The 1774-1794 War (American Revolutionary War)
It is about history's biggest lie generated. So the whites fought amongst themselves for ownership of this land? Read the Seven Fires Prophecy and you'll learn otherwise. What occurred between 1774-1794, was a white rebellion against the mighty Native American who held the whites along the eastern coast of North America, under their grip. The mighty Native American refused to allow the whites to expand further westward. However, they knew from prophecy what would eventually occur. Pontiac may have been alive in the 1770s while the early stages of this rebellion was occurring. White historians claim Pontiac was assassinated in 1769 but that could be a deliberate misconception to rob Pontiac of his role in this historic event, he may have organized. We should really refer to this 1774-1794 War, as Pontiac's War.
The Gauntlet Grounds In 1774, Lord Dunmore went and got brave and invaded the Kentucky (the Gauntlet Grounds) lands of the Anishinabe Nation. As mentioned, the Anishinabe people knew what their future foretold. Anishinabe ogimak had years earlier cleared the Kentucky region of its human population in order to entice the whites into invading that region so they could retaliate. The whites early on sneaked their way into the Kentucky region because of its lack of a human population. They quickly learned that it was extremely dangerous. So in the early going the number of whites who sneaked their way into the Kentucky region was very low. By 1770, the whites living in eastern Kentucky numbered close to 15,000. That changed when Lord Dunmore led a force of white soldiers into the Gauntlet Grounds. Lord Dunmore and his white soldiers, may have defeated the Anishinabe soldiers at the Battle of Point Pleasant in 1774, but the mass killings of illegal white settlers would commence soon afterwards. Between 1774-1794, 10,000s of illegal white settlers were killed by enraged Anishinabe soldiers in the Gauntlet Grounds.
Anishinabe soldiers, probably led by Pontiac, singled out the New England region to first launch their military onslaughts. A series of battles were fought for control of the largest white cities in the New England region including Boston, and also down in New York and Philadelphia. That is how determined Anishinabe ogimak were at defending their land. They repeatedly ordered their brave soldiers to assault the white fortified cities of Boston, New York, and Philadelphia, and also those white cities in Quebec, between 1775 and 1779. The whites used the Atlantic to sail to Europe for food supplies and the supplies of weapons of war, and to recruit 10,000s of white soldiers, particularly from Germany. The whites also launched many plague warfare assaults on the Anishinabe people and their Indian and black allies. During the time period between 1775 and 1780, the whites were hard pressed to confine themselves close to their fortified settlements in the New England region. In the south, the war there actually started around the same time as in the New England region but it didn't intensify until the whites started to dominate the Anishinabe soldiers in the New England region. That be around 1779, or around the time Pontiac may have really been assassinated.
After 1779, the whites intensified their military campaigns in the south. In the southern areas of the lands controlled by the Anishinabe Nation, a great many blacks were among the Anishinabe Army there, as well as a great many other Indian peoples. The whites had started to dominate them in the south by the very early 1780s. By 1782, the whites had enough of the war and requested a peace but Anishinabe ogimak knew they were losing and were determined to defend their land. A temporary truce followed but lasted only a short while. During the time period between 1762-1800, Anishinabe ogimak ordered their soldiers to gather 100,000s of Anishinabe people, other Indian peoples, and blacks to force their way out into the Caribbean. They early on toppled Cuba, then commenced to force their way onto the many islands that now make up the Bahamas. From there, they invaded the island of Hispaniola then South America. They also forced their way into Mexico and Central America. The Indians and blacks were the real Pirates of the Caribbean. In Central America, the blacks are known as the Garifuna. They are also known as the black Caribs and Maroons. In Mexico (they primarily came down to Mexico from the Texas region in the 19th century, while some came from the Caribbean Islands), they live primarily along the west coast of Mexico known as Costa Chica. They number over 1 million in Mexico. In the rest of Central America, including Panama, they number close to 1.5 million. A large number of Indians and blacks from the Caribbean Islands, especially the Lessor Antilles, fled to Central America after the whites started to regain control of those Caribbean Islands.
November 1782 Cease-Fire
After 1782, the whites knew they were dominating the Anishinabe Nation and launched more military campaigns and plague warfare assaults on them. After the September 11, 1782 Second Siege of Fort Henry, Anishinabe ogimak were clearly war weary as were the whites. An agreement was reached which commenced a temporary cease-fire. The whites knew they had now brought all of North America under their control but it would take a long time before actually doing so. The whites had sent 10,000s of white soldiers or even more, from Europe to North America, to fight in this war. That is not including the 100,000s of white soldiers born in North America who also fought in this war. Boston, New York City, Quebec, and Philadelphia each had 10,000s of soldiers to defend their settlements. Pehaps as many as 50,000 at some of those white cities. Total number of Anishinabe soldiers and their allies, was not even close to 100,000, yet they bravely fought to defend their beloved land. After 1782, the whites knew from instinct that they only needed to send small forces of white soldiers to the domain of the Anishinabe Nation, to fight them. The Anishinabe Nation had been so decimated by the war, their population had dramatically declined. We must also realize that a great many Anishinabe soldiers had forced their way out to the islands in the Caribbean and South America, as well as towards the Montana region and up to the Beaufort Sea, which is near the Arctic Ocean, at the same time. White leaders sat back and relaxed while battles occurred from time to time in North America. They also spied on the Anishinabe people. That led to the end of this long war.
