Overview of the
American Revolution, 1763-1775
GENERAL:
-
The
American revolution is generally dated 1763-1789, from the opening of resistance
to the launching of government under the Constitution. Those dates
are
significant,
but
the
revolution
actually
began
before
that,
and continued long after.
-
The
American Revolution can still teach us much about ourselves as a nation.
-
We can
also understand subsequent historic events more clearly:
-
During
the American Civil War both sides felt they were fighting for the legacy
of the Revolution;
-
The
American experience in Vietnam had similarities with that older conflict.
-
The
American Revolution stretched far beyond our shores—it was an event that
touched the world.
-
It is
interesting to compare our Revolution with the French Revolution—Some of
the same players were involved.
SUMMARY OF CONDITIONS IN 1763:
- The
French are out of North America—Great
Britain stands “astride the world like a colossus.”
-
The British government is deeply
in debt, although Great Britain is a wealthy nation.
-
The colonies are now prosperous
and large enough in population to begin to attract more attention from
Parliament.
-
The idea of different-ness from
Great Britain has been around for some time, but few if any Americans are
thinking about formal separation (independence) from Great Britain.
-
The idea of republicanism (democracy)
is not highly developed. On the contrary, it is considered a highly radical
concept that is not well received, especially among the ruling classes.
Republicans are seen as wild-eyed fanatics who favor mob rule. Americans
are likely much more progressive than their European cousins on this issue.
- Americans
are well versed in political philosophy from reading John Locke and others.
American ideology
also heavily emphasizes the idea of “virtue” as a necessary component of
political structure—an idea from the Enlightenment.
-
Between 1763 and 1775, Americans
increasingly rebel against tightening English rule and struggle to maintain
the status quo which had existed before the French and Indian War.
-
The Americans assume that their
own colonial legislatures are equivalents of Parliament. They believe that
since they are not represented in Parliament, only their own assemblies
can tax them. These ideas are sorely tried by the British.
-
Americans still believe in the
British Constitution, though they see it somewhat differently from many
British.
-
Bottom Line: There is no
thought of independence yet, but Americans do perceive a different-ness
between themselves and their British cousins.
Many
theories of revolution
exist,
but they do not always explain what happened in America. For example,
one assumed necessary ingredient of revolution is widespread discontent,
yet the average American was in general as well off as anyone in the world
at that time. Yet revolutions do tend to have certain things in
common. Of necessity they start with discontent of some sort, but it is
not always clear to what extent wrongs are real or perceived. In the end,
it probably does not matter. It is interesting to note that four
major revolutions (the English, American, French & Russian) all began
with government trying to get more money out of the people.
Points
to keep in mind on the American Revolution:
- The
American Revolution is not
over until 1787—without a stable system of government it could easily have
come unraveled.
- In
the Civil War both sides will
lay claim to the “Spirit of ‘76.”
- The
revolutionary leader as “wild-eyed
radical” is a cliché. Many have been sober, mild individuals. Some
American leaders were almost boring in their lack of revolutionary passion. Washington
was a very non-revolutionary figure who was one of the least radical Americans,
yet he was technically guilty of treason.
-
The rank and file (soldiers)
often come from the working classes.
-
Do not underestimate the power
of revolutionary rhetoric (though the sting goes out after a while.)
- American
leaders were the American
aristocracy, men of "striking respectability and social standing." The
56 signers of the Constitution were educated men (22 lawyers, 5 doctors,
11 merchants, 12 ministers or ministers’ sons.)
- The “establishment” provides
the leadership. There were moderates and extremists among them, but most
eventually embraced independence.
- Important
question is whether
revolutions change anything substantial. “Permanent” change is assumed
to be part of the result of any revolution and generally will include:
-
Transfer of property from one
group to another;
-
Changes in the ruling class;
-
Changes in attitudes about institutions;
-
Changes in the institutions themselves;
-
None of the above seem
to have been major outcomes of the American revolution ....
-
... Which is not to say
that no new ideas took hold—they
did.
-
Where a tradition of rebellion
exists, it is generally easier to get things started
What were the real causes
of the American Revolution?
- A
sense of national identity—the
isolation of the colonial period evolved into a spirit of common interest.
“We had best hang together, or we shall surely hand separately” (franklin). The Colonies had a good postal service,
etc., which eased communication.
- Patrick
Henry's “Liberty or Death” speech showed unity of purpose. Evidence existed
that people felt bound
to each other.
- The
Revolution began in the early
1760s with Otis’s protest against Writs of Assistance. John Adams claimed
it began in the “Hearts and Minds” with the Stamp Act of 1765. The seeds
had actually been planted when the colonial settlements became established.
-
There were in fact many reasons
for discontent, and no avenues for redress of grievances. Yet it was an
anti-colonial war for independence.
- Americans
believed that, “We had always
governed ourselves”—dissenting tradition
-
The American Revolution has been
called conservative, but it was truly revolutionary if you include events
through 1787. Whatever else, the Revolution produced the most profound
political document ever conceived by man.
-
Was the Revolution really justified?
Was it treason? Civil War? Were there really moral imperatives?
- In
many ways the British had no one to blame but themselves; their governance
of the colonies was an
unending stream of insensitivity and inflexibility: the real cause of the
war was “imperial mismanagement”—they failed to consult the colonists on
almost all major policy issues, feeling that what was good for the Empire
was good for all its parts, all the while treating the colonies as "dependent
children."
- Connected
to this failure was
the British idea of “virtual representation,” which the colonists rejected.
-
Bottom line: the American
Revolution was not inevitable, though eventual independence probably was.
Americans have much in their
history that prepares them for rebellion:
- An “experienced and self-confident
group of political leaders” has control and support of the major segments
of the population.
-
A prospering commercial and agricultural
economy exists.
-
Decades of changes in social,
family, religious, and ethnic conditions have undermined traditional deference
to authority.
- During
French and Indian War
legislatures had become in their own eyes “Little Parliaments.”
The
Nature of the American
Revolution. Gordon Wood, in The Radicalism of the American Revolution, a relatively
recent book (and a Pulitzer Prize winner), makes a number of interesting points about the American Revolution:
- Woods's
introduction reinforces the idea that has persisted that the American Revolution
was “conservative.”
- But
when viewed in terms of social
change, it was “as radical as any in history.”
-
Life in the 18th century
was oppressive everywhere, and by comparison Americans were quite free.
- Yet
significant social change was not likely to happen without a revolution,
and the American revolution
did that—it destroyed the concept of an aristocracy, gave status to the
working classes and brought respectability to ordinary people.
- The real key to the idea of revolution (in the opinion of this web author) is that prior to the American revolution, the responsibility for honest, virtuous, or just plain good government, resided in the hands of the power structure—the aristocracy. From 1776 onward, that responsibility lies in the hands of the people. Tom Paine made that point most eloquently in Common Sense.
-
Bottom line: it was “The most radical and
far-reaching event in American history.”
Other
historians see the American
Revolution in different ways. Norman Gelb, in Less than Glory,
takes on some of the “myths” surrounding the events of 1776. For example:
-
The revolution was not inevitable.
America probably would have become independent sooner or later anyway.
-
All things considered, and compared
with the rest of the world, American colonists had it pretty good.
-
The British handled things badly,
but they had their own problems at home.
- Americans
read the worst possible motives into everything the British did, and exaggerated
their complaints,
even in the Great Declaration (which has been called by another historian
the “defense brief for the treason trial.”)
On the other hand, principles
were involved, and perhaps Americans saw those principles more clearly
than most in 1770. Bottom line: it could have been avoided, but sooner
or later America was bound to become independent.
Copyright © Henry J. Sage
1996-2006