflexions on the signal Appearances of Divine Providence[....] (October 9, 1760), pg. 30. (See also different interpretation of victory as ending "infinite inconveniences" and Benjamin Franklin's argument for keeping Canada) Accessed 8 March 2022
^Robert Rogers, Letter to Capt. Beletere(sic) (November 19, 1760), Journals of Major Robert Rogers (1765), pgs. 217-20. Accessed 9 March 2022 (See also Rogers' description of his encounters with Pontiac)
^Robert Rogers, "I landed" (November-December, 1760), Journals of Major Robert Rogers (1765), pgs. 228-30. Accessed 9 March 2022
^Douglas and Bath, "The Truth of the Matter is" A Letter Addressed to Two Great Men, on the Prospect of Peace; And on the Terms necessary to be insisted upon in the Negociation (1760), pgs. 30-1. Accessed 16 March 2022
^Robert Rogers, canoe routesJournals of Major Robert Rogers (1765), pgs. 206-7. Accessed 9 March 2022
^Nova Scotia Council meeting (March 10, 1760), Nova Scotia Documents; Acadian French, pg. 313. Accessed 9 March 2022