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Major funding for "the
American revolution"
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was provided by the better angels society
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00:00:04,500 --> 00:00:06,946
and its members Jeannie
and Jonathan lavine
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00:00:06,970 --> 00:00:08,946
with the crimson lion foundation
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00:00:08,970 --> 00:00:10,846
and the blavatnik family foundation.
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00:00:10,870 --> 00:00:14,386
Major funding was also
provided by David m. Rubenstein,
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00:00:14,410 --> 00:00:17,526
the Robert d. And Patricia
e. Kern family foundation,
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00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,856
the Lilly endowment,
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00:00:18,880 --> 00:00:21,026
and by better angels society members:
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00:00:21,050 --> 00:00:23,366
Eric and Wendy schmidt,
Stephen a. Schwarzman,
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00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,066
and Kenneth c. Griffin
with Griffin catalyst.
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00:00:26,090 --> 00:00:27,836
Additional support was provided by
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00:00:27,860 --> 00:00:29,896
the Arthur vining Davis foundations,
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00:00:29,920 --> 00:00:31,536
the pew charitable trusts,
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00:00:31,560 --> 00:00:33,676
Gilbert s. Omenn and Martha a. Darling,
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the park foundation,
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00:00:35,130 --> 00:00:36,846
and by better angels society members:
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00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016
Gilchrist and Amy berg,
Perry and Donna golkin,
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00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,546
the michelson foundation,
Jacqueline b. Mars,
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00:00:42,570 --> 00:00:46,016
the kissick family foundation,
Diane and hal brierley,
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00:00:46,040 --> 00:00:48,716
John h.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell,
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John and Catherine debs,
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the fuller ton family charitable fund,
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and these additional members.
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"The American revolution"
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was made possible with support
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from the corporation
for public broadcasting,
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and viewers like you. Thank you.
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The American revolution caused
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an impact felt around the world.
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The fight would take
ingenuity, determination,
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and hope for a new tomorrow
to turn the tide of history
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and set the American story in motion.
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What would you like the power to do?
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Bank of america.
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From a small spark, kindled in america,
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a flame has arisen
not to be extinguished.
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Without consuming, it winds its progress
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from nation to nation,
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and conquers by a silent operation.
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Man finds himself changed
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and discovers that the strength
and powers of despotism
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00:02:03,180 --> 00:02:06,996
consist wholly in the fear of resisting it,
44
00:02:07,020 --> 00:02:09,336
and that, in order to be free,
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00:02:09,360 --> 00:02:13,066
it is sufficient that he wills it.
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Thomas paine.
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We know our lands are
now become more valuable.
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The white people think
we do not know their value,
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00:02:40,520 --> 00:02:45,566
but we are sensible that
the land is everlasting.
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Canasatego, spokesman
for the six nations.
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Long before 13 British colonies
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00:02:54,340 --> 00:02:57,316
made themselves into the United States,
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the six nations of the
iroquois confederacy...
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00:03:00,710 --> 00:03:07,256
seneca, cayuga, onondaga,
tuscarora, oneida, and mohawk...
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had created a union of their own
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that they called the haudenosaunee...
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a democracy that had
flourished for centuries.
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We heartily recommend union.
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We are a powerful confederacy.
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00:03:23,260 --> 00:03:25,546
And by your observing
the same methods
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our wise forefathers have taken,
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you will acquire fresh
strength and power.
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Therefore, whatever befalls you,
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never fall out one with another.
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In the spring of 1754,
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the celebrated scientist
and writer Benjamin Franklin
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proposed that the British
colonies form a similar union.
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He printed a cartoon of
a snake cut into pieces
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above the dire warning "join, or die."
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A few weeks later at Albany, New York,
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Franklin and other
delegates from 7 colonies
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agreed to his plan of union...
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and then went home to try and sell it.
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00:04:15,780 --> 00:04:19,426
But when the plan was
presented at the colonial capitals,
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each of the individual
legislatures rejected it
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00:04:23,090 --> 00:04:27,900
because they did not want
to give up their autonomy.
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The plan died, but
the idea would survive.
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20 years later, "join, or
die" would be a rallying cry
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00:04:38,310 --> 00:04:42,080
in the most consequential
revolution in history.
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We are in the very midst of a revolution
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the most complete,
unexpected, and remarkable
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of any in the history of nations.
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00:06:00,760 --> 00:06:04,066
Objects of the most
stupendous magnitude,
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00:06:04,090 --> 00:06:06,406
and measures in which
the lives and liberties
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00:06:06,430 --> 00:06:11,046
of millions yet unborn
are intimately interested,
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00:06:11,070 --> 00:06:13,376
are now before us.
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00:06:13,400 --> 00:06:15,170
John Adams.
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00:06:19,540 --> 00:06:21,986
The American revolution was not just
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a clash between
englishmen over Indian land,
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taxes, and representation,
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but a bloody struggle that would engage
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more than 2 dozen nations,
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European as well as native American,
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that also somehow came to be about
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the noblest aspirations of humankind.
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It was fought in hundreds of places,
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from the forests of Quebec
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to the back country of
Georgia and the carol in as;
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00:06:54,880 --> 00:06:58,186
from the rough seas off England, France
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00:06:58,210 --> 00:07:00,026
and in the Caribbean,
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00:07:00,050 --> 00:07:03,450
to the towns and
orchards of Indian country.
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00:07:04,750 --> 00:07:07,136
The fighting would take place on roads
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and in villages and cities;
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00:07:09,220 --> 00:07:12,366
by woods and fields,
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00:07:12,390 --> 00:07:16,506
and along waterways
with old American names:
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The susquehanna, the
Tennessee, and the Ohio;
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the oriskany, the catawba,
and the chesapeake;
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and along waters with newer names:
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The Charles, the
Hudson, and the schuylkill;
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00:07:31,180 --> 00:07:35,356
the brandy wine, the
Cooper, and the Ashley;
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00:07:35,380 --> 00:07:37,720
and finally the York.
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00:07:39,790 --> 00:07:42,696
The war grew out of a
multitude of grievances
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lodged against the British parliament
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by British subjects living
an ocean away in 13
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otherwise disunited colonies.
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It was also a savage civil war
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that pitted brother against brother,
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neighbor against neighbor,
American against American,
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killing tens of thousands of them.
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00:08:08,520 --> 00:08:10,226
However great the blessings
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00:08:10,250 --> 00:08:14,136
to be derived from a
revolution in government,
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00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:17,466
the scenes of anarchy,
cruelty, and blood,
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00:08:17,490 --> 00:08:19,606
which usually precede it,
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00:08:19,630 --> 00:08:21,806
and the difficulty of uniting a majority
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in favor of any system,
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are sufficient to make every person
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00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:27,916
who has been an eyewitness
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00:08:27,940 --> 00:08:31,870
recoil at the prospect
of overturning empires.
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00:08:33,010 --> 00:08:34,540
Abigail Adams.
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00:08:36,140 --> 00:08:39,056
The American revolution
was the first war
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ever fought proclaiming
the unalienable rights
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of all people.
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It would change the
course of human events.
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It's our creation myth, our creation story.
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00:08:56,630 --> 00:08:59,106
It tells us who we are,
where we came from,
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00:08:59,130 --> 00:09:01,046
what our forebears believed, and, and,
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00:09:01,070 --> 00:09:02,516
and what they were willing to die for.
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00:09:02,540 --> 00:09:04,346
That's the most profound question
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00:09:04,370 --> 00:09:07,386
any people can ask themselves.
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00:09:07,410 --> 00:09:10,556
What the American revolution
gave the United States
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00:09:10,580 --> 00:09:15,726
was an actual idea
of a moment of origin,
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which many other countries
in the world don't have.
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00:09:19,850 --> 00:09:23,696
And it has invested these particular years
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00:09:23,720 --> 00:09:27,876
of these particular
people with a set of stakes
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00:09:27,900 --> 00:09:31,576
that are so far beyond
what any set of events
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00:09:31,600 --> 00:09:34,146
and any set of people can plausibly carry
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00:09:34,170 --> 00:09:37,246
that it has made the way that Americans
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00:09:37,270 --> 00:09:41,240
think about this period
very unreal and detached.
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00:09:44,610 --> 00:09:45,986
One of the most remarkable aspects
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00:09:46,010 --> 00:09:47,756
of the revolutionary war is that you had
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such different places
come together as one nation.
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00:09:53,120 --> 00:09:57,936
I'm not sure there is a
state, anywhere in the world,
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00:09:57,960 --> 00:10:01,476
in the late 18th century,
that has as wide variety
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00:10:01,500 --> 00:10:03,906
of people who inhabit it,
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00:10:03,930 --> 00:10:06,246
and so, it really is
actually kind of remarkable,
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00:10:06,270 --> 00:10:09,846
the way that that
nation ends up cohering,
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not around culture, not around religion,
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00:10:13,870 --> 00:10:15,956
not around ancient history.
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00:10:15,980 --> 00:10:19,256
It was coming together around
a set of purposes and ideals
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00:10:19,280 --> 00:10:21,550
for one common cause.
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00:10:23,780 --> 00:10:25,966
Events like these have seldom,
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00:10:25,990 --> 00:10:30,866
if ever before, taken place
on the stage of human action.
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00:10:30,890 --> 00:10:33,706
For who has before
seen a disciplined army
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formed from such raw materials?
