History of the USA
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Religious Trends
As transatlantic trade increased, communication between the colonies and
England became closer, and English customs and institutions exerted a
stronger influence on the Americans. The aristocracy aped London fashions, and colonials participated in British cultural movements. The Church of
England, the established church in the southern colonies and in the four
counties in and around New York City, grew in status and influence. At the
same time, in both Britain and America, an increasingly rationalistic and
scientific outlook, born in the science of Sir Isaac NEWTON and the
philosophy of John LOCKE, made religious observance more logical and of
this world. Deism and so-called natural religion scoffed at Christianity
and the Bible as a collection of ancient superstitions.
Then from England came an upsurge of evangelical Protestantism, led by John
Wesley (the eventual founder of the Methodist church; see WESLEY family)
and George WHITEFIELD. It sought to combat the new rationalism and foster a
revival of enthusiasm in Christian faith and worship. Beginning in 1738, with Whitefield's arrival in the colonies, a movement known as the GREAT
AWAKENING swept the colonials, gaining strength from an earlier outbreak of
revivalism in Massachusetts (1734-35) led by Jonathan EDWARDS. Intensely
democratic in spirit, the Great Awakening was the first intercolonial
cultural movement. It vastly reenergized a Puritanism that, since the mid-
1600s, had lost its vigor. All churches were electrified by its power--
either in support or in opposition. The movement also revived the earlier
Puritan notion that America was to be a "city on a hill," a special place
of God's work, to stand in sharp contrast to what was regarded as corrupt
and irreligious England.
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
By the middle of the 18th century the wave of American expansion was
beginning to top the Appalachian rise and move into the valley of the Ohio.
Colonial land companies looked covetously to that frontier. The French, foreseeing a serious threat to their fur trade with the Indians, acted
decisively. In 1749 they sent an expedition to reinforce their claim to the
Ohio Valley and subsequently established a string of forts there. The
British and the colonists were forced to respond to the move or suffer the
loss of the vast interior, long claimed by both British and French. The
French and Indian War (1754-63) that resulted became a worldwide conflict, called the SEVEN YEARS' WAR in Europe. At its end, the British had taken
over most of France's colonial empire as well as Spanish Florida and had
become dominant in North America except for Spain's possessions west of the
Mississippi River.
Rising Tensions
A delirious pride over the victory swept the colonies and equaled that of
the British at home. Outbursts of patriotic celebration and cries of
loyalty to the crown infused the Americans. The tremendous cost of the war
itself and the huge responsibility accompanying the new possessions, however, left Britain with an immense war debt and heavy administrative
costs. At the same time the elimination of French rule in North America
lifted the burden of fear of that power from the colonists, inducing them
to be more independent-minded. The war effort itself had contributed to a
new sense of pride and confidence in their own military prowess. In
addition, the rapid growth rate of the mid-18th century had compelled
colonial governments to become far more active than that of old, established England. Because most male colonists possessed property and the
right to vote, the result was the emergence of a turbulent world of
democratic politics.
London authorities attempted to meet the costs of imperial administration by levying a tax on the colonials; the STAMP ACT of 1765 required a tax on all public documents, newspapers, notes and bonds, and almost every other printed paper. A raging controversy that brought business practically to a standstill erupted in the colonies. A Stamp Act Congress, a gathering of representatives from nine colonies, met in New York in October 1765 to issue a solemn protest. It held that the colonials possessed the same rights and liberties as did the British at home, among which was the principle that "no taxes be imposed on them but with their own consent, given personally or by their representatives." In March 1766, Parliament repealed the Stamp Act; it passed the Declaratory Act, asserting its complete sovereignty over the colonies.
Thereafter the transatlantic controversy was rarely quiet. The colonists
regarded the standing army of about 6,000 troops maintained by London in
the colonies after 1763 with great suspicion--such a peacetime force had
never been present before. British authorities defended the force as
necessary to preserve peace on the frontier, especially after PONTIAC'S
REBELLION (1763-65), which had been launched by the brilliant Indian leader
Pontiac to expel the British from the interior and restore French rule. In
another attempt to quell Indian unrest, London established the Proclamation
Line of 1763. Set along the crest of the Appalachians, the line represented
a limit imposed on colonial movement west until a more effective Indian
program could be developed. The colonists were much angered by the
prohibition. Historical memories of the use of standing armies by European
kings to override liberty caused widespread suspicion among the colonists
that the soldiers stationed on the Line of 1763 were to be employed not
against the Indians, but against the colonials themselves should they prove
difficult to govern.
