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The French And Indian War Was The Greatest Cause Of The American Revolution

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The American Revolution was a dispute between the Thirteen Colonies and Britain. The dispute was crucial because it led to the American colonies breaking away from Britain, and instituting the United States of America. Historians believe that there were many causes for the American Revolution, and numerous conclusions were made about how this guided to dissociation. However, the French and Indian war was the greatest cause of the American Revolution.

Also known as the 7 years’ War, the French and Indian war was a conflict between France and Britain over the Ohio Valley River. The French and Indian war began in 1754 and ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763, which Britain won but at a price. The cost of Britain winning the war was a 146 million pound debt. Disputes over the Proclamation Act and paying the expenses of the war arose during and after the war. The debt from the French and Indian War also led to many acts being imposed and put into action to raise the money that was lost during the war. With this Britain had to do many things to put them in effect. …show more content…

One of the many things they did in order to raise funds was the Stamp Act. Parliament passed the Stamp Act in 1776, which placed a tax on all legal documents, newspapers, almanacs, playing cards, dice, and paper products. This irritated the colonists because they had never been taxed directly by a parliament before, and had no elected representatives. Several colonists protested by petitioning, refusing to pay the act, and eventually resorting to property damage and harassment. The Stamp Act sparked the term, “No taxation without representation.” The American colonists also in retaliation created a group made solely to repeal the Stamp Act, and resist British rules that they saw as

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