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Who that was not a witness
could imagine that men
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00:10:39,500 --> 00:10:42,816
who came from the different
parts of the continent,
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00:10:42,840 --> 00:10:46,946
strongly disposed to despise
and quarrel with each other,
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00:10:46,970 --> 00:10:51,280
would become but one
patriotic band of brothers?
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00:10:52,880 --> 00:10:54,450
George Washington.
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We have great reason to believe
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you intend to drive us away.
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Why do you come to fight in the land
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that god has given us?
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00:11:20,840 --> 00:11:23,986
Why don't you fight in the
old country and on the sea?
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00:11:24,010 --> 00:11:26,856
Why do you come to fight on our land?
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Shingas, lenape nation.
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For several generations, violent conquest
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and old-world diseases had
decimated native populations
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00:11:40,090 --> 00:11:43,936
between the Atlantic ocean
and the appalachian mountains,
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00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:46,676
where, by the middle of the 18th century,
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00:11:46,700 --> 00:11:50,816
13 distinct British
colonies were established
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south of French Canada
and north of Spanish Florida.
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Now, as land speculators and settlers
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eyed the Ohio river valley
beyond the appalachians,
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00:12:02,920 --> 00:12:06,566
the Paramount question
became who would control
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00:12:06,590 --> 00:12:08,760
the north American interior.
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00:12:10,360 --> 00:12:13,706
Both protestant britain
and catholic France...
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ancient enemies that had already fought
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3 wars in North America...
claimed the region.
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00:12:20,470 --> 00:12:22,916
So did a host of Indian nations
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00:12:22,940 --> 00:12:26,046
who had lived and
farmed and hunted there
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00:12:26,070 --> 00:12:28,310
for hundreds of generations.
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In 1754, to solidify britain's claim,
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00:12:34,520 --> 00:12:38,226
the royal colony of
Virginia dispatched militia
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00:12:38,250 --> 00:12:41,320
to protect their interests
in the Ohio country.
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00:12:43,020 --> 00:12:47,236
The small force of militiamen
and a handful of native allies
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00:12:47,260 --> 00:12:50,306
surrounded a group of
unsuspecting French soldiers...
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00:12:50,330 --> 00:12:52,006
Fire!
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00:12:52,030 --> 00:12:53,800
And fired into them.
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00:12:55,200 --> 00:12:58,986
Nearly half of the frenchmen
were killed or wounded.
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00:12:59,010 --> 00:13:01,216
The rest surrendered.
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00:13:01,240 --> 00:13:04,456
According to one of the
Indians with the virginians,
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00:13:04,480 --> 00:13:08,326
the militia's 22-year-old
commander had been the first
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00:13:08,350 --> 00:13:11,526
to shoot into the enemy's encampment.
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00:13:11,550 --> 00:13:14,366
If so, George Washington fired
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00:13:14,390 --> 00:13:17,366
the very first shot of a global conflict
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that would come to be
called the seven years' war
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00:13:21,130 --> 00:13:24,470
and set the stage for
the American revolution.
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00:13:26,300 --> 00:13:28,576
Soon after his surprise attack,
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00:13:28,600 --> 00:13:30,146
a French and Indian force
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00:13:30,170 --> 00:13:32,586
surrounded Washington and his men,
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00:13:32,610 --> 00:13:36,286
forcing him, for the first
and only time in his life,
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00:13:36,310 --> 00:13:38,186
to surrender.
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00:13:38,210 --> 00:13:40,996
A less prominent young
man's military career
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00:13:41,020 --> 00:13:43,126
might have ended there,
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00:13:43,150 --> 00:13:46,866
but Washington was given a
second chance the following year
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00:13:46,890 --> 00:13:49,996
as aide-de-camp to
general Edward braddock,
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00:13:50,020 --> 00:13:53,006
the British commander
sent to dislodge the French
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00:13:53,030 --> 00:13:54,500
at fort Duquesne.
220
00:13:55,730 --> 00:13:58,706
Braddock was confident
his red-coated British regulars
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00:13:58,730 --> 00:14:04,316
could easily defeat anyone who
stood between him and the fort.
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00:14:04,340 --> 00:14:08,456
But on July 9, 1755,
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00:14:08,480 --> 00:14:13,286
a much smaller French and
Indian force overwhelmed them.
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00:14:13,310 --> 00:14:17,056
The British panicked.
Braddock was mortally wounded.
225
00:14:17,080 --> 00:14:20,296
The command fell to Washington.
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00:14:20,320 --> 00:14:23,136
Two horses were shot from under him.
227
00:14:23,160 --> 00:14:26,636
Musket balls ripped
through his hat and jacket.
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00:14:26,660 --> 00:14:29,836
He ordered a retreat and
managed to get most of his men
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00:14:29,860 --> 00:14:31,630
safely off the battlefield.
230
00:14:34,070 --> 00:14:37,346
Washington learned
two valuable lessons:
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00:14:37,370 --> 00:14:40,746
British troops were not invincible,
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00:14:40,770 --> 00:14:43,116
and there was no shame in retreating
233
00:14:43,140 --> 00:14:45,450
if you could live to fight another day.
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00:14:47,580 --> 00:14:51,196
He was hailed as a hero
and given overall command
235
00:14:51,220 --> 00:14:53,396
of Virginia's militia.
236
00:14:53,420 --> 00:14:55,966
But after his appeal
for a royal commission
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00:14:55,990 --> 00:14:58,436
in the British army was rejected,
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00:14:58,460 --> 00:15:03,206
he retired from military service in 1758
239
00:15:03,230 --> 00:15:06,476
and returned to his
plantation at mount Vernon,
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00:15:06,500 --> 00:15:10,440
filled with resentment at how
the British had treated him.
241
00:15:11,510 --> 00:15:13,516
And he comes to view
the people in London
242
00:15:13,540 --> 00:15:17,926
as people who have a
condescending view of Americans.
243
00:15:17,950 --> 00:15:19,926
They think of him as inferior.
244
00:15:19,950 --> 00:15:22,356
They didn't give him a commission.
245
00:15:22,380 --> 00:15:25,326
I mean, when Washington is told
that he didn't get a commission,
246
00:15:25,350 --> 00:15:27,736
he doesn't think that means he's inferior.
247
00:15:27,760 --> 00:15:30,590
He thinks that means
the British are really stupid.
248
00:15:31,990 --> 00:15:34,576
There can be no sufficient reason given
249
00:15:34,600 --> 00:15:37,106
why we, who spend
our blood and treasure
250
00:15:37,130 --> 00:15:39,476
in defense of the king's dominions,
251
00:15:39,500 --> 00:15:42,470
are not entitled to equal preferment.
252
00:15:43,570 --> 00:15:46,986
We can't conceive that being
Americans should deprive us
253
00:15:47,010 --> 00:15:49,380
of the benefits of British subjects.
254
00:15:53,650 --> 00:15:55,696
The seven years' war, against britain's
255
00:15:55,720 --> 00:15:57,826
imperial rivals, France and Spain,
256
00:15:57,850 --> 00:15:59,796
is fought not only in North America.
257
00:15:59,820 --> 00:16:02,696
It's fought in the Caribbean,
it's fought in Africa,
258
00:16:02,720 --> 00:16:06,236
it's fought in India, it's
fought in the Philippines.
259
00:16:06,260 --> 00:16:09,036
So, even though it starts
in the Ohio back country,
260
00:16:09,060 --> 00:16:11,146
with a dispute between colonists
261
00:16:11,170 --> 00:16:13,346
and the French and their Indian allies,
262
00:16:13,370 --> 00:16:16,016
it mushrooms into a global campaign
263
00:16:16,040 --> 00:16:18,946
that touches Europe
and all parts of the world.
264
00:16:18,970 --> 00:16:22,116
The American colonies are just one piece
265
00:16:22,140 --> 00:16:25,156
on a broad, global imperial chessboard
266
00:16:25,180 --> 00:16:28,126
as far as British
policymakers are concerned.
267
00:16:28,150 --> 00:16:29,796
Remembered in North America
268
00:16:29,820 --> 00:16:32,066
as the French and Indian war,
269
00:16:32,090 --> 00:16:34,166
the fighting went on for years
270
00:16:34,190 --> 00:16:36,836
until a series of British victories,
271
00:16:36,860 --> 00:16:39,806
won by regulars and colonial troops,
272
00:16:39,830 --> 00:16:43,736
ended the French empire's
presence on the continent,
273
00:16:43,760 --> 00:16:46,206
gave britain Spanish Florida,
274
00:16:46,230 --> 00:16:50,440
and more than tripled the
lands claimed by England's king.
275
00:16:51,970 --> 00:16:54,286
France transfers to britain
276
00:16:54,310 --> 00:16:57,010
all of its territory in North America.
277
00:16:58,210 --> 00:17:00,956
But it's a little bit like the
Greek myths, you know,
278
00:17:00,980 --> 00:17:02,656
never wish for something too much
279
00:17:02,680 --> 00:17:04,826
'cause you might get
what you wished for.
280
00:17:04,850 --> 00:17:06,996
The British, in North America,
281
00:17:07,020 --> 00:17:08,666
have been hoping and praying
282
00:17:08,690 --> 00:17:12,866
for the defeat of the French for 80 years.
283
00:17:12,890 --> 00:17:16,906
And now they're victorious.
