How Did The French And Indian War Affect Political Relations

476 Words2 Pages

The French And Indian war was an extremely crucial event in America’s history. Which changed economic, political and ideological relations between America and Great Britain forever. It changed the political relations because Britain was forced to heavily tax the colonists due to its own economic struggles, and imposes regulations on the colonist’s lives. The colonist’s refused to sit and take these things. They boycotted and retaliated. This further damaged their economic relations with the British. Ideally the war brought up many feelings of resentment towards the British. After the French and Indian war, the French no longer had any major piece of the new world land. England dominated The New World land. This inevitably led to the Proclamation Line of 1763, which took quite a toll on the political relationship between Great Britain and its colonies. The Proclamation Line was an attempt for Britain to stop further conflicts, but the colonists only viewed this as an obstacle to their path to being free. Britain had also abandoned its policy on salutary neglect. After the French and Indian war Britain was left with a large sum of debt that they had acquired during the war over the past several years. They began to strictly regulate trade and impose a tax on almost everything. This was called the Stamp Act. …show more content…

The Stamp Act was the coal, which fueled the fires inside the colonists. Including Benjamin Franklin who wanted these taxes repealed as soon as possible. The colonists began to boycott as a way of protesting the taxation. The boycotts cut at the very thing string, which were the economic relations between America and Great Britain greatly damaging them once

Open Document