A treaty signed in 1763 gave Great Britain control of most eastern North America
If you're looking for the city of Columbia (of which there are several in the U.S.), the answer is North America. If you are looking for the country Colombia - which is spelled differently than your question so I'm not sure which you're going for - it is located in the northern section of South America.
i think it was between France and Britain....
Economically it was a good move. You have settlers in N.A. growing, mining, cutting, or whatever the natural resources. They send them to Britain. Britain turns them into manufactured goods which they sell to people in Britain, trade with other countries, and ... also sell back to the British colonists.
Britain- The "Treaty of Paris" in 1763 forced France to give its Canadian claim to the British. :)
well they were going to but the majority of people in NI didnt want a change...
They were fairly apprehended due to limited amount of supplies and army. Also, people in Northeast had business ties with Britain, so it was hard for them to go to war with their business partners.
Because they do things differently than the north that we dont like
British people were sent to America to claim land for England
The North Sea and the English Channel are to the east of Great Britain
The South and Britain had a cotton trade going at the time of the civil war. If Britain supported the North, the South would have cut of the supply of cotton to Britain. Britain though, actually was in favor of antislavery.
The North Sea separates Britain from Scandinavia.
The North Sea. East of Britain is the North Sea.
Their situation gave to the people of the North the awareness the Union was going to win the war.
Their situation gave to the people of the North the awareness the Union was going to win the war.
There is no north river anywhere in southeastern Britain.
The relationship between Britain and British North America was mostly strained. British North America was bitter about the taxes it had to pay to Britain.