Church bells are ringing.
284
00:17:16,930 --> 00:17:19,546
This is the moment we've all hoped for.
285
00:17:19,570 --> 00:17:23,240
And then it all begins to
go to hell in a hand basket.
286
00:17:33,680 --> 00:17:39,096
Britishness in america
is just everywhere.
287
00:17:39,120 --> 00:17:41,396
In Boston, the town house
288
00:17:41,420 --> 00:17:44,136
sits at the center of
queen and king streets.
289
00:17:44,160 --> 00:17:46,766
The London bookshop
was around the corner.
290
00:17:46,790 --> 00:17:49,206
The crown coffee house.
291
00:17:49,230 --> 00:17:55,916
The sort of ideal of,
fashion, of political currency,
292
00:17:55,940 --> 00:18:01,386
of the basis of one's rights
and that sense of home.
293
00:18:01,410 --> 00:18:03,716
They talk about britain
even when they have
294
00:18:03,740 --> 00:18:06,250
never been there as home.
295
00:18:08,480 --> 00:18:12,496
On Saturday, December 27, 1760,
296
00:18:12,520 --> 00:18:16,196
a British frigate
anchored in Boston harbor.
297
00:18:16,220 --> 00:18:19,236
It brought with it big news.
298
00:18:19,260 --> 00:18:22,676
King George ii had died in October.
299
00:18:22,700 --> 00:18:28,076
His 22-year-old grandson
now reigned as George III.
300
00:18:28,100 --> 00:18:30,376
Crowds cheered.
301
00:18:30,400 --> 00:18:33,616
Bostonians were proud to
be part of what had become
302
00:18:33,640 --> 00:18:38,226
the most far-flung empire on earth.
303
00:18:38,250 --> 00:18:41,196
In the 18th century, the belief was,
304
00:18:41,220 --> 00:18:43,396
who in the world has got it right?
305
00:18:43,420 --> 00:18:46,696
Only one people on earth... the British.
306
00:18:46,720 --> 00:18:49,836
They have a mixed constitution,
constitutional monarch,
307
00:18:49,860 --> 00:18:53,906
house of lords, an
elected house of commons.
308
00:18:53,930 --> 00:18:55,836
You got an element of democracy,
309
00:18:55,860 --> 00:18:59,676
element of aristocracy,
element of monarchy.
310
00:18:59,700 --> 00:19:02,276
The 3 of them will check
and balance each other
311
00:19:02,300 --> 00:19:06,486
and produce the perfect combination.
312
00:19:06,510 --> 00:19:09,356
We tend to think of the
British empire in america
313
00:19:09,380 --> 00:19:11,156
as the 13 north American colonies
314
00:19:11,180 --> 00:19:12,886
that became the United States.
315
00:19:12,910 --> 00:19:15,796
But Great Britain actually
had 26 colonies in america.
316
00:19:15,820 --> 00:19:18,426
And, by far, the most important of those,
317
00:19:18,450 --> 00:19:21,366
the most profitable, the
most militarily significant,
318
00:19:21,390 --> 00:19:23,466
and the best politically
connected of those colonies
319
00:19:23,490 --> 00:19:25,636
were those colonies in the Caribbean.
320
00:19:25,660 --> 00:19:28,836
The territories that tended
to have the most slaves,
321
00:19:28,860 --> 00:19:32,176
and exploit enslaved
labor most intensively,
322
00:19:32,200 --> 00:19:34,446
tended to be the most profitable colonies.
323
00:19:34,470 --> 00:19:36,846
So, if you look at North
America, for example,
324
00:19:36,870 --> 00:19:39,586
Massachusetts is the
least profitable colony
325
00:19:39,610 --> 00:19:41,586
in North America and it's got
326
00:19:41,610 --> 00:19:44,556
the smallest percentage
of slaves in its territory.
327
00:19:44,580 --> 00:19:46,326
The most profitable
colony in North America
328
00:19:46,350 --> 00:19:47,996
is south Carolina.
329
00:19:48,020 --> 00:19:51,226
Then, when you get to a
place like Jamaica or Barbados,
330
00:19:51,250 --> 00:19:53,826
where 90% of the population is enslaved,
331
00:19:53,850 --> 00:19:55,196
then you're really talking.
332
00:19:55,220 --> 00:19:56,666
That's where the money is being made
333
00:19:56,690 --> 00:19:58,436
and that's also why that's where
334
00:19:58,460 --> 00:20:01,300
the royal Navy warships
are concentrated.
335
00:20:03,530 --> 00:20:05,846
But the 13 contiguous colonies
336
00:20:05,870 --> 00:20:09,876
that clung to the Atlantic
seaboard were the most populous.
337
00:20:09,900 --> 00:20:13,846
The colonists' numbers
had doubled every 25 years.
338
00:20:13,870 --> 00:20:18,286
By 1763, the population...
black and white...
339
00:20:18,310 --> 00:20:20,680
had reached almost 2 million.
340
00:20:21,720 --> 00:20:25,396
And those settlers
produce for the empire,
341
00:20:25,420 --> 00:20:27,296
but they also consume.
342
00:20:27,320 --> 00:20:28,966
They provide markets.
343
00:20:28,990 --> 00:20:33,036
They purchase goods that
are manufactured in britain.
344
00:20:33,060 --> 00:20:36,336
It's the fastest-growing
part of the British economy,
345
00:20:36,360 --> 00:20:38,946
is the trades with North America.
346
00:20:38,970 --> 00:20:42,346
The British empire expanded enormously
347
00:20:42,370 --> 00:20:45,486
as a result of the seven years' war.
348
00:20:45,510 --> 00:20:47,646
There's real anxiety
that unless this empire
349
00:20:47,670 --> 00:20:50,416
is tied together more tightly,
350
00:20:50,440 --> 00:20:53,526
by central control and direction,
351
00:20:53,550 --> 00:20:56,226
it will start to fragment, in
much the same way as the
352
00:20:56,250 --> 00:20:59,526
Roman empire was
assumed to have collapsed.
353
00:20:59,550 --> 00:21:01,996
For more than 150 years,
354
00:21:02,020 --> 00:21:05,436
London had treated its
north American colonies
355
00:21:05,460 --> 00:21:08,106
with what one British politician would call
356
00:21:08,130 --> 00:21:10,606
"salutary neglect."
357
00:21:10,630 --> 00:21:14,276
Each colony was part
of the king's dominions,
358
00:21:14,300 --> 00:21:16,676
but in most of them, legislatures,
359
00:21:16,700 --> 00:21:19,346
elected by propertied white men,
360
00:21:19,370 --> 00:21:21,716
made laws, levied taxes,
361
00:21:21,740 --> 00:21:25,586
and decided how they'd be spent.
362
00:21:25,610 --> 00:21:30,456
Slavery was legal everywhere,
from New Hampshire to Georgia.
363
00:21:30,480 --> 00:21:32,926
Many of the black people
living in the colonies
364
00:21:32,950 --> 00:21:36,366
had been born there or in the Caribbean.
365
00:21:36,390 --> 00:21:39,736
But tens of thousands
were from west Africa...
366
00:21:39,760 --> 00:21:44,576
captured from what is now
Senegal, Gambia, and Gabon;
367
00:21:44,600 --> 00:21:48,046
Angola, Congo, and the Ivory Coast;
368
00:21:48,070 --> 00:21:50,970
Nigeria, Cameroon, and Ghana.
369
00:21:52,140 --> 00:21:54,786
I think it's easy to underestimate
370
00:21:54,810 --> 00:22:00,750
the sheer diversity and
variety, in the colonies.
371
00:22:01,750 --> 00:22:04,326
Close to the majority of the population
372
00:22:04,350 --> 00:22:06,620
in the southern colonies are African.
373
00:22:07,750 --> 00:22:10,196
There are French huguenots;
There are Germans.
374
00:22:10,220 --> 00:22:12,530
There's Scots. There's Scots-Irish.
375
00:22:13,630 --> 00:22:16,176
There are native people,
not just on the frontiers,
376
00:22:16,200 --> 00:22:20,500
but actually living in the
heart of the 13 colonies.
377
00:22:21,840 --> 00:22:26,046
Most of the population of
North America is indigenous.
378
00:22:26,070 --> 00:22:27,886
70%, 80% of the
continent is still controlled
379
00:22:27,910 --> 00:22:30,016
by indigenous people, politically,
380
00:22:30,040 --> 00:22:32,686
economically, and militarily.
381
00:22:32,710 --> 00:22:35,196
It's not a separate place,
it's not this timeless space
382
00:22:35,220 --> 00:22:37,626
where native people are
sort of existing in Harmony
383
00:22:37,650 --> 00:22:39,426
with nature and that
they have no interest
384
00:22:39,450 --> 00:22:41,196
in the outside world.
385
00:22:41,220 --> 00:22:42,536
Native people want the good stuff
386
00:22:42,560 --> 00:22:44,596
that Europeans are bringing.
387
00:22:44,620 --> 00:22:46,206
Europeans want the wealth
388
00:22:46,230 --> 00:22:48,106
that they can get from native people.
389
00:22:48,130 --> 00:22:51,776
Native powers are as important
to the global market economy
390
00:22:51,800 --> 00:22:55,740
as a place like Virginia
or a place like New York.