Indeed, for many years colonists had been reading the radical British
press, which argued the existence of a Tory plot in England to crush
liberty throughout the empire. Surviving from the English Civil War of the
previous century was a profound distrust of monarchy among a small fringe
of radical members of Britain's Whig party, primarily Scots and Irish and
English Dissenters--that is, Protestants who were not members of the Church
of England. As members of the minority out-groups in British life, they had
suffered many political and economic disadvantages. Radical Whigs insisted
that a corrupt network of Church of England bishops, great landlords, and
financiers had combined with the royal government to exploit the community
at large, and that--frightened of criticism--this Tory conspiracy sought to
destroy liberty and freedom.
In the cultural politics of the British Empire, American colonists were
also an out-group; they bitterly resented the disdain and derision shown
them by the metropolitan English. Furthermore, most free colonists were
either Dissenters (the Congregationalists in New England and the
Presbyterians and Baptists in New York and the South); or non-English
peoples with ancient reasons for hating the English (the Scots-Irish); or
outsiders in a British-dominated society (Germans and Dutch); or
slaveowners sharply conscious of the distaste with which they were regarded
by the British at home.
A divisive controversy racked the colonies in the mid-18th century concerning the privileges of the Church of England. Many believed in the existence of an Anglican plot against religious liberty. In New England it was widely asserted that the colonial tie to immoral, affluent, Anglican- dominated Britain was endangering the soul of America. Many southerners also disapproved of the ostentatious plantation living that grew out of the tobacco trade--as well as the widespread bankruptcies resulting from dropping tobacco prices--and urged separation from Britain.
The current ideology among many colonists was that of republicanism. The radicalism of the 18th century, it called for grounding government in the people, giving them the vote, holding frequent elections, abolishing established churches, and separating the powers of government to guard against tyranny. Republicans also advocated that most offices be elective and that government be kept simple, limited, and respectful of the rights of citizens.
Deterioration of Imperial Ties
In this prickly atmosphere London's heavy-handedness caused angry reactions
on the part of Americans. The Quartering Act of 1765 ordered colonial
assemblies to house the standing army; to override the resulting protests
in America, London suspended the New York assembly until it capitulated. In
1767 the TOWNSHEND ACTS levied tariffs on many articles imported into the
colonies. These imports were designed to raise funds to pay wages to the
army as well as to the royal governors and judges, who had formerly been
dependent on colonial assemblies for their salaries. Nonimportation
associations immediately sprang up in the colonies to boycott British
goods. When mob attacks prevented commissioners from enforcing the revenue
laws, part of the army was placed (1768) in Boston to protect the
commissioners. This action confirmed the colonists' suspicion that the
troops were maintained in the colonies to deprive them of their liberty. In
March 1770 a group of soldiers fired into a crowd that was harassing them, killing five persons; news of the BOSTON MASSACRE spread through the
colonies.
The chastened ministry in London now repealed all the Townshend duties
except for that on tea. Nonetheless, the economic centralization long
reflected in the NAVIGATION ACTS--which compelled much of the colonial
trade to pass through Britain on its way to the European continent--served
to remind colonials of the heavy price exacted from them for membership in
the empire. The Sugar Act of 1764, latest in a long line of such
restrictive measures, produced by its taxes a huge revenue for the crown.
By 1776 it drained from the colonies about 600,000 pounds sterling, an
enormous sum. The colonial balance of trade with England was always
unfavorable for the Americans, who found it difficult to retain enough cash
to purchase necessary goods.
