French And Indian War Analysis

1458 Words3 Pages

Mid-Term

Julie Goane

Causes Of the Revolution: French and Indian War

Hostility broke out between the English and the french settlers in the 1750's. Both the English and the french thought that they were in titled to the land in the Ohio river valley which is where present day Pittsburgh Pennsylvania is now. The English migrated again from the westward colonies and the French migrated south from Canada and east from the Great Lakes area. In 1754 the English set out for Fort Duquesne under the command of George Washington, where they hoped to defeat the French and have the rights to the land. As a result of the British defeating the French, the French people lost all their possessions including Canada. Also as repayment for the Spain's …show more content…

After the war the English accumulated a great amount of debt. The Parliament thought of a way to help fix them financially. They issued the Stamp Act of 1765 which taxed every form of written documentation. The British were not okay with it and began to boycott it and even attacked British tax collectors. The Parliament repealed the Stamp Act and replaced it with the Declaratory Act which still allowed them to tax the people. The problems with the taxes resulted into much bigger problems 10 years later down the road, known as the American Revolution. The French and Indian war is American exceptionalism because the British and the French both thought that they were entitled to that land. Instead of working it out, it resulted in a war. In our society today we have learned from this, not that we don’t go to war over stuff anymore, but better documentation has helped us resolve problems and to better avoid them. In the case of the French and Indian war the the importance of resources and the pursuit of resources is very important because if the French or the English had proper documentation of the …show more content…

They made an agreement to work for a Virginia company and in return the Virginia company would pay for their voyage over to the colony. Thirty-five of the Pilgrims were members of the radical English Separatist Church, who traveled to America to escape the Church of England that they found to be corrupt. They had been separated from King James's Church and those who were not apart of the kings church were sent to jail. The Separatist wanted to worship freely and did not want to be thrown into jail for not being apart of the Kings Church. They would not be forced to be apart of it, so in 1607 and 1608 they fled to the Netherlands where the settled in Amsterdam and a town called Leiden where the separatist remained for the next ten years. After staying in the Netherlands for about a decade they decided to come to America where they could still worship freely not under the king and they could also still have their English Heritage and English Language. Coming to America would mean greater economic opportunity for them, so they aboarded the Mayflower and set sail to the new world. During the voyage over to the New World The Mayflower was blown off of it's course by sets of storms at sea and did not reach the land that they intended to, they ended up reaching what is known as present day Cape Cod. In December

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