391
00:22:57,770 --> 00:22:59,916
If there is a country in the world
392
00:22:59,940 --> 00:23:02,786
where Concord, according
to common calculation,
393
00:23:02,810 --> 00:23:06,456
would be least expected, it is america.
394
00:23:06,480 --> 00:23:11,126
Made up as it is of people
from different nations,
395
00:23:11,150 --> 00:23:12,826
speaking different languages,
396
00:23:12,850 --> 00:23:15,866
and more different in
their modes of worship,
397
00:23:15,890 --> 00:23:18,466
it would appear that the
union of such a people
398
00:23:18,490 --> 00:23:19,760
was impracticable.
399
00:23:21,030 --> 00:23:22,500
Thomas paine.
400
00:23:23,860 --> 00:23:27,106
In britain, 2% of the population...
401
00:23:27,130 --> 00:23:31,646
lords and lesser gentry...
owned 2/3 of all the land,
402
00:23:31,670 --> 00:23:34,046
and most people had for centuries
403
00:23:34,070 --> 00:23:37,816
lived "dependent" lives,
either as tenant farmers,
404
00:23:37,840 --> 00:23:41,026
working land belonging to aristocrats,
405
00:23:41,050 --> 00:23:44,990
or as landless laborers
working for an employer.
406
00:23:46,850 --> 00:23:49,866
For most free white men in the colonies,
407
00:23:49,890 --> 00:23:53,060
North America was a land of opportunity.
408
00:23:54,290 --> 00:23:57,306
The people who are
coming from northern britain,
409
00:23:57,330 --> 00:23:59,906
as well as a lot of Scots-Irish,
410
00:23:59,930 --> 00:24:02,546
often are bringing the
resentments that they'd been
411
00:24:02,570 --> 00:24:04,946
pushed off their lands by landlords.
412
00:24:04,970 --> 00:24:06,846
And so, there's a great sensitivity
413
00:24:06,870 --> 00:24:10,716
about any kind of financial exaction
414
00:24:10,740 --> 00:24:13,326
that could be a slippery slope
415
00:24:13,350 --> 00:24:15,696
leading to the kinds of dependence
416
00:24:15,720 --> 00:24:17,956
that they had escaped from.
417
00:24:17,980 --> 00:24:21,396
The colonies were
overwhelmingly agricultural.
418
00:24:21,420 --> 00:24:23,436
Just 3 seaport towns...
419
00:24:23,460 --> 00:24:26,036
Philadelphia, Boston, and New York...
420
00:24:26,060 --> 00:24:29,006
were home to more than 10,000 people.
421
00:24:29,030 --> 00:24:32,576
And 2 out of 3 farmers
were independent,
422
00:24:32,600 --> 00:24:34,900
proud owners of their land.
423
00:24:35,770 --> 00:24:37,946
Others were indentured servants,
424
00:24:37,970 --> 00:24:40,846
hoping that once they
fulfilled their contract,
425
00:24:40,870 --> 00:24:43,880
that they, too, could
prosper on their own.
426
00:24:44,950 --> 00:24:46,726
For Americans, land and Liberty
427
00:24:46,750 --> 00:24:49,556
are completely intertwined.
428
00:24:49,580 --> 00:24:54,066
White Americans see their
Liberty as being founded
429
00:24:54,090 --> 00:24:57,766
on not being a peasant
on somebody's else's land.
430
00:24:57,790 --> 00:25:01,036
Preserving, promoting that
Liberty for white Americans,
431
00:25:01,060 --> 00:25:04,276
to them, means taking native land.
432
00:25:04,300 --> 00:25:06,906
There is no other answer.
433
00:25:06,930 --> 00:25:10,816
American colonists
had been looking forward
434
00:25:10,840 --> 00:25:14,646
to the glorious day when the
French and their Indian allies
435
00:25:14,670 --> 00:25:19,426
would be defeated, and
British subjects would
436
00:25:19,450 --> 00:25:22,156
sweep over the appalachian mountains,
437
00:25:22,180 --> 00:25:24,696
looking for land.
438
00:25:24,720 --> 00:25:27,326
Maps at the time show the colonies
439
00:25:27,350 --> 00:25:31,766
extending well into the interior.
440
00:25:31,790 --> 00:25:34,976
We often see maps as benign,
441
00:25:35,000 --> 00:25:38,100
as descriptive, as without argument.
442
00:25:39,100 --> 00:25:41,846
But they're aspirational, in many ways.
443
00:25:41,870 --> 00:25:44,700
They're an argument
rather than a conclusion.
444
00:25:45,770 --> 00:25:47,716
Hundreds of native nations
445
00:25:47,740 --> 00:25:51,610
still are completely intact,
completely independent.
446
00:25:52,780 --> 00:25:54,756
In the north, is the powerful
haudenosaunee league,
447
00:25:54,780 --> 00:25:59,190
the six nations, including
the mohawks and the senecas.
448
00:26:00,590 --> 00:26:03,236
To their south are the shawnees,
449
00:26:03,260 --> 00:26:07,836
who have retaken the
Ohio valley in recent years
450
00:26:07,860 --> 00:26:10,036
and formed a huge confederacy
451
00:26:10,060 --> 00:26:12,906
that stretches from the
delawares, or the lenapes,
452
00:26:12,930 --> 00:26:16,146
in the east to the powerful nations,
453
00:26:16,170 --> 00:26:19,110
including the anishinaabe
of the Great Lakes.
454
00:26:21,040 --> 00:26:25,056
South of there are the
chickasaws, the cherokees,
455
00:26:25,080 --> 00:26:29,156
the choctaws, the creek
confederacy, or the muscogees,
456
00:26:29,180 --> 00:26:33,350
and hundreds of other smaller nations.
457
00:26:34,690 --> 00:26:37,896
These are nations that
fight against each other,
458
00:26:37,920 --> 00:26:41,466
but also that increasingly,
by the late 18th century,
459
00:26:41,490 --> 00:26:44,236
are making some larger confederacies,
460
00:26:44,260 --> 00:26:46,776
in part to try to fight against settlers
461
00:26:46,800 --> 00:26:49,600
who have been moving
onto their land in recent years.
462
00:26:52,640 --> 00:26:55,716
Beginning in the spring of 1763,
463
00:26:55,740 --> 00:26:58,326
in what was called Pontiac's war,
464
00:26:58,350 --> 00:27:01,526
warriors from at least
a dozen native nations
465
00:27:01,550 --> 00:27:05,426
overran many of the British
forts along the Great Lakes
466
00:27:05,450 --> 00:27:09,136
and in the Ohio valley
and raided settlements,
467
00:27:09,160 --> 00:27:12,906
killing or capturing 2,000 colonists
468
00:27:12,930 --> 00:27:16,060
and driving out some 4,000 more.
469
00:27:17,000 --> 00:27:19,746
Many colonists responded by killing
470
00:27:19,770 --> 00:27:21,940
any Indian they encountered.
471
00:27:23,100 --> 00:27:25,116
The brits look at this situation and say,
472
00:27:25,140 --> 00:27:28,786
"ok, we've just inherited
all of this empire.
473
00:27:28,810 --> 00:27:31,516
"How on earth are we
gonna stop this kind of thing
474
00:27:31,540 --> 00:27:34,626
happening again and again, and again?"
475
00:27:34,650 --> 00:27:35,956
The British concluded
476
00:27:35,980 --> 00:27:38,696
that native Americans and colonists
477
00:27:38,720 --> 00:27:42,366
needed to be separated,
at least for a time,
478
00:27:42,390 --> 00:27:47,166
and so, in 1763, a royal
proclamation declared
479
00:27:47,190 --> 00:27:50,036
all the territory beyond the appalachians
480
00:27:50,060 --> 00:27:53,900
off-limits to settlement or speculation.
481
00:27:55,640 --> 00:27:57,716
That prohibits white settlers
482
00:27:57,740 --> 00:28:00,046
from moving into these interior worlds,
483
00:28:00,070 --> 00:28:02,586
the same interior worlds
that many colonists
484
00:28:02,610 --> 00:28:04,656
felt like they had just fought for.
485
00:28:04,680 --> 00:28:08,126
And many settlers become outraged
486
00:28:08,150 --> 00:28:11,026
that, the British crown has any form
487
00:28:11,050 --> 00:28:15,366
of imperial, recognition of
these indigenous populations.
488
00:28:15,390 --> 00:28:19,806
A kind of racial animus
has formed in the aftermath
489
00:28:19,830 --> 00:28:22,936
of the seven years' war, in
which many British settlers
490
00:28:22,960 --> 00:28:26,046
come to resent all Indians.
491
00:28:26,070 --> 00:28:27,706
It's not because the British government
492
00:28:27,730 --> 00:28:29,916
is especially concerned
about native Americans.
493
00:28:29,940 --> 00:28:33,116
It's because they don't want
Americans spreading out,
494
00:28:33,140 --> 00:28:36,016
where they'll be even
more difficult to control.
495
00:28:36,040 --> 00:28:39,826
Part of British policy is
496
00:28:39,850 --> 00:28:43,156
British settlers will stay near the coast.
497
00:28:43,180 --> 00:28:46,796
And part of the colonists' answer is,
498
00:28:46,820 --> 00:28:49,160
"no. Sorry, we're not doing that."
499
00:28:50,660 --> 00:28:52,666
London hoped the proclamation
500
00:28:52,690 --> 00:28:54,806
would pacify the frontier.
