The French and Indian war not only significantly affected Britain, but also put ideas of different ways to go about things in the heads of the colonist. With…
Jamestown, Virginia was founded in 1609 by the Plymouth group. Their goals were to create a town that had livestock, crops, homes & land for the settlers. At first there was death from the diseases, then when their immune systems built up there become order, governed by Sir Thomas Gates and Sir Thomas Dale. They organized workers, disciplined and sentenced offenders, and gave incentives to workers like ownership of land in trade for work for the company. They also sold stock to adventurers, and also began to grow tobacco to sell and trade.…
-Tensions arose between the French and British settlers of Acadia, who came after the French. -Great Britain gained control of Acadia in 1713 and named in Nova Scotia (“New Scotland” in Latin). -The…
Britain also received Quebec. This land ownership change meant that the French were now gone from the North American continent. The colonists now see that France and Spain have departed and no longer see the need to pay taxes for the British military to protect them from either Spain or France. The British moved into trading posts and the forts left vacant by the French and Spanish.. However, with the French no longer the barrier to the west, the colonists began expanding westward. This caused friction with the Indians and fighting began between colonists and Indians. The fighting required a military force which cost money. Britain now needed more revenue to pay for the troops to fight the Indians for the colonists. To grow this revenue the British would impose several taxes on the colonists, angering them.…
In the 1600s, Great Britain’s North American colonies were mostly white, English, and Protestant. However, in the 1700s this changed. Great Britain’s colonies had become remarkably more diverse. The New World was home to many people who sought religious freedom; therefore new forces of race, ethnicity, and religion affected that society.…
In the early years of colonial settlement in the Americas, the struggle for land ownership between European countries seemed everlasting. One feud between Great Britain and France led to the French and Indian War during the mid 18th century. After the war was over in 1763, the political, economic and ideological relations between Britain and its American colonies were altered. Although altered, not all would agree that they were altered for the worse.…
When the colonists first came to the New World in 1607, they settled near a river, naming the river ‘The James’. James Fort, a colony the people had built near James River, was renamed Jamestown in honor of Kind James 1 of England who was ruling at the time. The men of Jamestown didn’t build decent shelters and didn’t know how to farm, causing starvation for them all. Their luck changed however, once they found and grew tobacco, making them rich and able to feed themselves…
The early 17th century saw the birth of New France as claimed by Samuel de Champlain. The father of New France claimed the land in 1608 by establishing the French territory of Quebec. New France was an integral part of history because their rapid colonization lead to exponential growth for the country. The actions France took towards colonizing and improving claiming New France is what eventually gave way to the birth of Canada. Immigrants who left their lives to explore the New World are integral elements of the Empire’s success. What those immigrants did for a living, their lifestyles, and their relationships with the Natives of North America were all significant aspects of the development and more or less creation of a new colony.…
The British and French in America were in war to each increase their land holdings. The French, called “runners of the wood,” wanted to expand their territories with respect to fur-trading and other French economic interests. The Indians migrated around so much and envied others permanent settlements, so they therefore wanted land to call their own. The British, like both the French and Indians, wanted one land. French, British, and Indians were fighting against each other in regard to the common cause of land holding.…
During the 1750’s the French and the English had coexisted peacefully for almost 100 years. Increase in population and trade caused both France and Britain to seek new territories and markets. To secure any new claim, communities, fortresses, missions and trading posts were usually established. Native Indians were used by both the French and the British to secure their hold on their claims. All of this led to the French & Indian war. The French & Indian war altered the political & economic relations between the Britain & its American colonies in change for the worse.…
British and Spanish Colonization Efforts in North America Prior to 1763 Starting in the late 1400s, and continuing for hundreds of years, Spanish and British colonization efforts have, in many ways, shaped North America. Because they had different goals, the Spanish and British went about their pursuit of the Americas in very different ways, and did not do many things similarly. When the Spanish came to America, they were mainly in search of silver, and gold, but they also wanted to spread their faith - Catholicism. They forced conversion on many Native Americans, believed that they were serving god.…
The removal of the boundary between Upper and Lower Canada would set both the French and English populations to merge together, placing the French as a minority to the ever growing English numbers. With the swaying of social opinions and overall public decisions, it would be better to describe the merge as a British take over, and not the start of co-existence. For the French, this was the sparking of new distaste against the English. Fortunately, it did not lead to a full scale rebellion. This being what the British wanted, and what the French would find at the short end of the stick.…
So the Indians and French told the colonies to go back to their place, but they did not listen. So…
By the middle eighteenth century, Britain and France become two mainly powerful competitors in north America. As shown in document A, England controls the eastern seaboard and Hudson Bay, while France dominates central continent before 1754. The two countries increase tension in competing with each others. Both sides want to grab more fortunes, as a result, the French and Indian War breaks out between the countries. The war spans for seven years; eventually, the French lose its territories in North America. The British take over the land the French used to manage. It seems that the British now win absolute authority in North America, however, even if the British get rid of France as a threat, they still have to deal the relationship with American colonies in politics, economy, and ideology.…
The English had never been or explored any other places except where they’d always lived. So when this new idea of immigration came into the scene the English were and little confused but also interested on what else was out there for them to see. New ideas and ways of living were founded in this time of immigration.…