Seven Years' War

Seven Years' War

HIS/115
November 13, 2011
Richard Coop

Seven Years' War
Many factors led up to the Seven Years’ War and in this paper I will describe the social and political backgrounds existent in eighteenth-century America, explain how the diverse backgrounds and views led to the Seven Years’ War and explain how the outcome of the Seven Years’ War affected me and America. All of this will be explained as you read along in this paper.
In the seventeenth-century before I was born, “the colonies were becoming overrun by various, very different immigrant groups” (Davidson, J., 2006). Famine, warfare, and religious persecution forced many non-English groups to flee their homes in Europe to the American colonies. This immigration quickly increased the population and made the colonies greatly diverse in backgrounds. This diversity in backgrounds caused the colonies to be divided along the cultural lines. The colonists divided themselves according to ethnic, regional, racial, and religious differences (Davidson, J., 2006). “Since many of these immigrants had no way to pay for their trip to America, they arrived in the colonies already signed into indentured servitude” (Davidson, J., 2006).
The population increase had a significant impact on the lifestyle of colonists in the eighteenth-century. “At this time the birth rate also increased with women typically giving birth to between five and eight children” (Davidson, J., 2006). My family, for example, is quite large. I have my parents, my three brothers, and my two sisters. I was thirteen years old at the time and I was the middle of the girls, the ages of my siblings ranging between 11 and 17 years old. This fast population increase made nearly every part of eighteenth-century American life more hectic. Social relations in this era grew more strained, as many colonials found that this diversity made it impossible to form a shared, common identity.
“Eighteenth-century colonial societies were divided along...