Seven Years War Turning Point

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The Seven Years’ War (French and Indian War, 1754-1763) marked a major turning point in American relations with Great Britain because after the victory of the British and the colonists, Great Britain fell into great debt. To repay the debt, Great Britain started heavily taxing the colonies. The relationship between the colonists and the British began to decline from there. During this time period, the colonies that were established were fairly new, and the colonists did not have major issues like they did in the 18th century. When the Seven Years’ War began, the colonists fought on the side of the British because they, at that point, had no conflict with the British besides the reasons they migrated to America. With the colonists and British fighting on the same side, the relations between the two were maintained; however, after the war, to recover from the significant debt gained after the war, the British began to excessively tax the colonists. The colonists saw this as unfair because they helped the British during the war. This disagreement and conflict between the colonists and the British was the beginning of the downfall of the good relations they once had before and during the Seven Years’ War. …show more content…

The colonies believed and protested that their rights as British citizens were violated by issuing these taxes and policies against them. These acts, thus, furthered the decline in good relations between the colonists and the British, and expanded the conflict between the two. After the end of the Seven Years’ War, the relationship between the colonists and the British fell into a state where it was no longer

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