The historically belligerent countries of France and Britain throughout much of the American conquest, created an intense climate of imperialism. A race triggered via dominance and political vengeance between the two kingdoms, the American colonies suffered from great internal struggles modeled in the shadow of the violent and volatile inputs of these great powers. Stemming from both, core ideologies like reason, sound governmental structure through democratic pathways, revolutionary freedoms for individuals, economic balance, religion, industrial technology advancements, and complex trade made headway in what the young United States would deem as national identity. The struggle to find this identity, along with who of the great European powers …show more content…
As the French-Indian alliance assaulted the colonies in response to skirmishes along the undefined borders; the initial “local affair” soon waged into an international conflict once the French, Austrian, and Swedish alliance bent on “crushing the rising power of Frederick the Great, king of Prussia” (USHistory.org) found the British-funded Prussian invasion of Saxony, ally of Austria (Hist,10), as an excuse to officiate the “Seven Years War”, also known as the “French and Indian War”. However, this realignment of European power brought not only support to the British troops in America, but staggering debt expected to be funded by the colonies as well. Notion not found favorable among the already irritated colonists; the orders placed by English secretary of state, William Pitt, created animosity amongst the English camp, as Brinkley evidences with the understandable, yet abusive troop housing, impressments, and the unpaid collection of resources from local farmers. All relaxed due to ‘threats to halt war effort’ because of them (86-87). The 1763 “Peace of Paris” finally gave Britain large concessions of land and maritime superiority, leaving France as much bitter as ready to intervene in the American Revolution
During the United States’ infancy, many French influences began to affect American policies. France colonized the middle of the United states from Newfoundland to the Rocky Mountains to New Orleans. This vast land colony was lost after the peace treaty following the Seven Years War. Forced to cede their American lands to the English and Spanish, France never forgot their prized possession. Choiseul’s plan to recover the lands started with the unrest in America before the American Revolution, “In 1766, Choiseul ordered Edmé Genet to send a naval officer-turned-spy— Sieur Pontleroy— to America to evaluate colonist dissatisfaction and determine whether French arms and money might help incite rebellion.”
Between 1763 – 1776, the relationship between the American colonists and the British changed drastically, as tensions rose dramatically. Economic Impact The British had depleted all financial resources to defeat the French during the French and Indian War, “she [Great Britain] was left with a debt of £137 million, over half of the budget going towards interest payments, and a garrison force in America, which cost £384,000 a year to maintain.” Footnote: Francis D. Cogliano, Revolutionary America, 1763-1815: A Political History, (London: Routledge, 2000), 27.
The Seven Years’ War signified the greatest reflection of European to American hostilities. While Spain and France fought fiercely against the British on the continent and in the seas, in British North America the war clashed as France and its indigenous allies laid claim to the Ohio Territory . This would lead the colonists to refer to the conflict as the French and Indian War, named after the combatants the Colonial British faced . This conflict would resolve in favor of the British, and simultaneously would set the scene for French involvement in the American race for independence in 1776. While war shaped the foundations of colonial development it also proved to be a key in colonial
Sentimental Influence Fighting for freedom is what got us here today! Back then in the 1770’s America wanted force, but wanted proper application of force. Colonist wanted separation from England since their people were not being treated right. The colonists suffer when British invade the colonies, welcoming themselves into colonists’ homes, along with inequality government wise.
The American colonies encountered a challenge during the American Revolution that resulted in a need for international support and diplomacy. America required an alliance with France in order to have a chance to defeat the British Empire. After France’s loss to its enemy, England during the Seven Years War and the American’s victory in the Battle of Saratoga, they now have a motive to support America’s fight for independence. In 1778, the French decided to join the Americans to help weaken the British’s Empire and to gain access to trading posts of the New World that they lost during the French and Indian War. Fortuneatly, the French were able to assist the American’s in holding off some British navy from the battles of the American Revolution.