The war would resume soon after the cease-fire took effect. It was the whites who initiated the continuation of this long war. In 1794, the last battle of this war was fought. The Anishinabe Nation was defeated in the 1794 Battle of Fallen Timbers. After losing the battle, Anishinabe ogimak bravely met with the extremely corrupted whites and commenced to cede their lands to them. Earlier in the 18th century, the Anishinabe people of the Great Lakes region had forced their way out onto the plains of Canada and the United States. They merged with the earlier diaspora of Anishinabek who invaded the Montana region around 900 to 1,000 years ago, in probably the 1750s. The Anishinabe people of the Montana region were civilized. After the Great Lakes Anishinabek reached the Montana region, they told their kinfolk in the Montana region about the horrible plight the eastern Anishinabek were going through. It led the Montana Anishinabek to strongly fortify their civilized settlements because they knew the whites were going to show up in their land soon.
In the early 1770s, or around the time of the 1774-1794 War, an Anishinabe ogima named Matonabbee, led 1,000s of brave Anishinabe soldiers from the northeastern part of what is now Manitoba, up to the Beaufort Sea, and into what is now the Nunavut region of Canada. They launched military campaigns against the Inuit Indians to their north and the Dene Indians to their west and northwest. By the early 1770s, the Anishinabe people were established in the McKenzie River Delta region. The whites soon showed up. They commenced to form alliances with the Dene Indians and Inuit Indians, which greatly enraged Anishinabe ogimak. In 1780, the whites commenced to launch devastating plague warfare assaults on the Anishinabe people, the Dene people, and the Inuit people. In two years they had murdered 100,000s of Indians from probably eastern Alaska to the western shores of Hudson Bay, using plague warfare. White historians claim that 9 out of every 10 Indians were murdered by the use of plague warfare, between 1780 and 1782. The Chipewyan Indians are really Anishinabek who absorbed a great many Dene people as well as Inuit people. Back in the Montana region, the Anishinabe people of western Montana (the Flathead Indians are really Anishinabek who absorbed a great many Salishan Indians), were probably still dominating the native Indians of the northern California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia region.
In the Great Basin region (that includes the Arizona and California desert), there is evidence of an inland flood covering much of that region. That could indicate that an Anishinabe conquest over the Indians of the Great Basin region only recently occurred during the mid or late 18th century. The Anishinabe people of the Great Basin region are the Shoshone. In the late 18th century and early 19th century, Anishinabe soldiers forced their way down into Mexico and brought Mexico under their control by 1820. New Mexico was also brought under their control during the same time period. During the early 19th century, Anishinabe soldiers in the Great Basin region, commenced to launch military campaigns against the whites who controlled southern California. They were obviously extremely upset about having to cross the desert of southern California but they did. They were never capable of subjugating southern California, west of the mountainous areas of southern California. They possibly brought the Indians and whites of central and western California near the Pacific, under their control. Below is a list of the major military battles fought in this war.