In 1772 the crown, having earlier declared its right to dismiss colonial
judges at its pleasure, stated its intention to pay directly the salaries
of governors and judges in Massachusetts. Samuel ADAMS, for many years a
passionate republican, immediately created the intercolonial Committee of
Correspondence. Revolutionary sentiment mounted. In December 1773 swarms of
colonials disguised as Mohawks boarded recently arrived tea ships in Boston
harbor, flinging their cargo into the water. The furious royal government
responded to this BOSTON TEA PARTY by the so-called INTOLERABLE ACTS of
1774, practically eliminating self-government in Massachusetts and closing
Boston's port.
Virginia moved to support Massachusetts by convening the First CONTINENTAL
CONGRESS in Philadelphia in the fall of 1774. It drew up declarations of
rights and grievances and called for nonimportation of British goods.
Colonial militia began drilling in the Massachusetts countryside. New
Englanders were convinced that they were soon to have their churches placed
under the jurisdiction of Anglican bishops. They believed, as well, that
the landowning British aristocracy was determined, through the levying of
ruinous taxes, to reduce the freeholding yeomanry of New England to the
status of tenants. The word "slavery" was constantly on their lips.
The War for Independence
In April 1775, Gen. Thomas GAGE in Boston was instructed to take the
offensive against the Massachusetts troublemakers, now declared traitors to
the crown. Charged with bringing an end to the training of militia and
gathering up all arms and ammunition in colonial hands, on April 19, Gage
sent a body of 800 soldiers to Concord to commandeer arms. On that day, the
Battles of LEXINGTON AND CONCORD took place, royal troops fled back to
Boston, and American campfires began burning around the city. The war of
the AMERICAN REVOLUTION had begun.
It soon became a world war, with England's European enemies gladly joining
in opposing England in order to gain revenge for past humiliations. British
forces were engaged in battle from the Caribbean and the American colonies
to the coasts of India. Furthermore, the United Colonies, as the
Continental Congress called the rebelling 13 colonies, were widely
scattered in a huge wilderness and were occupied by a people most of whom
were in arms. The dispersion of the American population meant that the
small (by modern standards) cities of New York, Boston, and Philadelphia
could be taken and held for long periods without affecting the outcome.
LOYALISTS numbered about 60,000, living predominantly along the coast where
people of English ethnic background and anglicized culture were most
numerous, but they were widely separated and weak. Pennsylvania's Quakers
had looked to the crown as their protector against the Scots-Irish and
other militant groups in Pennsylvania. The Quakers were appalled at the
rebellion, aggressively led in the Middle Colonies by the Presbyterian
Scots-Irish, and refused to lend it support. London deluded itself, however, with the belief that the Loyalists represented a majority that
would soon resume control and end the conflict.
Within a brief period after the Battle of Concord, practically all royal
authority disappeared from the 13 colonies. Rebel governments were
established in each colony, and the Continental Congress in Philadelphia
provided a rudimentary national government. The task now before the British
was to fight their way back onto the continent, reestablish royal
governments in each colony, and defeat the colonial army. By March 1776 the
British evacuated Boston, moving to take and hold New York City. Within
days of the British arrival in New York, however, the Congress in
Philadelphia issued (July 4) the DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. In December
1776, Gen. George WASHINGTON reversed the early trend of American defeats
by a stunning victory at Trenton, N.J. (see TRENTON, BATTLE OF).
Thereafter, as the fighting wore on and the cause survived, Washington
became in America and abroad a symbol of strength and great bravery.
In February 1778 the French joined the conflict by signing an alliance with
the Continental Congress. With the aid of the French fleet the British army
in the north was reduced to a bridgehead at New York City. Shifting its
efforts to the south, the royal army campaigned through Georgia and the
Carolinas between 1778 and 1780, marching to the James Peninsula, in
Virginia, in 1781. Here, in the YORKTOWN CAMPAIGN, by the combined efforts
of Washington's troops and the French army and navy, Lord CORNWALLIS was
forced to surrender on Oct. 19, 1781. The fighting, effectively, was over.
In September 1783 the Treaty of Paris secured American independence on
generous terms. The new nation was given an immense domain that ran
westward to the Mississippi River (except for Britain's Canadian colonies
and East and West Florida, which reverted to Spanish rule).
A NEW NATION
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