a war for independence. in europe, the war was known as the seven years’ war in north america,...
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FIRST, THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR In Europe, the war was known as
the Seven Years’ War In North America, it was known as
the French and Indian War The Treaty of Paris ended the war
in 1763 The French ceded territory to
Britain in North America and elsewhere
In addition, the British also secured Canada
And the thirteen colonies seemed safe from any threat posed from the French and their native American allies
MONEY AND OTHER CONCERNS After the war, the British wanted
the American colonies to contribute more to the cost of their own defense
And some successful merchants in the colonies wanted to break free of controls imposed by the British
Of course, there were also radical politicians and propagandists who wanted a complete break with Britain when many of their countrymen still hoped that it might be avoided
LESS A REVOLUTION AND MORE A WAR OF INDEPENDENCE There was a growing sense of
patriotism and national identity There was increased resentment
of Great Britain’s economic mastery over the colonies
In particular, many colonists, especially in light of the fact that they lacked representation in the British Parliament, resented the taxes Britain levied to pay for the army it maintained in North America
Economic freedom from Britain would also allow American merchants to become wealthier, due to free trade and the new spirit of capitalism
And don’t forget, the philosophers of the Enlightenment…their ideas encouraged the pursuit of liberty
Enlightenment thinkers such as John Locke, Baron Charles de Montesquieu, Voltaire, and others shaped the government that eventually developed after this war for independence
Yet the descent into armed conflict between patriot (anti-British) and loyalist (pro-British) sympathizers was gradual
Events like the Boston 'Massacre' of 1770, when British troops fired on a mob that had attacked a British sentry outside Boston's State House, and the Boston 'tea-party' of 1773, when British-taxed tea was thrown into the harbour, marked the downward steps
Less obvious was the take-over of the colonial militias - which had initially been formed to provide local defence against the French and the Native Americans - by officers in sympathy with American patriots/rebels, rather than by those in sympathy with pro-British loyalists/Tories
As all these elements of conflict came into play, the British commander in chief in North America was Lieutenant General Thomas Gage
WAR In April 1775, Gage sent a small
force to seize patriot militia weapons and gunpowder at Concord, not far from Boston, but his soldiers became involved in a brief fire fight on Lexington Green on their way there
At first, the poorly trained and poorly armed American forces, led by George Washington, struggled against the professional armies of Britain
By 1777, however, the tide was turning
In mid-1775, patriot representatives of the 13 colonies of America, meeting in Philadelphia as the Continental Congress, had appointed George Washington, a well-to-do Virginia landowner, as commander in chief of its military forces
Washington, who thought militias fundamentally unreliable, set about raising a regular force, the Continental Army, and as the initial skirmishes between the patriots on the one hand and the British and their loyalist supporters on the other turned into a full-scale war, both sides were to use a mixture of regular troops, militias and other irregulars
THE BRITISH NAVY Washington could also do nothing to deny
the enormous advantage that command of the sea conferred on the British
In the summer of 1776 General Howe, his army of 30,000 men carried in ships commanded by his brother Richard, landed near New York and duly captured the city, inflicting several sharp defeats on the patriots
Washington, fearing that his cause would inevitably collapse as short-term enlistment into the Continental Army expired, launched a risky attack on the little town of Trenton, held by a brigade of Hessians (German troops in British service) on Boxing Day 1776
He won this battle, and although the victory was small in tactical terms, it had a wider strategic impact, showing that the patriots were still in the fight
In 1777, Howe took Philadelphia for the British
But an ill-judged British attempt to invade from Canada, thrusting down the Hudson Valley towards New York and cutting off rebellious New England, went badly wrong, and Lieutenant General John Burgoyne was forced to surrender with his entire army at Saratoga in October
AND THEN THE FRENCH Defeat at Saratoga was not
necessarily a military cataclysm for the British, but it encouraged the French, anxious to obtain revenge for the humiliations of the Seven Years War, to go beyond the covert support they had offered the patriots thus far, and join the war
Spain and Holland were to follow suit, and in 1780 a wider League of Armed Neutrality was formed, to resist British attempts to stop and search merchant shipping
Saratoga did not improve Washington's position instantly, however, and his army spent a miserable winter at Valley Forge
In the New York area there had been no developments of real military significance
However, the ambitious Major General Benedict Arnold, one of the patriot heroes of Saratoga, had become embittered, and entered into secret negotiations with British General Clinton to betray the fort at West Point on the Hudson
The scheme failed at the last moment and Arnold escaped to enter British service: Major John André, Clinton's adjutant-general, was captured in civilian clothes carrying letters to Arnold, and Washington had him hanged
THE TURNING POINT In the spring of 1781 the picture changed Admiral de Grasse, commanding the
French fleet in the West Indies, made a bold attempt to secure control of the sea off the Chesapeake Bay
Immediately Washington heard what was afoot, he moved south with the bulk of his army and Rochambeau's Frenchmen
