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French And Indian War Dbq Analysis

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The French and Indian war, fought from 1754 to 1763, negatively altered political, economic, and ideological relations between Britain and its American Colonies. Most of these issues can be connected to the large influx of land in North America, nearly everything to the East of the Mississippi River ( as seen in the maps of North America in 1754 and 1763 found in Document A), conquered by Britain and the Colonies by the end of the war. With the colonies rapidly increasing in size, it became more and more difficult for Britain to control them an entire ocean away. North American began to take on a life of its own as in became increasingly apparent to both sides that they had conflicting goals. Further complications ensued with Britain’s attempts to properly …show more content…

The end of the French and Indian war essentially triggered a deadly domino effect between the colonies and the mother country. The new taxes and regulations put on the colonies were largely required by the result of the war, and the colonists now had a new credence for some form of governmental independence and domestic growth. Overall, the colonies began to feel less and less understood by Britain and as though they weren’t being treated fairly. Document D is a soldier’s diary during the French and Indian war, which exemplifies such treatment. He feels that Britain is not supplying the army with enough to keep warm, and is frustrated and confused when the soldiers aren’t released from serving on the previously agreed upon date. Britain’s ideology was then dominated by both annoyance and fear. The annoyance came from the colonists supposed unfair objections to a government that inherently had power over them, and the fear was in losing the North American colonies their nation they had worked so hard to settle. This mixture of emotional tension on both side ripened the circumstances for Revolutionary

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