The Road to Revolution

The Road to Revolution

Unlike many modern revolutions, the American Revolution was not rooted in economic deprivation or in the struggle of an oppressed class against an entrenched elite. But, this does not mean that the colonists did not suffer from serious grievances.

The Revolution was the product of forty years of abuses by the British authorities that many colonists regarded as a threat to their liberty and property. However, people do not act simply in response to objective reality, but according to the significance that they give to events. The Revolution resulted from the way the colonists perceived and interpreted events.

The American patriots were alarmed by what they saw as a conspiracy against their liberty. They feared that the corruption and the abuses of power by the British government would taint their own society. And, further, they were troubled by the knowledge that they had no say over a government three thousand miles away.


Reading Maps

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