The British could not prevent de Grasse from entering the Chesapeake Bay, and when they brought him to battle in early September the result was a tactical draw but a strategic victory for the French
They still controlled the bay, and Cornwallis was still trapped in Yorktown
Another French squadron brought in heavy guns from Rhode Island, and the French and Americans mounted a formal siege against the outnumbered and ill-provisioned British General Cornwallis
Although Clinton and the admirals mounted a relief expedition, it arrived too late: Cornwallis had surrendered
THE END Although the war was not formally ended
until the Treaty of Paris in 1783, it was clear after Yorktown that the British, with their world-wide preoccupations, no longer had any realistic chance of winning
AN INTERESTING COMPARISON The patriots had always been likely to win,
provided they struggled on and avoided outright defeat
It is unlikely that George Washington would much like being compared with General Vo Nguyen Giap, who commanded the North Vietnamese army in the Vietnam war
But both shared the same recognition that a militarily-superior opponent with worldwide preoccupations can be beaten by an opponent who avoids outright defeat and remains in the field
It is an old truth, and 21st-century strategists, whatever their political differences, should be well aware of it
ADDITIONAL FACTORS Although some colonists, nicknamed
“Tories,” remained loyal to the British, popular support for the revolution was high
Another social factor that helped the Americans was that most members of all classes – lower, middle, and upper – united behind the independence movement
And the Americans were fighting on their home territory
Not only did European freedom fighters with military experience arrive to train American troops, the Americans also used unconventional tactics and guerrilla warfare to counter the British soldiers’ training and experience
The British were also fighting far from home, at the end of extremely long supply lines
And of course, after America’s victory at Saratoga in late 1777, France, Britain’s mortal enemy, began to lend military and naval assistance to the American colonists
The assistance of the French fleet against the Royal Navy, Britain’s chief strength, was particularly useful to the Americans
TO FORM A GOVERNMENT After the war, there was much
disagreement over how closely bound together the thirteen colonies would be
Also, who should have power? Should the government be elected? And if so, who should be allowed to vote? These questions and others were decided
at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 By 1789, the United States Constitution
had been written and accepted by all thirteen states
A DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC The system that resulted was a democratic
republic, in which a federal government shared powers with governments in each state
To prevent a dictatorship, power at the federal level was shared among three branches: executive (president), legislative (Congress), and judicial (Supreme Court)
State governments, as well as the president and members of Congress, were to be elected
NOT INCLUSIVE It should be noted, however, that
“democracy” in this case – as in all cases before the twentieth century – was by no means all-inclusive
Women and Native Americans could not vote
Men who failed to fulfill certain property requirements could not vote
Moreover, the U.S. Constitution did not outlaw slavery
YET DESPITE ITS FLAWS Yet despite its initial flaws, the U.S.
Constitution has remained one of the most successful political documents in world history
It is also the product and cause of a great deal of intellectual and philosophical exchange
Most of the Constitution’s general ideals, and many of the specific principles, came from England and France
THE INFLUENCE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT From John Locke, the ideas of natural
rights or the right to life, liberty, and property were incorporated into the Constitution
From Montesquieu, the idea of separation of powers came
From Voltaire, the principle of religious freedom and freedom of speech were incorporated
And Rousseau contributed the idea of the social contract
IMPACT ON THE ATLANTIC REVOLUTIONS In turn, the Constitution (along
with the Declaration of Independence that the colonists wrote in 1776) had an enormous impact on the Atlantic revolutions that followed in the 1780s, 1790s, and early 1800s
France’s Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen drew heavily upon America’s Declaration of Independence and Constitution
The failed Dutch rebellion of the 1780s did likewise
In the early nineteenth century, the revolutionaries of Latin America did their best to adapt the Americans’ political methods and ideals
Therefore, the American Revolution, and the political documents at the heart of it, had a tremendous impact on the rest of the world
A FEW ADDITIONAL POINTS The Monroe Doctrine (1823) -the U.S. government warned the
nations of Europe against intervening in the Western Hemisphere’s political affairs
-It was the first step in the United States’ creation of a sphere of influence in the Americas
-By the end of the 1800s, especially after the Spanish-American War (1898), the United States’ economic and political influence over Latin America was considerable
U.S.A. Territorial Expansion -The rapid and massive growth of the
United States, from a collection of small colonies on North America’s east coast to a vast land sprawling from Atlantic to Pacific, greatly altered the balance of world power
-This growth began with the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and continued with the Mexican-American War (1846-1848), along with other events
-The United States became a huge nation, incredibly rich in natural resources
America’s reputation as a land of freedom and economic opportunity drew millions of immigrants from Europe and Asia during the 1800s
Approximately one million Irish immigrants came to the United States during the Irish Potato Famine of the 1800s
The impact of immigration has had a tremendous demographic effect on the geographical balance of world population
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