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From Comfort to Discontent

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Title: From Comfort to Discontent


1
From Comfort to Discontent
An overview of the changing relationship between
Great Britain and its American Colonies in the
years before and just after the French and Indian
War.
2
The French and Indian War
  • As colonies grew, settlers began to dream of
    moving across the Appalachian Mts. And into the
    Ohio Valley.
  • Both Britain and France claimed this area.
  • In 1754, the French built a Fort (Duquesne)
    (doo-KANE) where the city of Pittsburgh stands
    today.
  • News of the Ft. alarmed the governor of
    Virginia.

3
  • The governor ordered a small force of Virginia
    militia to drive out the French.
  • To head the militia, the governor chose a
    22-year-old volunteer named George Washington.
  • Near the Fort, Washington and his 150 men came
    across a French scouting party camped in the
    woods. Washington ordered his men to open fire -
    It was an easy victory for the British. - This
    was the first battle of the war.

4
  • The war began badly for Britain in the colonies
  • In 1755 - a force of 800 troops led by General
    Braddock arrived in Virginia to drive the French
    out. His force and 600 militia men marched toward
    the fort.
  • As the troops marched, Washington warned Braddock
    that the bright red uniforms would make them easy
    targets for the French and the Indians. He
    ignored the warning.
  • As they neared the Fort - a shower of bullets
    rained on them and Braddock was killed. The
    British were defeated badly - lost two thirds of
    their men.

5
  • The tide of battle shifted to Britain when James
    Wolfe was sent to lead the assault on Canada.
  • In 1759 Wolfe arrived in America determined to
    cut up New France by the roots.
  • Wolfe led the attack on Quebec. Britain and
    Wolfe defeated the French - Wolfe was killed.
  • The fall of Quebec was just one of many British
    victories in 1759, a year the British called
    the wonderful year.
  • The French and Indian war dragged on for three
    more years and ended with the Treaty of Paris in
    1763.

6
Road to a Revolution
7
Before the French and Indian War
  • 1660 - King Charles II became King and enacted
    the Navigation Acts to control colonial trade.
  • Navigation Acts said
  • (1) Only export primary crops and raw materials
    to England,
  • (2) Import all manufactured goods from England
    alone,
  • (3) All goods flowing into or out of the
    colonies had be carried by English or colonial
    ships.
  • By 1750 each of the 13 colonies had its own
    elected assembly which shared power with a
    governor (usually appointed by the King) many
    were incompetent.

8
Before the French and Indian War
  • Over the years, colonial assemblies found that
    they could use their power to control most
    governors.
  • By 1750, the colonists were so accustomed to
    running their own affairs that they looked on
    instructions from the King as guidelines set down
    for the governor.

9
After the French and Indian War
  • The Treaty of Paris of 1763 officially ended the
    French and Indian War. France gave up its claim
    to both Canada and the Mississippi River Valley.
  • King George III took control just as the war came
    to an end.
  • Great Britain emerged as the most powerful nation
    in the world.
  • Native Americans remained loyal to France and
    resented the colonist who they feared would
    trickle over the Appalachians into more of their
    land.

10
After the French and Indian War
  • In 1763 an Ottawa chief named Pontiac organized
    an attack on the British fort of Detroit. At the
    same time several other tribes captured most of
    the British outposts in the Ohio Valley.
  • The unrest in the Ohio valley forced Britain to
    issue a proclamation that set the area aside as
    an Indian reservation.
  • The Proclamation of 1763 infuriated colonists.
  • - Land-hungry settlers had helped fight the
    French who had for so long blocked their
    expansion westward.
  • - After helping to win the war, they were now
    being denied the fruits of victory.

11
  • In order to enforce the Proclamation of 1763
    George III decided to keep 10,000 soldiers in
    America.
  • - How to pay for the cost of keeping the
    soldiers in America.
  • - King George III had already raised taxes in
    Britain so high that taxpayers were rioting in
    protest.
  • - The British were determined to exercise
    greater control over the colonists and force them
    to help pay the war debts.

12
The Colonists Object
  • No such army had been maintained while the French
    occupied the territory.
  • Some believed that Britain wanted troops in the
    colonies not for defense, but rather to cram
    unpopular acts of Parliament down their throats.
  • Most of all, they objected because they expected
    they would be forced to pay for the troops
    support.
  • As discontent grew in the colonies, the stage was
    set for yet another struggle for Britain. This
    time the conflict would not be with a rival
    nation, but with the colonists.

13
  • The war with France had forced the British to
    loosen control over the colonies in order to gain
    their cooperation.
  • With victory the British attempted to tighten
    their colonial rule.
  • With a growing population, expanding economy, and
    freedom from French threat, the colonies
    increasingly resented British interference.
  • The British viewed the colonies as inferior and
    dependent children, the Americans saw Britain as
    an overprotective parent. These differing views
    set the stage for future conflict.
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