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How the Colonies Became a Nation, 1750-1783

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The American Revolution Turned Out to be a Good Thing for all
Mankind, for it set Up a Standard of Popular Government
and Widely Distributed Suffrage that has Spread
All Over the World

VERYTHING seemed to be going
well in the colonies down to 1750.
They were prosperous and happy.
The
government in England had
many other things to do and paid
little attention to the colonies, except to
appoint governors and see that the
people bought their goods of or through
the home country. Naturally the

colonies felt no special gratitude to England, and were happy in making their own fortune.

England was now the strongest naval power in the world, had conquered large areas in India and was reaching out all over the world with ships and trade. Spain and France were losing commerce and power, while the British were building up a great empire.

Commonwealth
Builders

This is a good

ernors and courts. They were acquiring territory, laying taxes, training militia, keeping up schools, regulating national trade, trying to keep lawbreakers in order. They were learning how to set up and to use self-government, better than in the mother country, better than anywhere else in the world.

Most of the world was governed by

Principles of Life
AMONG the principles

of life which lay in
the minds of the Colonists
the following are the
most important:

Personal Freedom,
Equality before the

Law,

A share in their own
Government, and

Government made by
a compact" between the
people and rulers.

place to consider a side of American life which is more important than the founding of colonies and the wars of the colonizing nations. The colonists of Great Britain were carrying on little popular governments, from which later arose the states of the Union, and the Constitution of the United States. They were thinking out great ideas of personal rights, of town meetings and county and city governments, of colonial assemblies and councils and gov

kings or sultans, or

czars or emperors, who laid down the law for all the people in their realm. In England the kings were figureheads. The real government there was in the hands of a small group of landowning families. Only in the colonies was there real popular gov

ernment.

Rights of Man

The foundation of these free little governments was the idea of personal freedom, as an inborn right, which could not be taken away. This began with the personal rights of Englishmen at home, which the colonists brought over with them.

First of these "inviolable rights" was freedom of person. Englishmen could not be slaves. They were free from arbitrary arrest or imprisonment; and if arrested they had a method, called "habeas corpus," by which anyone deprived of his liberty, except for crime, could quickly be set free. They had a

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system of trial by jury under which a man could be convicted only by the verdict of twelve of his countrymen.

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But the colonists were freer than the people of England in their governments. England had no written constitution, but every one of the thirteen colonies was for a time at least under its own charter or grant. In the New England colonies a town meeting in every town made the local laws; and in the middle and southern colonies a county government with popular elections cared for local matters.

Then each of the thirteen colonies had its own elected legislature. To be sure eleven of the thirteen colonies had governors appointed from England who could veto acts passed by the Assemblies.

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Great Power

The most striking thing about these colonial and local governments was that they had so much power. They levied taxes, raised troops, enacted criminal laws, set up courts, made laws on business, told the Indian what he must do

and set up schools and colleges. The colonists knew there was a power and force across the sea that was bigger than they. Nevertheless all the colonies liked to have their own way and did have it in most respects.

Summary of Colonial Rights

If you wish to understand a boy or girl you take note of what he or she says, but still more of what he or she seems to believe and act upon. So with the colonists. We must know not only what they did but what they thought it right to do. Among the principles of life which lay in their minds some of the most important are the following:

1. Personal freedom.

2. Equality before the law. No colonial nobility existed and they paid little attention to English titles.

3. A share in their own government, through elections and representation in legislatures.

4. The idea that government is made by "a compact" between the people and their rulers. If the ruler were a king and would not keep the compact, then it was right to break it and if necessary to break the king.

5. The right to gather in Congresses where they learned how to act together under their own central authority.

All the people of England were considered to be represented in the Parliament that taxed them; but none of the colonists were represented there. The one field in which the general laws of England bound the colonies was that of commerce and relations with other countries. Still, so long as England

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made no local laws for the colonies they did not suffer.

Frontier War with France
(1754-1763)

All these questions were put aside for several years during the so-called French and Indian War.

The French at last woke up and made a great effort to bring their northern and southern colonies, Canada and Louisiana, closer together. About 1750 they began to build a chain of forts from Lake Ontario to the Ohio River. If they could succeed in holding that country for a few years, the English would be blocked out of the West. Hence it was altogether to the interest of the English colonies to work with the home country in putting a stop to the French advance.

Virginia claimed the region west of the mountains and in 1754 sent out a young Virginian officer named George Washington to warn the French. They attacked him near Great Meadows on the upper waters of the Monongahela River. This was the beginning of a war which in Europe was called the Seven Years' War.

