The French-Indian War
The French-Indian War
The French-Indian War was a major turning point in relations between the Americans and the British. American colonists were generations removed from their British ancestry, and it showed on the battlefield. The Brits and Americans had different tactics and ideals during the war. These differences created bitterness between the Americans and British economically, theologically, and socially following the war due to the fact that the British controlled the colonies and could therefore tax them/tell them what to do. If two countries hate each other, and one of the countries has control of the other one, problems are bound to arise, as they did between America and Britain following the French-Indian War. These problems would eventually lead to the American Revolution.
Economic relationships between Americans and Brits soured following the French-Indian war due to the increased taxes on colonists that resulted from the high cost of the war. According to document F, the tax revenues brought in from the colonies by the Brits was seen as insufficient after the French-Indian War (due to the “vast increase in territory and population” as seen in document A), and the British