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Why did Westward Expansion Lead to the American Revolution

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[[File:NorthAmerica1762-83.png|thumbnail| left | 250px |Map of North America after the Treaty of Paris of 1763 ]]__NOTOC__
The British won vast territory in North America after the Seven Years’ War, but with the land came numerous problems of how to govern it. Conflicts arose from the inability of British officials to balance the interests of colonists and Indians, which led to colonial dissatisfaction with imperial rule and, ultimately, to the causes of the American Revolution.
The Quebec Act angered the Virginia elite, since most of the western lands they claimed were now officially part of Quebec or in the Indian reserve. The act, which Parliament passed at the same time as legislation placing Massachusetts under crown control, also fueled resentment among Calvinist New Englanders, who saw in its autocratic, pro-Catholic provisions further evidence of an imperial conspiracy against colonial liberties.
 ====Conclusion====When the American Revolution began in 1776, tensions between settlers and Indians became a part of the conflict. The Continental Congress’s attempts to secure Indian alliances largely failed, as most Indians saw the British military as the lesser of two evils in their struggle against settlers’ encroachments upon their land. However, the Oneida and Tuscarora Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy did side with the colonists. The ultimate effect of British frontier policy was to unite frontiersmen, Virginia land speculators, and New Englanders against unpopular British policies. These groups, angered by British taxation policies, forged revolutionary alliances with other colonists.<div class="portal" style='float:rightcenter; width:35%'>
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====Conclusion====
When the American Revolution began in 1774, tensions between settlers and Indians became a part of the conflict. The Continental Congress’s attempts to secure Indian alliances largely failed, as most Indians saw the British military as the lesser of two evils in their struggle against settlers’ encroachments upon their land. However, the Oneida and Tuscarora Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy did side with the colonists.
 
The ultimate effect of British frontier policy was to unite frontiersmen, Virginia land speculators, and New Englanders against unpopular British policies. These groups, angered by British taxation policies, forged revolutionary alliances with other colonists.
 
Republished from [https://history.state.gov/| Office of the Historian], United States Department of State
Article: [https://history.state.gov/milestones/1750-1775/proclamation-line-1763|Proclamation Line of 1763, Quebec Act of 1774 and Westward Expansion]
[[Category:Wikis]] [[Category:US State Department]] [[Category:United States History]] [[Category:18th Century History]] [[Category:Colonial American History]] [[Category:French History]] [[Category:British History]]

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