Which statement best describes British-American relations after the French and Indian War?
French and Indian War.
The outcome angered the relationship between the Native Americans and the English.
A) the british began to respect American culture B) the colonist began to question british authority C) the british began to treat Americans as equals D) the colonist became more dependent on Britain
the british
They were on the British side, The French and Indians were allies against the British.
Most of the Native American tribes were allies or had friendly relations to the French, who were more interested in the fur trade then establishing large plantations and expelling local Indian tribes from their lands. One of the few tribes that sided with the British were the Iroquois Confederacy.
American soliders financed by the British government.
French and Indian War.
British officers treated the American colonial militia with contempt.
The British Colonists and some of the Iroquois tribes fought against the French.
It was not a war between the French and Indians, it was a war between the British and French, with the Native Americans as allies on both sides. It is called the French and Indian War because if you're American/British, you were fighting the French and most of the Natives, hence French and Indian war.
The French and Indian war in North America saw the American colonists and the British army engage in battle with the French and their Native American allies. Noteworthy about this war was that George Washington was a commander who waged war on the French.