The American RevolutionThe American Revolution 4
CONTENTS
■This 1857 painting depicts the destruction of a statue of King George III
during the Revolution. This rendering purges the “mob” action of its menacing
violence: The arm gestures are celebratory rather than threatening, and the
women and children are well-to-do. This is a middle-class view of the American
Revolution—bloodless, public-spirited, and consensual.
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birthday was declared a national holiday in 1968, most
states have chosen to honor him by closing schools.
Indeed, the founders now loom so large that it may
seem that they could not have lost to the British. But their
triumph was not inevitable. To understand the American
Revolution, we must examine it from the perspective of the
past, before the names of the founders adorned beer bot-
tles and elementary schools, and before the United States
had become a mighty nation. The simple truth is that the
American Revolution was accomplished by men and
women who did not know if they would succeed. At the
outset, they did not even know whether they sought British
concessions or independence, whether most colonists
would side with them or remain loyal to His Majesty’s
government, whether foreign powers such as France could
be enlisted to provide support, whether rebellion against
political authority in London would undermine social order
in America, or whether the many different peoples of the
colonies could be knitted into a single nation. The revolu-
tionaries did know, however, that if they failed they would
likely face arrest, imprisonment, and even death.
As the rebellion escalated into a full-scale war for
independence, the colonists confronted the challenge of
creating and financing an army that could defeat the
mightiest empire in the world. In the midst of fighting,
and in the wake of freedom from British rule, they faced
an even greater challenge—the founding of a new nation,
with a new government and a new national spirit.■
■The Shot Heard Round
the World
■The Second Continental
Congress
■The Battle of Bunker Hill
■The Great Declaration
■1776: The Balance of Forces
■Loyalists
■The British Take New York City
■Saratoga and the French
Alliance
■The War Moves South
■Victory at Yorktown
■Negotiating a Favorable Peace
■National Government under
the Articles of Confederation
■Financing the War
■State Republican
Governments
■Social Reform and Antislavery
■Women and the Revolution
■Growth of a National Spirit
■The Great Land Ordinances
■National Heroes
■A National Culture
■Debating the Past:
Was the American Revolution
Rooted in Class Struggle?
■Re-Viewing the Past:
The Patriot
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