American Revolution
Why did the
American Revolution take place?
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I |
n explaining why the
Revolution took place, it is necessary to look both at underlying causes and at
the precipitating events.
The Revolution was, in part,
the consequence of long-term social, political, and cultural transformations.
Between 1680 and 1776, a distinctly American society emerged, a society that
differed significantly from Britain. In the course of a century, the colonies
had diverged markedly from Britain. A variety of long-run trends gave the 13
American colonies certain common characteristics and which made them very
different from England.
What were some of these
characteristics?
1. The absence of a
titled aristocracy
The colonies had no legally
privileged social classes. Nor did they have many of the other characteristics
of a monarchical society. They had no standing army and had a government
bureaucracy that was smaller and far less powerful than that found in Britain.
While there were wealthy merchants and planters in the colonies, economic
stratification was less pronounced than in Britain and membership in this
affluent segment of the population was volatile and changing.
To be
sure, colonial society in the eighteenth century was, in certain respects, becoming
more aristocratic. Colonial elites increasingly emulated the values and
lifestyle of the English aristocracy. They aped the English elites’ dress and
manners, and copied their furniture and architecture. Nevertheless, compared to Britain, few Americans had fortunes large enough to lead
lives of leisure.
2. The widespread ownership of property
Except for slaves, most
physical labor was performed by people who owned their own farms or shops or
could expect to eventually to be economically independent. Relatively few of
the colonists were tenant farmers, and most yeomen maintained a remarkable
degree of independence. Even in the Chesapeake region or the Hudson River
Valley, where much of the land was leased, farmers still could acquires
long-term leases on relatively easy terms.
3. Religious diversity
The colonies not only
displayed a religious diversity unmatched in the western world, they were also
more willing to tolerate religious difference. Four colonies—Delaware, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island—had no established church. Five other states disestablished the Church
of England even before the Revolution broke out.
4. The relative absence of poverty
In 18th century
England, half the population was at least occasionally dependent on charity for
subsistence. Apart from slaves, the American population was far better off.
Nothing better illustrates the relative affluence of the white population than
the fact that the colonists were on average three inches taller than their
English counterparts.
5. A lack of urban development
In 1760, the largest city in
the colonies, Philadelphia, had just 20,000 inhabitants. In that year, the
total number of American living in cities or towns with more than 3,000
residents was no greater than 70,000. The colonies had few of the attributes of
an urban society: there was no large-scale manufacturing, no stock markets, few
large cities, and virtually no banks in British North America.
6. A relative lack of
deference to authority
The
American colonists were far less deferential and less willing to accept
subordination than their British or European counterparts. The colonists enjoyed the
broadest suffrage of any people in the western world. Although the right to
vote in colonial America was restricted to property owners, property owning was
so widespread that roughly 80 percent of white adult males could vote.
Although relatively few men
actually voted in elections, the principle of self-government was
well-developed. To gain political office, social leaders felt increasingly
forced to make direct appeals to the people.
Compared to Britain, popular
participation in decision making was much more pronounced. Militia officers
were often selected by their companies and ministers were often hired by their
congregations.
7. The presence of slavery
In 1776, one-fifth of the
inhabitants of the American colonies lived in bondage. Most of the growth of
slavery had taken place since 1680. In 1680, Africans accounted for just 5
percent of the population in Maryland and Virginia. But in 1760, enslaved
Africans comprised nearly 40 percent of Virginia’s population. By 1776, the
number of slaves in the colonies had reached 500,000.
Slavery in eighteenth
century America was not confined to the South. Slaves could be found in each of
the 13 colonies, and were especially numerous in New Jersey and in New York's
Hudson River Valley.
The widespread presence of
slavery made adult white males acutely aware of the difference between
independence and dependence. Colonial Americans knew what it was like to be
subjected to the will, authority, and domination of another person.
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B |
y the 1770s, a growing
number of Americans had begun to see their society as fundamentally different
from European society. Theirs was a "republican" society, a society
free of many of the trappings of aristocracy and of the corruptions associated
with cities and large-scale manufacturing and financial institutions. From this
perspective, Americans were simpler, more independent, and more virtuous than
Europeans.