British north america
The Fundamental Years
The True Successor from the war of 1812
In my opinion the ones who truly 'won' the war are the people who are the most successful after the war to present day. The Country that is the most successful from the 3 big competitors (France/Canada British and America) is America (USA). America is ranked 3rd by TheTopTen.com. The war may not have a big impact on America but it did have an impact.
The development and hardships of the Thirteen Colonies
The Thirteen colonies however the success had to go through a lot of difficulties for example during the sixteen century you could make more money from wool than you would make by selling food so a lot of people like land owners switched to becoming farmers in hope that they would get more successful. What they didn't know was that by doing this they made it hard for people to buy/get food because the people who would usually be providing food for consumers are now converting their fields into pastures for sheep so they can be more focused on getting wool.
British americans
British american had been the for many generations and where more loyal to British. They had
British Canadian
While the British Americans had been there for many generations the British Canadian were still new to the land
The "neither"
The longer the revolution went on the higher the population of the "neither" group increased because more and more people started to get confused on which side would win and why they would be loyal to either colony. The reason for this was because no one wanted to be on the "wrong side of the bullet."
The Declaration Of Independence
The Declaration of Independence was when the 13 colonies was announced by the continental congress that the colonies would no longer be a part of the British Empire. This happened on the 4th of July, 1776.
Development of the Dominion of Canada
With an act of British Parliament, the Dominion of Canada was born on 1 July 1867. In the beginning it had about four million people living there. There were four provinces in the starting. (Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia)