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| United States War of Independence
United States War of Independence
United States War of Independence
It is also called AMERICAN REVOLUTION or AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR. It is
the insurrection
by which 13 of Great Britain’s North American colonies won political
independence and went on to form the
United States of America.
The 13 colonies that became the USA were originally colonies of Great
Britain. By the time the American
Revolution took place, the citizens of these colonies were beginning to get
tired of the British rule. The British
government decided to make its North American colonies pay more of the
costs of governing and defending them,
so rebellion and discontent were rampant. In 1763 and the following 12
years Britain imposed a series of new
taxes on the colonies that aroused heated opposition.
· In 1764 the British for the first time imposed a series of
taxes designed to raise revenue from the colonies.
The tax, whose official name was the American Revenue Act, became
popularly known as the Sugar
Act. One of its major components was the raising of tariff on sugar.
The act was combined with a greater
attempt to enforce the existing tariffs. Colonial protests forced the
British to scale back the tariffs. The
Quartering Act, forcing colonists to provide housing and food for
British troops, followed the sugar
tariffs.
· In 1765 a Stamp Tax was enacted. It imposed taxes on all
legal documents (e.g. marriage licenses and
newspapers). The colonists responded with vocal protests. Not only
did these taxes hurt their
pocketbooks, but also they were highly visible (e.g. they were needed
for every day transactions). In
addition, to enforce the actions, the British announced that colonial
offenders were to be tried in the hated
Admiralty courts.
The protests, which grew, began developing new slogans including "No
taxation without
representation". One result of the protests was the meeting of the
Stamp Act Congress in New York, to
which many of the colonies sent representatives. Many colonies agreed
not to import any British goods until
the Stamp Tax was repealed. One of the American reactions to the
stamp act was the creation of secret
organizations throughout the colonies, known as the Sons of Liberty.
Led by prominent citizens, they
resorted to force stamp agents to resign their posts.
· In the summer of 1766, King George III of England replaced
Prime Minister Rockingham with William Pitt.
Pitt was popular in the colonies. He opposed the Stamp Act and
believed that colonists were entitled to all
the rights of English citizens.
Pitt suddenly became sick. Charles Townshend, Chancellor of the
Exchequer, took over the reins of the
government. Unlike his predecessor, Townshend was not concerned with
the subtleties of the rights of
American colonists. Townshend wanted to strengthen the power of the
British Parliament, which would
simultaneously strengthen the power of royal officials. He convinced
the Parliament to pass a series of laws
imposing new taxes on the colonists. These laws included special
taxes on lead, paint, paper, glass and tea
imported by colonists. In addition, the New York legislature was
suspended until it agreed to quarter
British soldiers.
The Acts also insured that colonial officials, including governors and
judges, would receive their salaries directly
from the Crown.
Colonist Respond with boycott:
The most tangible colonial protest to the Townshend Act was the revival of
an agreement not to import British
goods, especially luxury products. The Non-importation agreement slowly
grew to include merchants in all of the
colonies, with the exception of New Hampshire. Within a year importation
from Britain dropped almost in half.
1768: British troops land in Boston:
In response to colonial protest and increasing attacks on colonial
officials by the Sons of Liberty, Lord
Hillsborough, Secretary of State for the Colonies, dispatched 4,000 troops,
to restore order in Boston. The daily
contact between British soldiers and colonists served to worsen relations.
1770: Boston Massacre:
An armed clash between the British and the colonists was almost inevitable
from the moment British troops were
introduced in Boston. Brawls were constant between the British and the
colonists, who were constantly insulting the
troops.
On March 5, 1770, a crowd of sixty towns people surrounded British sentries
guarding the customs house. They
began pelting snowballs at the guards. Suddenly, a shot rang out, followed
by several others. Ultimately, 11
colonists were hit, five were dead
1770: Townshend act repealed:
The British parliament repealed the Townshend duties on all but tea.
Falling colonial imports and raising opposition
convinced the British government that its policies were not working. The
British government, led by Prime Minister
Lord North, maintained the taxes on tea, in order to underscore the
supremacy of parliament.
1773: Boston Tea Party:
Protests in the colonies against the Stamp Acts had died down when
Parliament passed the Tea Act. The new act
granted a monopoly on tea trade in the Americas to the East India Tea
Company. The Governor of Massachusetts,
Thomas Hutchinson, insisted that tea be unloaded in Boston, despite a
boycott organized by the Sons of Liberty.
On the evening of December 16th, thousands of Bostonians and farmers from
the surrounding countryside packed
into the Old South Meeting house to hear Samuel Adams. Adams denounced the
Governor for denying clearance
for vessels wishing to leave with tea still on board. After his speech the
crowd headed for the waterfront. From the
crowd, 50 individuals emerged dressed as Indians. They boarded three
vessels docked in the harbor and threw
90,000 pounds of tea overboard.
1774: Coercive Acts imposed:
The British were shocked by the destruction of the tea in Boston Harbor and
other colonial protests.
The British parliament gave its speedy assent to a series of acts that
became known as the "Intolerable Acts”.
These acts included the closing of the port of Boston, until such time as
the East India tea company received
compensation for the tea dumped into the harbor. The Royal governor took
control over the Massachusetts
government and would appoint all officials. Sheriffs would become royal
appointees, as would juries. In addition,
the British took the right to quarter soldiers anywhere in the
colonies.
Declaration of Independence and Federal Constitution:
By early 1776, Americans were ready to denounce any allegiance to the
British crown. In January of that same
year, Thomas Paine published Common Sense, a brochure that strongly served
to rally Americans to
independence. Paine's writing convinced many of his countrymen to disown
the monarchy and replace it with a
republic. By this time, the movement toward revolution was rapidly gaining
speed. By spring of that same year, all
royal governors had been ousted and patriots replaced British authority in
the colonies by makeshift governments.
The Congress itself exercised sovereign powers. In July 1776, Congress met
and adopted the Declaration of
Independence from Britain. The Articles of Confederation was the first
document uniting the citizens of all
thirteen colonies into one country. Under the Articles, the central
government was very weak and the states held
most power, but it was a beginning.
As a result of Shay's Rebellion, the Articles were disowned and the Federal
Constitution was written in 1787. It
is still the basic law of the United States of America.
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