501
00:28:54,830 --> 00:28:57,976
Instead, it infuriated
those would-be settlers
502
00:28:58,000 --> 00:29:02,616
poised to move west and
frustrated land speculators
503
00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:05,070
who saw fortunes to be made there.
504
00:29:06,170 --> 00:29:09,016
And that is a huge slap in the face
505
00:29:09,040 --> 00:29:13,886
and a blow to those
elite colonial Americans
506
00:29:13,910 --> 00:29:17,426
who've been indulging in this investment.
507
00:29:17,450 --> 00:29:19,126
Who are these people?
508
00:29:19,150 --> 00:29:27,150
Benjamin Franklin, Thomas
Jefferson, Patrick Henry,
509
00:29:27,730 --> 00:29:29,200
George Washington.
510
00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:34,106
After abandoning his dream of serving
511
00:29:34,130 --> 00:29:36,276
as an officer in the British army,
512
00:29:36,300 --> 00:29:40,246
George Washington had married
an enormously wealthy widow,
513
00:29:40,270 --> 00:29:44,856
Martha dandridge custis, and
had made himself still wealthier
514
00:29:44,880 --> 00:29:48,086
speculating in western lands.
515
00:29:48,110 --> 00:29:50,050
He saw no reason to stop.
516
00:29:50,920 --> 00:29:53,166
The law was only a temporary measure
517
00:29:53,190 --> 00:29:56,496
to "quiet the minds of
the Indians," he said,
518
00:29:56,520 --> 00:30:00,566
and he directed his land
agent to defy the proclamation
519
00:30:00,590 --> 00:30:04,576
and "secure some of
the most valuable lands"
520
00:30:04,600 --> 00:30:06,500
beyond the appalachians.
521
00:30:07,730 --> 00:30:11,076
I think the American
revolution was all about land.
522
00:30:11,100 --> 00:30:13,446
It's easy to make the
political kinds of arguments,
523
00:30:13,470 --> 00:30:16,086
but I think underpinning all of that was
524
00:30:16,110 --> 00:30:18,256
the possibility of expansion,
525
00:30:18,280 --> 00:30:21,110
was the conflict with Indian people.
526
00:30:22,020 --> 00:30:24,196
Now to enforce the hated law
527
00:30:24,220 --> 00:30:26,296
and to police the frontier,
528
00:30:26,320 --> 00:30:28,466
the British government
resolved to station
529
00:30:28,490 --> 00:30:32,536
an army of 10,000
men in North America.
530
00:30:32,560 --> 00:30:34,336
The cost would be enormous...
531
00:30:34,360 --> 00:30:39,046
some 360,000 British pounds a year.
532
00:30:39,070 --> 00:30:42,316
London did not have the money.
533
00:30:42,340 --> 00:30:47,016
Years of war on 4 continents
had doubled the national debt.
534
00:30:47,040 --> 00:30:50,156
Britain was in the midst
of a postwar depression,
535
00:30:50,180 --> 00:30:53,086
and British consumers
were already burdened
536
00:30:53,110 --> 00:30:55,726
with higher taxes than were the subjects
537
00:30:55,750 --> 00:30:58,356
of any other European monarch.
538
00:30:58,380 --> 00:31:00,596
The average British subject paid
539
00:31:00,620 --> 00:31:03,866
26 shillings a year in taxes;
540
00:31:03,890 --> 00:31:07,766
the average new englander paid just one.
541
00:31:07,790 --> 00:31:10,076
So, some bright spark has the idea,
542
00:31:10,100 --> 00:31:12,546
"well, let's tax the
American colonists." Right?
543
00:31:12,570 --> 00:31:15,216
They should pay their
share because, after all,
544
00:31:15,240 --> 00:31:19,646
we fought the war for them,
and this is to defend them.
545
00:31:19,670 --> 00:31:24,186
In 1764, the prime
minister, George grenville,
546
00:31:24,210 --> 00:31:27,826
proposed a series of 3
parliamentary statutes,
547
00:31:27,850 --> 00:31:29,956
all meant to make the colonies
548
00:31:29,980 --> 00:31:32,220
help pay for their own defense.
549
00:31:33,250 --> 00:31:35,966
The currency act, which
forbade the colonists
550
00:31:35,990 --> 00:31:38,036
from issuing their own money,
551
00:31:38,060 --> 00:31:41,166
angered the tobacco-growing
gentry of Virginia,
552
00:31:41,190 --> 00:31:43,400
who were especially hard-hit.
553
00:31:44,660 --> 00:31:49,016
The sugar act imposed taxes
on imports from the Caribbean,
554
00:31:49,040 --> 00:31:53,216
and to enforce it, the British
Navy dispatched 44 ships
555
00:31:53,240 --> 00:31:56,886
to stop smuggling,
enraging new englanders,
556
00:31:56,910 --> 00:31:59,950
whose economy had
long profited from it.
557
00:32:01,010 --> 00:32:04,256
The rest of the colonies
were largely unaffected.
558
00:32:04,280 --> 00:32:07,866
London assumed
Americans were too disunited,
559
00:32:07,890 --> 00:32:10,066
too divided by self-interest,
560
00:32:10,090 --> 00:32:13,430
to ever be able to present a united front.
561
00:32:14,590 --> 00:32:18,946
But now, grenville introduced a third tax...
562
00:32:18,970 --> 00:32:20,506
the stamp act.
563
00:32:20,530 --> 00:32:24,600
It would affect nearly every
colonist in every colony.
564
00:32:25,740 --> 00:32:29,656
No one would be able to
obtain a license or a loan,
565
00:32:29,680 --> 00:32:32,086
transfer land or draft a will,
566
00:32:32,110 --> 00:32:35,256
earn a diploma, purchase a newspaper,
567
00:32:35,280 --> 00:32:37,656
or even buy a deck of cards
568
00:32:37,680 --> 00:32:42,096
unless it was printed or
written on English-made paper
569
00:32:42,120 --> 00:32:45,906
that bore a stamp embossed
by the royal treasury,
570
00:32:45,930 --> 00:32:48,260
for which they would have to pay.
571
00:32:49,660 --> 00:32:53,606
For the very first time,
parliament planned to tax
572
00:32:53,630 --> 00:32:56,476
the 13 colonies directly.
573
00:32:56,500 --> 00:32:59,546
The stamp act was
scheduled to go into effect
574
00:32:59,570 --> 00:33:02,680
on November 1, 1765.
575
00:33:04,010 --> 00:33:07,256
Colonists said, "no taxation
without representation."
576
00:33:07,280 --> 00:33:09,826
What they meant was,
no taxation except by
577
00:33:09,850 --> 00:33:14,096
our elected legislature,
here in our particular colony.
578
00:33:14,120 --> 00:33:18,136
These taxes were very
small, but the fear was,
579
00:33:18,160 --> 00:33:20,006
"if we give into this precedent,
580
00:33:20,030 --> 00:33:22,506
"if we pay the small stamp tax now,
581
00:33:22,530 --> 00:33:24,800
what will they do in the future?"
582
00:33:26,200 --> 00:33:28,276
In the Virginia house of burgesses,
583
00:33:28,300 --> 00:33:31,846
Patrick Henry introduced
a series of resolutions
584
00:33:31,870 --> 00:33:35,616
asserting that only the
general assembly of that colony
585
00:33:35,640 --> 00:33:39,580
had the "right and power
to lay taxes" on its people.
586
00:33:40,780 --> 00:33:44,326
Henry went on to declare
that just as Julius Caesar
587
00:33:44,350 --> 00:33:46,496
had his assassin brutus,
588
00:33:46,520 --> 00:33:50,766
George III should understand
that some American resister
589
00:33:50,790 --> 00:33:54,436
was sure "to stand up
in favor of his country."
590
00:33:54,460 --> 00:33:56,776
When some delegates
shouted "treason!"
591
00:33:56,800 --> 00:34:00,106
Others who were present
remembered he responded,
592
00:34:00,130 --> 00:34:03,100
"if this be treason, make the most of it!"
593
00:34:05,070 --> 00:34:08,416
In Boston, 42-year-old Samuel Adams
594
00:34:08,440 --> 00:34:10,416
helped rally the opposition
595
00:34:10,440 --> 00:34:13,426
against implementation of the stamp act.
596
00:34:13,450 --> 00:34:17,526
A failure as a brewer and
as a collector of local taxes,
597
00:34:17,550 --> 00:34:21,326
Adams was a master of propaganda.
598
00:34:21,350 --> 00:34:23,336
His mission, he once explained,
599
00:34:23,360 --> 00:34:26,906
was to "keep the
attention of fellow-citizens
600
00:34:26,930 --> 00:34:29,060
awake to their grievances."
601
00:34:29,930 --> 00:34:33,046
If our trade may be
taxed, why not our lands?
602
00:34:33,070 --> 00:34:34,506
Why not the produce of our lands
603
00:34:34,530 --> 00:34:37,976
and everything we
possess or make use of?
604
00:34:38,000 --> 00:34:40,646
If taxes are laid upon us in any shape
605
00:34:40,670 --> 00:34:42,986
without our having a legal representation
606
00:34:43,010 --> 00:34:44,686
where they are paid,
607
00:34:44,710 --> 00:34:47,956
are we not reduced from
the character of free subjects
608
00:34:47,980 --> 00:34:51,250
to the miserable state of tributary slaves?
