205
See also: The Battle of Quebec 191 ■ The storming of the Bastille 208–13 ■ The Slave Trade Abolition Act 226–27 ■
The 1848 revolutions 228–29 ■ The Gettysburg Address 244–47 ■ The California Gold Rush 248–49
Virginia considered themselves
to be Virginians, for example, not
Americans—beyond an increasingly
strained loyalty to the British crown.
However, the colonies were also
remarkably self-aware and acutely
conscious of Enlightenment notions
of political liberty, and they were
concerned that their freedom
would come under threat as a
result of British rule. Unable to
assert their own natural rights, and
subjected to what they considered
unreasonably imposed taxes, the
colonists questioned why a distant
parliament and a distant king
should impose their will on them.
Impelled by a series of exceptional
leaders, in 1776 they not only
rejected British authority, but
they set about establishing an
entirely new kind of state in which
government would derive from
“the consent of the governed.”
This explosively novel idea would
lead to the creation of a new and
enduring republican government.
Support for a formal assertion
of American independence was
far from universal in the colonies,
however. Five states in particular—
New York, New Jersey, Maryland,
Delaware, and Pennsylvania—
feared it would damage trade and,
if unsuccessful, provoke harsh
reprisals from Britain. In the same
way, as many as 500,000 of a
population of 2.5 million remained
CHANGING SOCIETIES
American victory in the war with
the British government leads to the recognition
of independence.
The Declaration of Independence
is issued.
American colonists’ protests against taxes
imposed by Britain lead to conflict
with the British government.
France and Britain’s new ideals of political
liberty take hold in Britain’s American colonies.
loyal to the British crown to the end
of the conflict, many subsequently
settling in Canada.
The conflict takes shape
It would take a drawn-out and
bitterly fought war to make
independence into reality. Britain
was determined to assert what it
saw as its legitimate rule, while
the hastily assembled forces of the
nascent United States were no less
determined to assert what they
saw as their right to independence.
The two modest armies—Britain’s,
because of the difficulties of sending
forces en masse to America; the
colonists’, because they consistently
lacked the means to raise and equip
any substantial fighting force—
confronted each other in a series of
minor engagements over six years.
At their peak, the American
forces numbered scarcely 40,000
and had almost no navy at all.
Britain deployed about the same
number of soldiers but in addition
had a vastly greater number of
ships. In 1778, however, France
declared support for the colonists
and sent 5,000 troops and a
substantial fleet. Facing certain ❯❯
These United Colonies are,
and of Right ought to be Free
and Independent States.
Richard Henry Lee
Proposed resolution at the Second
Continental Congress (June 1776)
US_204-207_Dec_Independence.indd 205 15/02/2016 16:43