Answer Close-Reading Questions
Have students write their responses, or use the Close-Reading Questions to guide a discussion.
• How does the author try to grab readers’ attention in the first paragraph? (Author’s Craft)
The author tries to create interest by starting with the idiom that George Washington was “in way over his head.” Readers might be surprised that a person known as a great general and leader in American history was inexperienced and having so much trouble. The first paragraph ends by saying that Washington was about to make a “serious, even tragic, blunder” but doesn’t provide details about what the mistake was, which might make readers interested to know more.
• What was George Washington’s role on May 28, 1754? What blunder did he make that day? (Key Details)
Washington was a lieutenant colonel from the British colony of Virginia. His blunder was letting a diplomatic mission turn into a massacre that helped start the French and Indian War. That day he was leading a group of 40 soldiers through the woods on their way to tell the French to leave Fort Duquesne on what the British considered their land. Washington’s ally, a Seneca chief named Tanaghrisson, wanted the British to attack the French. He led Washington and his men to the French camp. Shots were fired and almost half of the French soldiers were injured or killed. Tanaghrisson murdered the French leader Ensign Coulon de Jumonville with a hatchet, and then the Native warriors killed most of the wounded French soldiers.
• Summarize the section “Complicated Rivalries.” (Summarizing)
In 1754, North America contained several competing groups. Britain had 13 colonies on the east coast, and its settlers were outgrowing their land. France claimed much of the territory to the north and west, including much of what is now Canada, the Great Lakes area, and land along the Mississippi River. Both nations wanted to control more territory. However, many Indigenous peoples already lived in North America and wanted to keep their land. Some sided with the British, while others allied with the French. The six nations of the Haudenosaunee, a group known as the Iroquois Confederacy, tried to use the British and French against each other so they could claim the Ohio Country for themselves.