609
00:34:52,520 --> 00:34:55,066
In terms of masters of communication,
610
00:34:55,090 --> 00:34:57,766
Samuel Adams was really up there.
611
00:34:57,790 --> 00:35:01,066
He has an amazing
ability to translate a concept
612
00:35:01,090 --> 00:35:03,636
into easily digested words.
613
00:35:03,660 --> 00:35:07,776
And, therefore, to make,
what seem... what could seem
614
00:35:07,800 --> 00:35:09,716
like fairly abstract ideas
615
00:35:09,740 --> 00:35:13,516
very vital and very
urgent, and he's tireless.
616
00:35:13,540 --> 00:35:16,486
So, he's able to produce
page after page after page,
617
00:35:16,510 --> 00:35:19,810
new offenses, new
crimes, new injustices.
618
00:35:21,710 --> 00:35:24,096
Pamphleteers took up the cause,
619
00:35:24,120 --> 00:35:27,366
declaring the stamp act illegitimate.
620
00:35:27,390 --> 00:35:30,636
Most of the colonies'
24 weekly newspapers...
621
00:35:30,660 --> 00:35:35,136
the businesses that would
be hit hardest... followed suit.
622
00:35:35,160 --> 00:35:38,006
Those that didn't faced being shut down
623
00:35:38,030 --> 00:35:40,430
by their journeymen and apprentices.
624
00:35:42,300 --> 00:35:44,446
Newspapers are very important.
625
00:35:44,470 --> 00:35:49,686
The colonial public is more
literate than any other people
626
00:35:49,710 --> 00:35:52,356
in the world outside of scandinavia.
627
00:35:52,380 --> 00:35:55,696
There's also word of
mouth, conversation,
628
00:35:55,720 --> 00:35:58,126
absolutely essential.
629
00:35:58,150 --> 00:36:00,396
It became very common to discuss
630
00:36:00,420 --> 00:36:03,566
how you govern people
and how people are free.
631
00:36:03,590 --> 00:36:08,730
These ideas had filtered
into the general population.
632
00:36:10,400 --> 00:36:14,746
Those ideas now led
to protests in the streets.
633
00:36:14,770 --> 00:36:19,716
In Boston, in August of
1765, a crowd formed...
634
00:36:19,740 --> 00:36:22,556
made up of men and
a handful of women,
635
00:36:22,580 --> 00:36:25,526
free blacks and runaway slaves,
636
00:36:25,550 --> 00:36:29,696
poorly paid or unemployed
workers who resented the rich,
637
00:36:29,720 --> 00:36:32,366
and apprentices in their off-hours,
638
00:36:32,390 --> 00:36:34,220
just looking for trouble.
639
00:36:35,320 --> 00:36:37,536
They hanged in effigy the local man
640
00:36:37,560 --> 00:36:40,806
designated to become
distributor of stamps
641
00:36:40,830 --> 00:36:44,336
and went on to invade the
home of the lieutenant governor,
642
00:36:44,360 --> 00:36:46,746
destroying everything in sight
643
00:36:46,770 --> 00:36:49,676
and carrying off all of his furniture
644
00:36:49,700 --> 00:36:52,770
and 900 British pounds in cash.
645
00:36:54,710 --> 00:36:57,716
In Newport, Rhode Island,
another mob surrounded
646
00:36:57,740 --> 00:37:00,826
the stamp distributor,
forced him to resign,
647
00:37:00,850 --> 00:37:05,250
and to lead them in chants
of "property and Liberty."
648
00:37:06,620 --> 00:37:11,036
In Charleston, south Carolina,
white anti-stamp act protestors
649
00:37:11,060 --> 00:37:14,606
marched through the
streets chanting, "Liberty!"
650
00:37:14,630 --> 00:37:18,576
But when enslaved south
carolinians echoed their cries,
651
00:37:18,600 --> 00:37:21,306
frightened enslavers called out the militia
652
00:37:21,330 --> 00:37:23,240
to patrol the street.
653
00:37:24,470 --> 00:37:27,516
The Maryland appointee
was driven from Annapolis
654
00:37:27,540 --> 00:37:29,940
with only the clothes on his back.
655
00:37:31,740 --> 00:37:35,526
By the time the stamp act
was supposed to go into effect,
656
00:37:35,550 --> 00:37:39,926
none of the 13 colonies
had an official in place
657
00:37:39,950 --> 00:37:41,550
willing to enforce it.
658
00:37:42,820 --> 00:37:44,796
Part of our revolution I think we have
659
00:37:44,820 --> 00:37:46,706
largely sanitized.
660
00:37:46,730 --> 00:37:50,576
I think we've forgotten
much of the street warfare,
661
00:37:50,600 --> 00:37:54,646
of the anarchy, of the
provocations that took place.
662
00:37:54,670 --> 00:37:58,276
A black cloud seems to hang over us.
663
00:37:58,300 --> 00:38:00,116
It appears to me that there will be an end
664
00:38:00,140 --> 00:38:06,286
to all government here, for
the people are all running mad.
665
00:38:06,310 --> 00:38:07,850
James Parker.
666
00:38:09,580 --> 00:38:11,696
When a crowd
surrounded the British army
667
00:38:11,720 --> 00:38:13,866
headquarters in New York City,
668
00:38:13,890 --> 00:38:18,036
general Thomas Gage made
sure his men held their fire,
669
00:38:18,060 --> 00:38:22,036
for fear, he said, that
50,000 angry colonists
670
00:38:22,060 --> 00:38:26,000
would swarm into the
city and start a civil war.
671
00:38:27,470 --> 00:38:29,346
General Gage was in charge of
672
00:38:29,370 --> 00:38:32,116
all British soldiers in North America.
673
00:38:32,140 --> 00:38:36,016
He had been sent to
maintain peace on the frontier.
674
00:38:36,040 --> 00:38:40,486
Instead, he had found himself
at loggerheads with colonists
675
00:38:40,510 --> 00:38:43,396
convinced they were
being denied their rights
676
00:38:43,420 --> 00:38:45,496
as englishmen.
677
00:38:45,520 --> 00:38:47,990
Gage understood what was happening.
678
00:38:48,750 --> 00:38:53,166
The spirit of democracy
is strong amongst them.
679
00:38:53,190 --> 00:38:56,736
The question is not of the
inexpediency of the stamp act
680
00:38:56,760 --> 00:38:59,876
or the inability of the
colonies to pay the tax,
681
00:38:59,900 --> 00:39:03,416
but that it is contrary to
their rights and not subject
682
00:39:03,440 --> 00:39:05,640
to the legislative power of Great Britain.
683
00:39:06,770 --> 00:39:09,486
Thomas Gage was
married to an American.
684
00:39:09,510 --> 00:39:12,156
He owned land in the colonies.
685
00:39:12,180 --> 00:39:13,426
He was, in many ways,
686
00:39:13,450 --> 00:39:15,796
embedded within colonial society.
687
00:39:15,820 --> 00:39:19,296
So, he was particularly reluctant, I think,
688
00:39:19,320 --> 00:39:21,090
to engage in conflict.
689
00:39:22,290 --> 00:39:24,596
In the colonial world
and the European world,
690
00:39:24,620 --> 00:39:27,166
democracy had a bad name.
691
00:39:27,190 --> 00:39:30,536
It was a synonym for "anarchy."
692
00:39:30,560 --> 00:39:32,906
It had a reputation as being turbulent,
693
00:39:32,930 --> 00:39:36,646
as a system exploited by
694
00:39:36,670 --> 00:39:39,816
ruthless politicians
called "demagogues"...
695
00:39:39,840 --> 00:39:44,216
people who pandered to the
passions of common people
696
00:39:44,240 --> 00:39:48,426
in order to whip them up and
get them to do passionate things,
697
00:39:48,450 --> 00:39:50,796
and to get government to serve them
698
00:39:50,820 --> 00:39:56,666
and to prey upon the property
of more wealthy people.
699
00:39:56,690 --> 00:39:59,566
So, democracy is not the aspiration
700
00:39:59,590 --> 00:40:01,566
that creates the revolution.
701
00:40:01,590 --> 00:40:04,276
The revolution creates
the conditions for people
702
00:40:04,300 --> 00:40:06,500
to aspire to have a democracy.
703
00:40:07,630 --> 00:40:09,816
Meanwhile, hundreds of merchants
704
00:40:09,840 --> 00:40:12,786
in New York, Boston, and Philadelphia
705
00:40:12,810 --> 00:40:15,216
pledged to boycott British goods
706
00:40:15,240 --> 00:40:17,810
until the stamp act was repealed.
707
00:40:19,110 --> 00:40:22,756
To keep up the opposition,
some lawyers, merchants,
708
00:40:22,780 --> 00:40:26,566
and skilled craftsmen
established an association,
709
00:40:26,590 --> 00:40:30,196
the sons of Liberty,
and soon had chapters
710
00:40:30,220 --> 00:40:34,906
from Portsmouth, New Hampshire
to Charleston, south Carolina
711
00:40:34,930 --> 00:40:36,060
working together.
