The Repercussions Of War: The French And Indian War

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The Repercussions of War The French and Indian war resulted in growing tension between the British and the colonists. England began imposing taxes on the colonists due to the debt caused by the war. The effects of the French and Indian war altered the relationship between England and its colonies through disputes over land and control of colonial economics by taxation. With the growing population in the colonies, many hoped to move westward, yet were restricted by the mother country. The Proclamation of 1763 prevented the westward movement beyond the Appalachian Mountains, which quickly outraged the colonists. The Americans began the war with this land and acquired it through the war, yet they were held back from experiencing its bounty.…show more content…
The Ohio River valley was one of the greatest trading posts. Most of the French economy depended on that post. They had won these resources, this abundant land, yet they could not use it. The tension sparked with the proclamation, but it flared and burned with ferocity when the Quebec Act passed. To have such an abundance of land and natural resources restricted was one concept, but to have it returned to the enemy was another concept all its own. The Ohio River valley was a treasure, a source from which the colonial economy could have flourished and multiplied. The hatred burned deep because it was not given up by colonial authority, but the royal crown. Colonial economy was loosely by Britain through Mercantilism before the French and Indian war, but after, taxes ravaged colonial purses. The Quartering Act also ravaged the American purses because Americans now had to pay and support British military in the colonies. On one hand population has the colonies bursting due to the Proclamation of 1763, and on the other, the English military is now taking up more space. All these forces harmed the colonists, economically and with
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