Northern Anishinabe Military Campaigns
Ohio Battles
Battle of Point Pleasant
Siege of Fort Henry
Siege of Fort Laurens
Battle of Vincennes
Colonel Bowman's Defeat
Battle of St. Louis
Balme's Defeat
Louchry's Defeat
Gnadenhutten Massacre
Crawford's Defeat
Second Battle of Piqua
Second Siege of Fort Henry
Harmar's First Defeat
Harmar's Second Defeat
St. Clairs Defeat
Siege of Fort Recovery
Battle of Fallen Timbers
Siege of Boston Battles of Concord and Lexington
Siege of Boston
Battle of Bunker Hill
Battle of Falmouth
Siege of Quebec
Siege of Quebec
Siege of Fort Cumberland
Battle of Saint Pierre
Battle of the Cedars
Battle of Trois Rivieres
Battle of Valcour Island
Siege of Fort Ticonderoga
First Battle of Fort Ticonderoga
Second Battle of Fort Ticonderoga
Battle of Hubbardton
Battle of Fort Anne
Battles of Fort Stanwix and Oriskany
Battle of Bennington
Battle of Saratoga
Carleton's Raid
Cherry Valley Massacre
Royalton Raid
Battle of Johnstown
Siege of New York City
First Battle of New York City
Second Battle of New York City
Third Battle of New York City
Fourth Battle of New York City
Fifth Battle of New York City
Battle of Bound Brook
Battle of Ridgefield
Battle of Shorthills
Battle of Staten Island
Battle of Fort Clinton
Battle of Rhode Island
Baylor's Massacre
Battle of Paulus Hook
Battle of Young's House
Battle of Connecticut Farms
Battle of Springfield
Battle of Groton Heights
Siege of Philadelphia
First Battle of Trenton
Second Battle of Trenton
Battle of Princeton
Battle of Millstone
Battle of Cooch's Bridge
Battle of Brandywine
Battle of the Clouds
Battle of Paoli
Battle of Germantown
Battle of Red Bank
Battle of White Marsh
Battle of Matson's Ford
Battle of Quinton's Bridge
Battle of Crooked Billet
Battle of Barren Hill
Battle of Monmouth
Wyoming Massacre
Little Egg Harbor Massacre
Southern Anishinabe Military Campaigns
Siege of Virginia
Gunpowder Incident
Battle of Kemps Landing
Battle of Great Bridge
Battle of Norfolk
Siege of the Carolina's
Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge
Battle of the Rice Boats
Battle of Sullivan's Island
Anishinabe Conquest of the Southern English Colonies
After the battle at Sullivan’s Island, the southern English Colonies were brought under the control of the Southern Anishinabe Confederation and their Indian allies and their black allies. For the next two years the English had no choice but to concentrate on defending their northern colonies against the mighty northern Anishinabek, who were devastating the northern English population. Pontiac must have felt extremely pleased after his brave soldiers brought the southern English colonies under Indian control! I am not certain when the blacks commenced to side with the southern Anishinabek in large numbers, and when the greatest number of black casualties occurred during this war, but by July 1, 1776 a new way of life emerged in the former southern English colonies. Historians claim that more than 100,000 blacks became a casualty of this war, which hints at the whites committing a horrific crime on their black citizens, either before the southern English colonies fell to the Southern Anishinabe Confederation, during the two years of Anishinabe domination, or after the English resumed the war to regain control of their southern colonies. Anyway, it is very likely that 10,000s of southern blacks, fled to the southern Anishinabek seeking asylum around the 1776 time period. The southern Anishinabek allowed the blacks to build and live in their own black villages in the south, as long as they allied with them against the English whites, which the English gave them every reason to.
Unfortunately, it was the blacks who endured the more casualties in this war. However, those blacks who joined with the Southern Anishinabe Confederation got even with the whites on the battlefields and by capturing and enslaving large numbers of whites. Since the English were now concentrating on defending their northern colonies, it likely led to many of the brave soldiers of the Southern Anishinabe Confederation, heading up to the north to militarily support the Northern Anishinabe Confederations. While the Southern Anishinabe Confederation ruled the southern English colonies from mid 1776 to mid 1778, the huge numbers of southern whites and blacks who fled to the larger fortified white southern cities had no choice but to tough it out. A great many died from starvation and diseases during those two years. The population of the southern English colonies at the time of this military event (1776) was nearly 1,000,000, with about half being black. They obviously stocked up on necessary food supplies, especially beans which they knew would last for up to 10 years or longer. However, they may have looked upon their fellow black citizens as being a burden to their cause and shared little of their food with them. That is possibly why so many blacks were killed during this war. Most southern blacks obviously chose to remain with the southern white English. It was an action they definitely regretted afterwards. Though this was more of a siege of the southern English Colonies, it can be rightfully called a conquest, excepting in the Virginia region.
Savannah Campaign
Battle of Alligator Bridge
Capture of Savannah
Battle of Beaufort
Battle of Kettle Creek
Battle of Brier Creek
Siege of Savannah
Siege of Augusta
Siege of the Carolina's
Battle of Stono Ferry
Siege of Charleston
Battle of Lenud's Ferry
Waxhaw Massacre
Battle of Ramsour's Mill
Battle of Rocky Mount
Battle of Hanging Rock
Battle of Camden
Battle of Fishing Creek
Battle of Musgrove Mill
Battle of Kings Mountain
Battle of Blackstock's Farm
Battle of Cowpens
Battle of Cowan's Ford
Battle of Haw River
Battle of Wetzell's Mill
Battle of Guilford Court House
Battle of Hobkirks-hill
Siege of Fort Motte
Siege of Virginia
Battle of Blanford
Battle of Spencer's Ordinary
Battle of Green Spring
Siege of Yorktown
Kentucky Battles
Siege of Boonesborough
Battle of Little Mountain
Second Siege of Fort Ninety Six
Long Run Massacre
Battle of Blue Lick's