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The American Revolution and/or War of Independence, 1775-1783
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What’s in a Name? “War of Independence” “American Revolution” “Revolutionary War” In Britain: “American Revolutionary War” “Revolution of 1775” “American Insurrection”
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Colonists divided John Adams’ estimate, 1775: One-third of colonists Patriots (revolutionaries) One-third of colonists Loyalists (“Tories”) One-third of colonists neutral, undecided Actually, fairly accurate (40%, 25%, 35%)
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Colonists divided “Patriots” were a militant, radical minority – Claiming to represent the majority Key to patriot success: – Change the percentages: attract the undecided – Drive out or isolate Loyalists – Just enough military success to sway opinion
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Colonists divided War/Revolution was a civil war – Colonists fought on both sides – Every sociological category of people on both sides Women, African Americans, farmers, immigrants, New Englanders, Native Americans, etc. – Families split by fighting Ben Franklin’s son was a Loyalist – NOT “the Americans” vs. “the British” in 1775 American/British distinction an *effect* of the war more than a *cause* of the war Most colonists not of British ancestry (English, Scottish, Welsh, Scots-Irish)
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1775 Patriots: British AND American? “Grand Union Flag” First national flag of the U.S.; carried into battle against British forces, 1775 County militia flag from Pennsylvania, 1775 Carried into battle against British forces
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American Revolution as Military Conflict Patriot victory – Wins political conflict with Loyalists – Mixed record in conventional military terms (battlefield) – Successful insurgency against British Empire Parliament decided to cut its losses and stop fighting – British operations alienate loyalists and neutrals British Army encourages slaves to escape – For most slaves, the British represented liberty – Alienated many white Southern loyalists – Diplomatic success: international aid French alliance the key to victory
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British surrender to Washington (Library of Congress)
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James Armistead Virginia slave and George Washington’s double agent
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Treaty of Paris, 1783 Britain recognizes U.S. independence U.S. boundaries extremely generous – More than what U.S. diplomats had asked for! – Includes territory Spain also claims – Includes land claimed by Native American nations Separate peace, without consulting France – U.S. violates its treaty with France – France left to fight war w/ Britain, make its own treaty – U.S. and France still allied after the war? U.S. says no, France says yes
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A map presented to Benjamin Franklin by the Royal Cartographer of France, showing the 1783 Treaty boundaries (Royalty-Free/CORBIS)
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Unresolved land/people issues of 1780’s Questions addressed by Constitution (of 1787) Loyalist refugees – “British” in the U.S.? U.S.-Britain relationship Independence does not mean friendship Official status = what are the states, exactly? 13 countries? One country? Plural: “the United States are” Who owns the western territories? Native American sovereignty Nations, non-nations, or something else?
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