712
00:40:37,560 --> 00:40:40,276
The colonies until now
were ever at variance
713
00:40:40,300 --> 00:40:42,776
and foolishly jealous of each other;
714
00:40:42,800 --> 00:40:44,876
they are now united for
their common defense
715
00:40:44,900 --> 00:40:47,716
against what they
believe to be oppression;
716
00:40:47,740 --> 00:40:49,516
nor will they soon forget the weight
717
00:40:49,540 --> 00:40:52,526
which this close union gives them.
718
00:40:52,550 --> 00:40:54,010
Dr. Joseph Warren.
719
00:40:55,610 --> 00:40:59,526
The colonies now accounted
for 1/3 of britain's trade.
720
00:40:59,550 --> 00:41:01,796
With the boycott, some manufacturers
721
00:41:01,820 --> 00:41:04,866
were forced to close their doors.
722
00:41:04,890 --> 00:41:07,836
Thousands of workers lost their jobs.
723
00:41:07,860 --> 00:41:12,706
The town councils of 27 English
trading and manufacturing towns
724
00:41:12,730 --> 00:41:14,730
pleaded for repeal.
725
00:41:16,040 --> 00:41:20,146
By mid-February
1766, the British cabinet
726
00:41:20,170 --> 00:41:23,216
was looking for a way
out of the impasse.
727
00:41:23,240 --> 00:41:26,826
It asked Benjamin Franklin,
then living in London
728
00:41:26,850 --> 00:41:29,056
as a lobbyist for Pennsylvania,
729
00:41:29,080 --> 00:41:31,556
to appear before the house of commons,
730
00:41:31,580 --> 00:41:34,266
hoping that hearing from
the best-known American
731
00:41:34,290 --> 00:41:36,836
on earth would help.
732
00:41:36,860 --> 00:41:41,966
Franklin patiently
answered 174 questions.
733
00:41:41,990 --> 00:41:45,336
What had been the colonists'
attitude toward Great Britain
734
00:41:45,360 --> 00:41:48,246
before the stamp act was enacted?
735
00:41:48,270 --> 00:41:49,816
The best in the world.
736
00:41:49,840 --> 00:41:51,876
They had not only a respect
737
00:41:51,900 --> 00:41:54,646
but an affection for Great Britain;
738
00:41:54,670 --> 00:41:57,686
for its laws, its customs, its manners,
739
00:41:57,710 --> 00:41:59,726
and even a fondness for its fashions,
740
00:41:59,750 --> 00:42:01,910
which greatly increased the commerce.
741
00:42:03,350 --> 00:42:07,196
"Would the colonies now accept
a compromise?" He was asked.
742
00:42:07,220 --> 00:42:11,436
"No," he answered. "It
was a matter of principle."
743
00:42:11,460 --> 00:42:16,636
"Might a military force compel
the colonists to pay the tax?"
744
00:42:16,660 --> 00:42:18,906
"No," Franklin said.
745
00:42:18,930 --> 00:42:22,546
Suppose a military
force is sent into america.
746
00:42:22,570 --> 00:42:24,716
They will find nobody in arms.
747
00:42:24,740 --> 00:42:26,816
What are they then to do?
748
00:42:26,840 --> 00:42:29,386
They cannot force a man to take stamps
749
00:42:29,410 --> 00:42:31,416
who chooses to do without them.
750
00:42:31,440 --> 00:42:34,086
They will not find a rebellion.
751
00:42:34,110 --> 00:42:36,780
They may indeed make one.
752
00:42:38,880 --> 00:42:41,366
8 days after Franklin's testimony,
753
00:42:41,390 --> 00:42:45,596
the house of commons
voted to repeal the stamp act.
754
00:42:45,620 --> 00:42:48,606
British workers would
return to their factories.
755
00:42:48,630 --> 00:42:52,060
Merchant vessels set
sail again for the colonies.
756
00:42:53,230 --> 00:42:55,976
When the news
reached america in April,
757
00:42:56,000 --> 00:42:58,216
the sons of Liberty disbanded;
758
00:42:58,240 --> 00:43:02,886
their rights as englishmen
seemed to have been restored.
759
00:43:02,910 --> 00:43:06,086
New York commissioned
a statue of king George,
760
00:43:06,110 --> 00:43:10,496
wearing a Roman toga, to
be placed on the bowling green
761
00:43:10,520 --> 00:43:12,350
at the tip of Manhattan.
762
00:43:14,190 --> 00:43:19,066
But beginning in the summer
of 1767, the British government,
763
00:43:19,090 --> 00:43:21,266
still struggling with war debt,
764
00:43:21,290 --> 00:43:26,706
would win passage of 5 new
laws... the townshend acts.
765
00:43:26,730 --> 00:43:30,846
One of them especially
angered colonists.
766
00:43:30,870 --> 00:43:36,016
It imposed new taxes on 4
items manufactured in England...
767
00:43:36,040 --> 00:43:40,526
glass, lead, paper, and painter's colors...
768
00:43:40,550 --> 00:43:44,196
and on a fifth item, tea, grown in China
769
00:43:44,220 --> 00:43:48,866
but re-exported from britain
and loved by the colonists,
770
00:43:48,890 --> 00:43:51,190
rich and poor alike.
771
00:43:52,860 --> 00:43:55,436
Newspaper editors and pamphleteers
772
00:43:55,460 --> 00:43:57,806
denounced the new taxes.
773
00:43:57,830 --> 00:44:00,776
A revived and more
militant sons of Liberty
774
00:44:00,800 --> 00:44:04,070
called for a new boycott of British goods.
775
00:44:05,240 --> 00:44:08,316
Women, who normally
played a subordinate role
776
00:44:08,340 --> 00:44:12,216
in public life and had
almost no legal rights,
777
00:44:12,240 --> 00:44:15,326
joined the resistance by the thousands
778
00:44:15,350 --> 00:44:17,420
as "daughters of Liberty."
779
00:44:18,750 --> 00:44:21,126
Crisis changes people.
780
00:44:21,150 --> 00:44:23,866
And it gave women different ideas
781
00:44:23,890 --> 00:44:25,760
about what they should be doing.
782
00:44:26,990 --> 00:44:29,906
Women were the main
consumers in colonial society
783
00:44:29,930 --> 00:44:34,200
and they were the ones who
made sure the boycotts worked.
784
00:44:35,400 --> 00:44:36,916
Women stopped drinking tea.
785
00:44:36,940 --> 00:44:39,116
Women started making their own fabric.
786
00:44:39,140 --> 00:44:41,086
Women started making
toys for their children.
787
00:44:41,110 --> 00:44:44,416
And they didn't just
stop buying British things
788
00:44:44,440 --> 00:44:48,856
and start making their own
things; They publicized it.
789
00:44:48,880 --> 00:44:52,126
One of the key forms of political theater
790
00:44:52,150 --> 00:44:55,826
during the resistance movement
would be for a local minister
791
00:44:55,850 --> 00:44:57,896
to invite the women of the community
792
00:44:57,920 --> 00:44:59,736
to come down to the church
793
00:44:59,760 --> 00:45:03,336
and to spend the day
spinning and weaving cloth.
794
00:45:03,360 --> 00:45:05,806
And it would be a competition
to see which community
795
00:45:05,830 --> 00:45:07,676
could produce the most homespun.
796
00:45:07,700 --> 00:45:09,716
It would be published in the newspaper.
797
00:45:09,740 --> 00:45:11,146
And these women would be praised as
798
00:45:11,170 --> 00:45:13,616
great American patriots
for having produced
799
00:45:13,640 --> 00:45:15,270
so much homespun cloth.
800
00:45:16,540 --> 00:45:19,756
And reporters would
report, "the ladies of Boston",
801
00:45:19,780 --> 00:45:23,426
"the ladies of New York
" are the most patriotic.
802
00:45:23,450 --> 00:45:28,196
They are at the forefront
of this protest movement."
803
00:45:28,220 --> 00:45:30,266
If women hadn't done
that, the protest movement
804
00:45:30,290 --> 00:45:32,890
and eventually the revolution
would have gone nowhere.
805
00:45:33,990 --> 00:45:37,176
Let the daughters of Liberty nobly arise,
806
00:45:37,200 --> 00:45:40,146
and though we've no
voice but a negative here,
807
00:45:40,170 --> 00:45:43,876
stand firmly resolved
and bid them to see,
808
00:45:43,900 --> 00:45:48,386
that rather than freedom,
we'll part with our tea.
809
00:45:48,410 --> 00:45:49,780
Hannah griffitts.
810
00:45:51,080 --> 00:45:54,886
I wish to see america boast of empire...
811
00:45:54,910 --> 00:45:59,766
of empire not established
in the thralldom of nations
812
00:45:59,790 --> 00:46:02,966
but on a more equitable base.
813
00:46:02,990 --> 00:46:06,936
Though such a happy state,
such an equal government,
814
00:46:06,960 --> 00:46:11,376
may be considered by
some as a utopian dream;
815
00:46:11,400 --> 00:46:16,416
yet, you and I can easily
conceive of nations and states
816
00:46:16,440 --> 00:46:19,646
under more liberal plans.
817
00:46:19,670 --> 00:46:21,810
Mercy Otis Warren.
818
00:46:22,940 --> 00:46:25,456
The political philosopher and historian
819
00:46:25,480 --> 00:46:29,496
mercy Otis Warren would
publish plays and poems
820
00:46:29,520 --> 00:46:31,496
that satirized royal officials
821
00:46:31,520 --> 00:46:35,926
with names like judge
meagre and sir spend all.
