The Revolutionary War: The Nature Of The American Revolution

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The famous American founding father, Thomas Jefferson once said "The boisterous sea of liberty is never without a wave." Indeed, this wave he was speaking about was present in the American Revolutionary War, and it changed the idea of government for the people, of the people, and by the people”. America wanted to break free from the rule of the British Empire, because of Great Britain treating Americans as second-class citizens, and also the Americans desire to establish their own government. You cannot understand the nature of the American Revolution, unless you understand the events which led up to the American Revolution: The French and Indian War(1754), The Proclamation of 1763, The Stamp Act of 1765, The Boston Massacre(1770), and the…show more content…
Unlike the British, the French are friendly with the Native American Indian tribes living in America, and the French pay them for land and treat them fairly, while the British take Indian lands and don’t treat them fairly, so the French are prepared to fight the British over land. The French and Indians join forces to fight the British. Among the many attempts to unite the colonies, Benjamin Franklin wants to unite the colonies against France, this plan is called the Albany Plan of union – to unite all of the colonies. Parliament rejects this plan, and war breaks out in 1754 between the French and Indians and the British. They are fighting over power and land in the Ohio Valley. The war carries on until 1763. The French surrender and sign the Treaty of Paris, giving the land to…show more content…
The 1773 Tea Act, made the colonists to realize that the British still had the right to tax the colonies. Sam Adams wanted the American people to remember the cause of liberty. He helped form the committees of correspondence. They announced news throughout the colonies about things like who was and who wasn’t boycotting British goods. This communication helped the colonies in acting together. Word got around that the colonists didn’t want to pay tax on Tea, so they organized a protest. This protest took place all across the colonies. Colonists dressed as Indians and dumped millions of dollars worth of British tea into the Boston Harbor. This was really an epic moment in American history, as John Adams put it, “the most magnificent moment of
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