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History

American War of Independence (1775–83)

American War of Independence, French Revolution, Industrial Revolution, Russian Revolution

Paper I · Unit 1 Section 2 of 9 0 PYQs 30 min

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American War of Independence (1775–83)

1.1 Background and Causes

By the 1760s, Britain had 13 colonies along the eastern seaboard of North America, inhabited by approximately 2.5 million people. The population was primarily of European (mostly English, Scots-Irish, German) and African (enslaved) descent. The colonies had developed their own representative assemblies and a strong tradition of self-governance.

Taxation Without Representation

Britain emerged from the Seven Years' War (1756–63) deeply in debt and sought to make the colonies contribute to their own defence. A series of taxation measures provoked colonial resistance:

  • Stamp Act (1765): First direct tax on colonies — stamps required on newspapers, legal documents, pamphlets. Colonial slogan: "No taxation without representation." Repealed in 1766 after massive resistance.
  • Townshend Acts (1767): Import duties on glass, lead, paint, paper, tea. Boston Massacre (1770): British soldiers killed 5 colonists during a confrontation in Boston.
  • Tea Act (1773) and Boston Tea Party (16 December 1773): Sons of Liberty, disguised as Mohawk Indians, dumped 342 chests of East India Company tea (£10,000 worth) into Boston Harbour, protesting monopoly trading.
  • Intolerable/Coercive Acts (1774): Britain closed Boston Harbour, restricted Massachusetts self-government, quartered troops in homes — pushing colonists toward rebellion.

Philosophical Foundation

The Declaration of Independence (drafted primarily by Thomas Jefferson, adopted 4 July 1776) reflected Enlightenment ideals directly:

  • Locke's theory of natural rights (life, liberty, property): "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."
  • Government is instituted to protect these rights; when it destroys them, the people have the right to "alter or abolish it."

1.2 Course of the War (1775–83)

  • Battles of Lexington and Concord (19 April 1775): First military engagements — "shot heard round the world"
  • Second Continental Congress (May 1775): Appointed George Washington as Commander-in-Chief
  • Battle of Saratoga (October 1777): American victory — pivotal moment; convinced France to ally with America (February 1778); Spain and Netherlands also entered against Britain
  • Valley Forge winter (1777–78): Washington's army suffered; Baron von Steuben trained them into an effective force
  • Battle of Yorktown (October 1781): British General Cornwallis surrendered to Washington and French General Rochambeau — decisive military victory
  • Treaty of Paris (3 September 1783): Britain recognised American independence; US territory extended to the Mississippi River

1.3 Significance and Legacy

The American Revolution's significance:

  1. First successful anti-colonial revolution — model for subsequent independence movements globally (including India)
  2. First written national constitution (1787) — checks and balances, federalism, separation of powers (Montesquieu's influence)
  3. Bill of Rights (1791) — first 10 constitutional amendments guaranteeing fundamental freedoms
  4. Republican government — replaced monarchy with an elected executive and legislature
  5. Inspired the French Revolution — French officers (Lafayette, Rochambeau) who served in America returned with revolutionary ideas; France's bankruptcy from war funding triggered its own crisis
  6. Contradiction of slavery — the Declaration's "all men are created equal" co-existed with chattel slavery of 700,000 Africans — not resolved until the Civil War (1861–65)