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kuli, i was being sarcastic
what JB3 says below
Most of this is conjecture. I'd assume that the British would have aimed first for the north, since it is RIGHT along the Canadian border, but that's presuming it would care to retake anything while it was dealing with Napoleon. Regardless, the fate of these fictional unions don't seem, especially when you really consider all that was going against the experiment (native populations and multiple European powers were imposing enough) had they, even just split in two, quarreled as separate political entities.
I used to do wargaming. When we did the scenario where the South and North started out divided, the British wiped the mat with them. When we did the scenario where they split after independence, the southern strategy worked best -- the North would have had to watch two borders, which up until about 1830 they couldn't pull off very well.
Just for kicks, we set it up with the Iroquois as their own nation allied with the North, which gave the North a better chance.
But in any of them, random events played a big part; no one could count on winning -- which is why it made a fun thing to game. The big thing, though, was British command of the seas; they could have had an army in Canada, threatening, an army in Virginia, threatening, and kept one on a fleet that could strike anywhere -- New Orleans was always an attractive target.
Anyway, without an alternate universe or five.....
















