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"The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution"
This paper reviews historian, Robert Middlekauff's narrative historical study of the American Revolution title, "The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution." -- 935 words; MLA

Book Review: "The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution"
This paper discusses "The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution" by Robert Middlekauff, emphasizing the book's new realistic view of the American Revolution and its human heroes. -- 885 words; MLA

A Critical View of the History of the American Revolution
A study of various theories that relate to the American Revolution. -- 3,048 words; MLA

"The Iroquois in the American Revolution"
A look at the historical importance of Barbara Graymont's book in understanding the relationship between the Native Americans and the locals in the American Revolution. -- 1,600 words; MLA

Historiography of the American Revolution
A look at how the history of the American Revolution can be written from a wide variety of points of view and using a variety of methodologies. -- 3,448 words; MLA

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AMERICAN REVOLUTION

American Revolution 
One of the central myths that many Americans entertain about the Revolutionary War is
that victory over the British redcoats was quick and easy. A united, freedom-loving
country rose up in righteous anger at the King's tyrannical actions, grabbed their trusty
flintlocks, hid behind trees and walls, defeated the dull British soldiers who were
sitting ducks in their scarlet uniforms, and established the United States of America.
Throughout the story, there is a certain inevitability about American victory. 
This story raises many problems. If victory was so easy, why did it take eight and a half
years for the Americans to win it? There is also the question of Valley Forge, which
Americans have always interpreted as a parable of courage over adversity. But while one
can admire Americans' fortitude, there is still the real question: why were Continental
Army soldiers lacking clothing and shoes and starving to death in the middle of a
prosperous country? 
These questions and others have prompted modern historians to revise our understanding of
the Revolutionary War. We now recognize that the war affected almost everyone in America.
Of the ten wars that Americans have fought, only the Civil War saw more American military
deaths per 10,000 citizens. And, except for the Vietnam War, the Revolution was the
longest war Americans ever fought. 
Historians also began to recognize that the American Revolutionary War was a complex
event that belies a simplistic nationalist view. They now argue that the American
Revolutionary War contained many different wars. It was, first, a war for national
independence. Although this type of war is taken for granted by Americans today, it must
be remembered that the Revolutionary War was the first in which colonies successfully
rebelled against an imperial power. As a result, the American Revolution became an
inspiration to other colonial peoples in the nineteenth century. This was especially true
for Spanish-American liberators like Simon Bolivar who, in throwing off Spanish rule,
looked to the example of the American Revolution. 
Second, the American Revolutionary War was a civil war. Rather than a country united
against the British, Americans were divided over whether the colonies should leave the
British empire. We now know that in every part of the United States, but especially in
the South after 1778 (when the British transferred its military operations to that
region), Americans fought Americans. Sometimes, American family members fought each
other, as fathers sided with the British and sons with the Americans (or visa versa).
Historians now believe that forty percent of Americans were patriots; twenty percent were
Loyalists, who supported the British; and forty percent were neutral, preferring to be
left alone during the hostilities. Almost 18,000 Loyalists actually joined the British
army and fought against Americans. These conflicts were often extremely violent and
bitter, reminiscent of ethnic conflicts between Serbians and Bosnians today. 
Third, the American Revolution was also a world war. With the American victory at
Saratoga in 1778, France entered the war on the American side. The French wanted to
avenge its defeat in 1763 at the hands of the British in the Seven Years' War. It had
been secretly supplying the Americans with military supplies since 1775 awaiting an
opportunity to side openly with the revolting Americans. By 1780, both Holland and Spain
joined the French and Americans. (The Spanish, it is true, were a little hesitant to make
war against another colonial power, but the possibility of destroying British trade
hegemony was too powerful to resist. The Spanish monarchy would regret its decision in
the nineteenth century when its own colonies would revolt citing the American example).
With their seafaring fleets, America's European allies attacked British possessions in
the West Indies, Africa, and India, thus spreading the war over the face of the globe. 
Historians also stress the importance of the direct assistance that the European allies
gave to the Americans in their victory over the British. It is probably not going too far
to say that America owes its independence to foreign intervention and aid, especially
from France. The French monarchy sent arms, clothing, and ammunition to America; it also
sent soldiers and the French Navy. Most importantly, the French kept the United States
government solvent by lending it the money to keep the Revolution alive. The magnitude of
French support of the American Revolution can be glimpsed at the battle of Yorktown.
There, the majority of George Washington's 15,000 man Continental Army were French
soldiers. Washington's men were clothed by the French, the rifles they used were French,
and French gold paid their wages. Nor must we forget that it was the French Navy that
trapped Cornwallis's soldiers at Yorktown by preventing English ships sent from New York
from rescuing the British army. Perhaps the final irony of the French monarchy's
assistance to America (and proving once again that no good deed goes unpunished) is that
it led to the financial collapse of the French ancien regime. And the bankruptcy of Louis
XVI was one of the major causes of the French Revolution. 
The importance of foreign intervention cannot be overemphasized. Many Americans assume
that Yorktown ended the American Revolution. But technically, the British could have
continued fighting. Ten thousand soldiers remained in New York City under General
Clinton. Thousands more could have been sent from England. But just as America in 1973
made peace in Vietnam, the British in 1783 decided to make peace with America. It would
do so for both political and military reasons. Attacked in Parliament and spread thin by
attacks in all parts of its empire, the British ministry decided to cut its losses in
America and grant independence to its former colony. It did so primarily in order to
consolidate its own military forces and fight the French and Spanish. The British went on
to defeat both European powers and preserve what would come to be called the Second
British Empire. 
Finally, the American Revolution was a war of ideas. The new nation which declared itself
independent in 1776 was founded upon the natural rights philosophy of John Locke, the
English political theorist and philosopher. Following ideas and values embedded in the
Declaration of Independence, Americans went to war to defend the inalienable rights of
man to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness and that all men were created equal.
Underlying this theory of natural rights was the contract theory of government that
postulated that government was a voluntary agreement between a ruler and the people and
that when the ruler violated that contract the people had the right of revolution. To
launch a revolution, and fight a war for political principles was a new development in
the world. Certainly, in the eighteenth century, Europeans fought wars for dynastic
ambition or economic gain. The American Revolution's emphasis on self-rule and the right
of revolution was a standing challenge to the existing European order that would not go
unnoticed. The world of kings and lords, hierarchy and inequality, would never be the
same again. 

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