American
Revolution
Why did the
colonists rebel and the British resist?
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T |
he British Crown
misunderstood that the colonists increasingly saw themselves as a separate
people, due their own voice in their own affairs. A series of British political
missteps, outright blunders, and heavy handedness stirred the colonists to
become patriots. By 1776, a growing number of Americans, including George
Washington, were convinced that Britain was embarked on a systematic plan to
strip them of their property and reduce them to slavery.
At the same time, Britain
feared that if it lost the American colonies, it would lose the entire British
empire. In 1776, Britain did not have 13 New World colonies, it had 30. The
American Revolution raised the specter of the loss of Ireland and the British
West Indies.
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A |
defining characteristic of the American Revolution is its
complexity. The American war for independence was partly a product of the
colonists' sense of a distinctive identity as a inhabitants of a republican
society. But the revolution also helped to nurture a sense of a uniquely
American identity. The Revolution was a colonial war for independence, but it
was also a struggle over "who would rule at home."
The struggle for American
independence was led by prominent lawyers, merchants, and planters. But the
revolution's success ultimately depended on the willingness of hundreds of
thousands of ordinary Americans to risk their lives and economic well-being in
the patriot cause. The Revolution represented a conservative effort to preserve
liberties that British policies seemed to threaten. But the Revolution was
accompanied by social and intellectual transformations that fundamentally
altered the nature of American politics and involved ordinary people in
politics to an unprecedented degree.
The
Revolution was truly multifaceted. There was a rebellion of the colonial gentry
against British aristocrats who refused to accept them as equals and who viewed
them with condescension. There was also a rebellion by merchants and shippers
who chafed at British trade restrictions and royal monopolies. There was a
conservative revolution, which sought to defend traditional liberties against
British encroachments. And there was a radical revolution, inspired by the call
for liberty and equality in the Declaration of Independence, which sought to
create a society that could serve as a model of freedom for the rest of the
world.