Impact of the French and Indian War on American Colonies The French and Indian War, also referred to as the Seven Year’s War, was fought between Great Britain and the colonist and the French and many Native tribes during the Mid-18th century. Many disagreements between the two empires led to global conflict, which had a major impact on the social, political, and economic aspects of colonial society. The French and Indian War created an opportunity for global expansion and control of colonial America. France dominated the beginning of the war, but in 1757 Great Britain imposed their will upon France in a very decisive and costly battle.
The Revolutionary War gave reason for America’s unification, but the diversity of America made it impossible for one unified culture to emerge. By 1700, the New England and Chesapeake colonies had evolved into two distinct societies contrary to their predominantly English populations, but these differences did not happen quickly. Rather, they were the result of the colonists’ intentions during colonization, their distinct environments, and their different social and political inequalities. The New England and Chesapeake colonies began to develop into two distinct societies from their very beginnings due to the intentions of their respective colonists during colonization.
After the end of the Seven Years’ War, the French no longer held a threat in America causing the colonies to no longer need to rely on Britain. However, Britain saw this as a time to get repayment for the protection it had already provided during that conflict. The new taxes became overbearing and the breaking point for many American Colonist; war broke out.
Britain's inability to establish authority over her colonies after the 7 Years War led the colonist to feel they were independent from British rule. When British government tried to reinstate British laws over the colonies, many citizens felt that it wasn’t fair. Many small events sparked multiple major causes that led America to want separate from Great Britain. Among those causes were protection of religious freedom, the taxes that resulted because of the French and Indian War, and Salutary Neglect. These causes led the Americans to victory after they entered the war because they understood the consequences if they didn’t win.
The five imperial wars greatly impacted everyone who participated. Moreover, the French and Indian War caused the thirteen colonies to become closer politically and culturally. In fact, it brought English colonists together as Americans for the first time and allowed them to realize the true intentions of the British Empire. English American settlement was a melting pot of “self-reliant individual landholders, fiercely independent in pursuit of their own interest” (American Yawp, chp.4). They had previously developed their own political institutions, each colony creating their own assembly in which carried out the same duties that Britain exercised such as taxation, managing revenue, and granting salaries to royal officials.
Mr. Parsifal October , 2017 Imperialism in the U.S. Imperialism was something that had been experience by Navajo people in the 1800’s. having lost everything and forced to travel a treacherous 300 mile journey called “The Long Walk”. The Navajo Long Walk was a time of great suffering and sorrow for the Navajo people, Becoming victims instead of warriors.
One of the unique challenges of studying history is that there is never a single right way to interpret the events of the past. Oftentimes, it is difficult to compile a disparate range of people and places into a single theme. Likewise, in the early days of colonial america, there was no single narrative that could describe the vast differences in the society, behavior, and beliefs of early American settlers. However, as America continued to grow and expand, a common narrative developed around the dreams of settling a new land, and the ways in which this was accomplished. All of this shaped a collective identity that came to revolve around a tool that unexpectedly shaped the course of history: the axe.
And lastly the desire for a new frontier to settle in order to maintain America’s identity and prosperity. All three of the examples: economically, politically/military, and culturally can simply explain why and how America became an imperialist nation in the late
Soon after the Seven Years’ War, the British and the colonists learned that victory came with a rather expensive price (Kennedy, Cohen, & Bailey, 2010). Great Britain tightened its grip on the colonies in North America, expecting colonists to pay for their financial struggles. In order to make colonists pay for the war, Great Britain reminded the North American colonies who had authority by controlling the colonists to submit to various ordinances ratified by British Parliament. This action only showed that arrogance leads to rebellion socially, economically, and politically. Socially, a lack of communication between Great Britain and the North American colonies was to blame for the Revolutionary War.
Relations between the British and colonial Americans during the French and Indian War were hostile to say the least, and in this essay I will be arguing how economic, ideological, and political struggles defined the hostility between the two nations. It’s widely known that the Intolerable Acts, and a number of other factors led to hostile relations between the British and Americans, however there were definitely other factors including discrimination, taxation, and of course, wars. In this case, the French and Indian war will be solely discussed. In a 1763 British Council Order, an economic trial was discussed. In the document, it is cited that the regulation of American trade with the British was “of immediate necessity”.