The Political changes and advancements made both during and after the Seven Years War were astonishing. During the War the British Motherland supplied the American Front with many troops, this was indeed the deciding factor in the victory over the French, however it also gave the colonists their first taste of just how different the Motherland viewed the colonists politically as compared to its natural citizens. As shown in document D, the colonial forces realized that the supplies that were desperately needed for the coming winter may never arrive, and that it was now apparent to the colonial soldiers that they were no better to the British soldiers than a slave is to its master. Those supplies, more often than not, never arrived to the colonial forces camps; this was not out of lack of supplies for everyone though, because the British forces received numerous supplies as needed. The colonists did not receive these provisions due to the lack of belief by the British war council that the colonists would put them to efficient use. Though there was much dispute over who played the larger role in the victory over the French, the war was still won by the British and its colonies and there was much gained by this momentous occasion.
The geographical area gained by the British in the Treaty of Paris in 1763 gave the British a dominance of the continent both politically and geographically. The length of the British government’s