Here is a portrait of a battle between the British infantry and the Heron Indian soldiers. Many of these battles were fought in wooded, forest environments that were not favorable to the British. It is noticed that the Indians, who used makeshift weapons created by hand, stood no chance against the military technology of the British at the time.
http://www3.gettysburg.edu/~tshannon/hist106web/site5/conclusion.htm
The Battle of Quebec took place in 1760, and was the turning point of the war. The British, lead by mater strategist Prime Minister Pitt and British Captain James Wolfe, elected to attack the French on their homeland in what is now eastern Canada. Wolfe's strategy was to outflank the French in their territory, resulting in their victory, despite his death in combat. This decisive battle won the British the war.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Revolutionary_War
This is the "Join, or Die" poster created by Benjamin Franklin after the Albany Conference in 1754. The goal of this conference was to not only confirm Iroquois allegiance to the British, but to spread the idea of home rule to the 13 British colonies as well. The meeting was attended by 7 of the 13 colonies, but the idea of home rule went opposed by the colonies once presented. The poster is a snake broken up into 13 parts, all of which have an initial of a colony. The idea for Franklin was to bring these 13 parts into one, unified snake through his ideas.
http://www.shmoop.com/french-indian-war/photos.html
This is the Treaty of Paris in 1763 at the conclusion of the Seven Years War. The victorious British expelled the French from the new world, but did not make them pay the reparations for their war effort. This left England in massive debt, forcing them to heavily tax the colonies. The Indian parties involved, both victorious and defeated, gained nothing from this treaty and lost both land and resources. http://www.historyrocket.com/American-History/timeline/1600-1799/french-and-indian-war/French-And-Indian-War-Timeline.html