For the first time the British sent out regular troops to fight on the frontier. A little army from England, with colonial detachments, under the command of General Braddock in 1755 was ambushed by the French at Braddock's Field, a few miles from the present Pittsburgh. Then the war blazed all the way from Canada to the Ohio River.

For several years the French had the best of it, because they were united, and the English

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colonists, though brave and hardy, would not act together. When the Quakers of Pennsylvania refused to vote money to carry on war, the Governor induced them to buy "bread, flour, wheat or other grain." Whereupon he bought gun powder which he said must be "the other grain."

Finally the current began to run in favor of the English, who beat the French out of India, and defeated their fleets at sea. British and American privateers captured a large part of the French merchant ships. The English and Americans together at last took Fort Duquesne at the place where Pittsburgh now stands. The British army under General James Wolfe captured Quebec in a notable battle and that ended the war in America.

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Peace, Union and Approach of A Storm

When peace was finally made in Paris in 1763, the French were obliged to give up every square mile of their holdings in the continent of North of North America. The English took the whole of Canada, and the upper lake region and the valley of the Mississippi east of that river. Choiseul, the French statesman is said to have remarked that, "It would always be of service to keep [the British] colonies in their dependence which they would not fail to shake off the moment Canada should secede." Benjamin Franklin, a leading figure in Pennsylvania, did his best to get at least the middle and southern colonies to work side by side. In 1754 seven colonies sent delegates to a meeting

SHILLINGSVI PENC

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HEREAS many of our Subjects in divers Parts of our Colanice and Planetians in North rice, mided by dangerous and ill defigong Men, and forget the Allegiance which they owe to the Power that has protected and fullmed them, after van dorderly Ad commited in durbance of the public Pears, to the Oruction of lawful Comment, and to the Opprion of er loyal Subyen carrying on them, have at length proceeded to an open and avowed Rebellion, by arraying themftives in hofile Manner, to wichland the Esecution of the Law, and traitoroully preparing, ordering and levying War in us: And whereas there is Reafon to apprehend that fuch Rebellion hath been much promoted and ensuraged by the traitorous Correfpondance, Counfels, and Comfort of

AVA divers wicked and deperate Perfons within the Arsim-To the End therefore that none of our bjela may

glect or violate their Dury through Ignorance thereof, or through any Doubt of the Protection which the Law will afford to their Layshy and Zeal have thought fr, by and with the Advice of our Privy Council, to for this our Royal Proclamation, hereby declaring, that not only all our Officers Cvid and Military, are ofliged to exert their utmoft Endeavours to fupprefs fuch Rebellion, and to bring the Traisons to Juftice but that all our Subyeds of this Kesim and the Dominions thereunto belonging, are bound by Low to be aiding and ding in the Suppalin of fuch Rebelion, 2nd to diéciale and make known all traitorous Confpiracies and Amcapes against us, our Crees and Dignity: And we do accordingly Ardly charge and command all our Officers, a well Civil as Maitary, and all other our obese and loyal Subjects, to nic their utmod Exevours to withdand the foppers fuch Rebalion, and to diklofe and make known all Treasons and trainprous Confpiracies which they hall know to be agant us, our Croes and Dignity and for that Purpole, that they tranfest to one of our principal Secretares of Scate, or other proper Officer, due and fall laformation of Perins the thall be found carrying on Correfpondence with, or in asy Manner dr Degree aiding or assing the Perfons now in open Arms and Rekos apaindu Geverage within any of our Colours and Flantation in Americe, in order to bring re condign Pandort the usher Perpetrators, and Alerts of fach traitorous Deligna. Grace of our Court of St Jame's the Tour Day of Augut, One Themed Show Hundred and Seary for, in the firm Tour of Rege In Obedience therefore to his Majefty's Commands to me given, I do hereby publifh and make known his Majefty s molt gracious Proclamation above recited; earneftly exhorting and requiring a his Majefty's loyal and faithful Subjects within this Province, as they value their Allegiance due to the beff of Sovereigns, their Dependance on and Proration from their Parent State, and the Blefings of a mild, free, and happy Constitution; and as they would fun the faral Calamities which are the inevitable Confequences of Sedition and Rebellion, to pay all due Obedience to the Laws of their Country, fenoufly to attend to his Majefty's taid Proclamation, and govern themiches according'). Geser my Hand and Sadar, the Chy of New-York, the Fat Day of Nonumber. Our Thmad Srem Handred and fo the S The of the Rege of Surge Land Genose Therdly the Grace of God of Gress-Bras, Prance and Ireland, K, Defe Py ho Escalony's WM. TRYON. RAVEL BATARD, Jon Dr Boy

GOD SAVE THE KING.

As a result, the King, George III, issued a proclamation DECLARING THE COLONISTS TRAITORS!

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