Doing the research from the ten different documents, the conclusion drew from it was that the revolutionary war was not so revolutionary. The research gotten from the documents supports this claim because as big as it was to to split away from a huge empire, not much changed. The only things that really changed was just rights and equality after years. For example, in document 3, there was someone who was not rich and they were playing pool with other rich people after the war. This just shows that some equality changed and nothing else that could be huge was like economy, or government since they just used basically the same type of government, but with different rich, white men. Also, document 2 was a part from the Unanimous Declaration of
The topic of revolution is extremely subjective. What may appear as an insurrection to some might not be as extreme to others. When talking about the American Revolutionary War, however, the answer is clear. While the War certainly brought about change within the United States, it wasn’t necessarily very revolutionary. The most important aspects of the colonies, such as ideas about government, various types of societal equality, slavery and freed blacks, and the rights of women remained for the most part, unaffected.
From one perspective war has always been the same, technology may improve or philosophies may change, but wars are started by those in power and fought by the poor. The results now may be somewhat different from 1775, post-Revolutionary war time with rebellions like Shay’s Rebellion, but the various reasons for the poor to join the military have stayed relatively the same.
1st, Resolved, That whoever shall aid, or abet, or in any manner assist in the introduction of tea, from any place whatsoever, into this colony, while it is subject, by a British act to parliament, to the payment of a duty, for the purpose of raising a revenue in American, he shall be deemed an enemy to the liberties of America.
The evidence shows a British soldier fired the first shot of the American Revolutionary War. In November 1775, seven hundred overconfident and armed British troops congregated in Lexington at dawn to begin their assault on the Colonists. They were ordered to confiscate any hidden weaponry the Colonists possessed. The Colonists did not want to fight and had set up just a meager defense. British soldiers surrounded and disarmed the militia.
For many, after the dreadful seven years’ war all thought it could only get better. Britain sustained a massive debt leaving them in a hole so deep you could not see light. Britain had sought to acquire all nessary funds to help lessen the debt as much as possible, leaving the people angered, especially people from the colonies. Britain began to impose an abundance of unsanctioned taxes on them. The American colonist were infuriated with such actions, arguing that they it was not consulted. In accordance to all these events many had took it up themselves to express their opinion with action.
In my opinion the Boston Tea party, The Intolerable Acts, and The Proclamation were the three main causes of the Revolutionary war. The Boston Tea Party and the Intolerable acts caused some friction but not the most. The main cause that started the war was the intolerable acts.
On April 19,1775 the American Revolutionary War started and ended on September 3, 1783.Did you know that Samuel Adams had the idea for the Boston Tea party? I bet you didn’t know that!! Do you also know why there was an American War? Well, it happened because the Great Britain wanted to rule the new 13 colonies and the colonies did not want to be ruled.Did you know who patriots were? Well, patriots were people who fought for the rights of the colonies to be a free country which soon became our U.S.A. Do you know loyalists were? Loyalists were people who fought for the rights of Great Britain to rule over the new 13 colonies, but I guess that they didn’t win the war. There were also big events like the Boston Massacre, Boston Tea
“Among the American suffering the most grievous losses were those who remained loyal to the Crown” (Nash, p. 187). They lived successful lives in England and other regions as well. They appeared after the war to the royal commission demanding the reimbursement of their losses during the war. They did not secure anything. The amount of people who stayed loyal differed from place to place. Many remained a loyalist because of the revolutionary assemblies who had revenge against those who rejected the revolution and could not vote. They had their properties taken away, and banished from their homes. Some of them in the Georgia assembly was towards their death. Their childhood was destroyed, families left them, and people could attack them because
“Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves, and, under a just God, cannot retain it.” This quote from Abraham Lincoln takes place far from the beginning of slavery and the Revolutionary War but illustrate how it is important for each person to respect the freedom of another person. All the states north of the Chesapeake gradually abolished slavery after the Revolutionary in different ways. This essay explains how people from a state as Maryland divided by abolitionists and conservatives have changed their mind about slavery between before and after the Revolutionary War. For analyze this change of mind, we need first to have a look of the born and the beginning of the slavery, how it came up, why and for what.
The American Revolution transformed the roles and expectations of women in multiple ways. One way
In the middle of the 1700’s, America was not yet America, just mere colonies ruled by the British. However, soon the colonists found themselves restricted by the English, and the tension between them separated them. The once healthy relationship among the colonists and England is now tainted. That’s when the colonists’ desire for independence began. In 1776, their war for independence broke out.
Road to the Revolution6th periodSydney Hickman Paragraph #1 IntroductionHave you ever wondered about all the different events that lead to the RevolutionaryWar? It’s amazing to think about how all of the ten acts influenced Americans to start theRevolutionary War. These ten acts is the Navigation Act, French and Indian war, Pontiac'sRebellion and the Proclamation, the Sugar Act, the Boston Tea Party, and the Intolerable Act. However all the acts was involved with the Revolutionary it began with the Navigation Act. Paragraph #2 Navigation Act of 1660In 1650-1696 Parliament passed the Navigation Act.
The Revolutionary War wasn’t as “revolutionary” as everyone thinks. The rights of many people didn’t change at all. Firstly it did contribute to economic and political change but the main one, social change, was only change for some people. Looking at document 5 it shows that only 5 or 6 states abolished slavery within 5 years. Plus on document 7 Abigail Adams sent John Adams a letter that stated “ I desire you to remember the ladies”, but women didn’t get the right to vote until August 18 1920 also on Plus looking at document 8 when is says that the “right of a citizen to vote should be denied by the account of sex”. Quoting document 2 and the Declaration of Independence “ We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are
On the other hand, the hostility was furthered when the interaction between the English and the Americans became atrocious. The colonists then decided to organize themselves into equal groups to fight, but only the men who wanted to do so by volunteering. Yet, the English broke up into an order that was constantly maintained, which included divisions. In 1759, a Massachusetts soldier admitted that the English troops “are but little better that slave to their officers.” This effect resulted with the increase of the colonists’ resistance to the political interference of Britain, but also their resentment towards them as well.
A motivating force behind the revolution was the American embrace of a political ideology called "republicanism", which was dominant in the colonies by 1775. The "country party" in Britain, whose critique of British government emphasized that corruption was to be feared, influenced American politicians. The commitment of most Americans to republican values and to their rights, helped bring about the American Revolution, as Britain was increasingly seen as hopelessly corrupt and hostile to American interests; it seemed to threaten to the established liberties that Americans enjoyed. The greatest threat to liberty was depicted as corruption. The colonists associated it with luxury and, especially, inherited aristocracy, which they condemned.