822
00:46:35,950 --> 00:46:38,696
No woman played a more important role
823
00:46:38,720 --> 00:46:40,360
in promoting resistance.
824
00:46:42,800 --> 00:46:46,176
Tensions with England
continued to grow.
825
00:46:46,200 --> 00:46:49,146
In Boston, in June of 1768,
826
00:46:49,170 --> 00:46:53,846
a ship called the "Liberty"
was seized by the royal Navy.
827
00:46:53,870 --> 00:46:55,816
Its owner, John Hancock,
828
00:46:55,840 --> 00:46:58,116
was the richest merchant in the city,
829
00:46:58,140 --> 00:47:01,126
a prominent member
of the sons of Liberty...
830
00:47:01,150 --> 00:47:04,056
and a practiced smuggler.
831
00:47:04,080 --> 00:47:07,520
A big, angry crowd formed at the wharf.
832
00:47:08,850 --> 00:47:10,836
The mobs here are very different
833
00:47:10,860 --> 00:47:12,520
from those in old England.
834
00:47:13,560 --> 00:47:15,906
These sons of violence
are attacking houses,
835
00:47:15,930 --> 00:47:18,806
breaking windows,
beating, stoning, and bruising
836
00:47:18,830 --> 00:47:21,746
several gentlemen
belonging to the customs.
837
00:47:21,770 --> 00:47:23,840
Ann hulton.
838
00:47:24,740 --> 00:47:26,116
The town has been under
839
00:47:26,140 --> 00:47:28,646
a kind of democratical despotism
840
00:47:28,670 --> 00:47:30,986
for a considerable time.
841
00:47:31,010 --> 00:47:33,026
And it has not been safe for people to act
842
00:47:33,050 --> 00:47:35,626
or speak contrary to the sentiments
843
00:47:35,650 --> 00:47:38,496
of the ruling demagogues.
844
00:47:38,520 --> 00:47:39,950
Thomas Gage.
845
00:47:41,020 --> 00:47:43,836
On orders from London,
general Gage sent
846
00:47:43,860 --> 00:47:46,866
two regiments of
regulars from Nova Scotia,
847
00:47:46,890 --> 00:47:50,300
not to defend Boston, but to police it.
848
00:47:51,300 --> 00:47:55,206
Most bostonians were appalled.
849
00:47:55,230 --> 00:47:57,646
An army during wartime makes sense.
850
00:47:57,670 --> 00:47:59,316
Of course, you need that.
851
00:47:59,340 --> 00:48:02,786
But an army during
peacetime is a standing army.
852
00:48:02,810 --> 00:48:05,956
And if you have an
army during peacetime,
853
00:48:05,980 --> 00:48:09,286
the thinking is that its only use
854
00:48:09,310 --> 00:48:13,190
is to turn on poor, innocent subjects.
855
00:48:14,290 --> 00:48:18,236
To have a standing army! Good god!
856
00:48:18,260 --> 00:48:20,806
What can be worse to a
people who have tasted
857
00:48:20,830 --> 00:48:23,076
the sweets of Liberty?
858
00:48:23,100 --> 00:48:26,276
Things are come to an unhappy crisis.
859
00:48:26,300 --> 00:48:29,306
All confidence is at an end.
860
00:48:29,330 --> 00:48:31,946
And the moment there is any bloodshed,
861
00:48:31,970 --> 00:48:35,116
all affection will cease.
862
00:48:35,140 --> 00:48:37,040
Reverend Andrew eliot.
863
00:48:40,580 --> 00:48:43,496
The spirit of emigration to america,
864
00:48:43,520 --> 00:48:46,366
which seems to be epidemic
through Great Britain,
865
00:48:46,390 --> 00:48:49,796
is likely to depopulate
the mother country,
866
00:48:49,820 --> 00:48:53,636
and leave our ancient kingdom
the resort of owls and dragons,
867
00:48:53,660 --> 00:48:57,936
and other solitary
animals, who shun the light,
868
00:48:57,960 --> 00:49:01,946
and seem displeased at the human race.
869
00:49:01,970 --> 00:49:04,040
"The Edinburgh amusement."
870
00:49:05,500 --> 00:49:07,246
The steadily rising tensions
871
00:49:07,270 --> 00:49:10,286
between England and
its north American colonies
872
00:49:10,310 --> 00:49:12,686
did not slow the steady stream of
873
00:49:12,710 --> 00:49:15,356
English, Scots-Irish, German,
874
00:49:15,380 --> 00:49:18,256
and a small number
of Jewish immigrants
875
00:49:18,280 --> 00:49:20,796
eager to carve out new lives
876
00:49:20,820 --> 00:49:23,220
within the north American interior.
877
00:49:24,290 --> 00:49:25,466
Part of what really sets
878
00:49:25,490 --> 00:49:27,906
the north American experience apart
879
00:49:27,930 --> 00:49:30,136
is just how many European settlers
880
00:49:30,160 --> 00:49:32,000
are coming to North America.
881
00:49:33,500 --> 00:49:36,776
And they keep coming. 15,000 a year.
882
00:49:36,800 --> 00:49:39,670
A kind of empire was already in view.
883
00:49:41,870 --> 00:49:46,216
Thousands of new arrivals
and American-born colonists
884
00:49:46,240 --> 00:49:48,656
poured down the great wagon road
885
00:49:48,680 --> 00:49:54,066
that ran all the way from
Philadelphia to the carol in as.
886
00:49:54,090 --> 00:49:56,366
The back country there
was already the home
887
00:49:56,390 --> 00:50:01,290
of native peoples, including
the catawbas and cherokees.
888
00:50:03,260 --> 00:50:05,176
Upon the whole, it is the best
889
00:50:05,200 --> 00:50:08,006
country in the world
for a poor man to go to
890
00:50:08,030 --> 00:50:09,446
and do well.
891
00:50:09,470 --> 00:50:11,816
And the farther they
go back in the country,
892
00:50:11,840 --> 00:50:14,310
the land turns richer and better.
893
00:50:15,970 --> 00:50:18,216
Here, a man of small substance,
894
00:50:18,240 --> 00:50:20,726
if upon a precarious footing at home,
895
00:50:20,750 --> 00:50:25,896
can, at once, secure to himself
a handsome, independent living,
896
00:50:25,920 --> 00:50:29,020
and do well for himself and posterity.
897
00:50:30,860 --> 00:50:35,136
All modes of Christian
worship are here tolerated.
898
00:50:35,160 --> 00:50:37,706
"Scotus americanus."
899
00:50:37,730 --> 00:50:41,106
Colonial america is a
very protestant place.
900
00:50:41,130 --> 00:50:45,016
And it's founded when
the norm in Europe was that
901
00:50:45,040 --> 00:50:47,686
whoever your sovereign was got to set
902
00:50:47,710 --> 00:50:48,910
what the religion should be.
903
00:50:49,980 --> 00:50:52,486
Congregationalism was
the established church
904
00:50:52,510 --> 00:50:55,526
in nearly all new England colonies.
905
00:50:55,550 --> 00:50:57,996
The official religion in much of the south
906
00:50:58,020 --> 00:51:00,326
was the church of England.
907
00:51:00,350 --> 00:51:02,426
But those who belonged to other faiths
908
00:51:02,450 --> 00:51:05,696
resented being forced
by colonial legislatures
909
00:51:05,720 --> 00:51:10,506
to pay the salaries of clergymen
who did not minister to them.
910
00:51:10,530 --> 00:51:13,746
None were more resentful
than the back country settlers
911
00:51:13,770 --> 00:51:15,306
in the carol in as...
912
00:51:15,330 --> 00:51:20,270
baptists, presbyterians,
lutherans, methodists.
913
00:51:21,340 --> 00:51:24,516
And what they hear from their ministers
914
00:51:24,540 --> 00:51:28,156
about whether resisting their sovereign
915
00:51:28,180 --> 00:51:29,556
or supporting their sovereign
916
00:51:29,580 --> 00:51:31,856
is the right thing to
do as a Christian duty,
917
00:51:31,880 --> 00:51:33,890
that will matter a lot.
918
00:51:36,290 --> 00:51:40,966
I was born in Boston in
america in the year 1760.
919
00:51:40,990 --> 00:51:44,436
In the time I was at school,
the troubles began to come on.
920
00:51:44,460 --> 00:51:47,546
And I was told the day of
judgment was near at hand,
921
00:51:47,570 --> 00:51:49,246
and the moon would turn into blood,
922
00:51:49,270 --> 00:51:51,270
and the world would be set on fire.
923
00:51:52,300 --> 00:51:53,740
John greenwood.
924
00:51:55,440 --> 00:52:00,656
Shortly before noon on
Saturday, October 1, 1768,
925
00:52:00,680 --> 00:52:03,656
8-year-old John greenwood left his home
926
00:52:03,680 --> 00:52:05,196
in Boston's north end
927
00:52:05,220 --> 00:52:08,166
and hurried toward the waterfront.
928
00:52:08,190 --> 00:52:11,236
There, riding at anchor in a great arc,
929
00:52:11,260 --> 00:52:13,666
he saw 14 British warships,
930
00:52:13,690 --> 00:52:16,606
their Cannon trained upon the city.
931
00:52:16,630 --> 00:52:20,576
Boats swarmed between the
ships and the end of long wharf,
932
00:52:20,600 --> 00:52:25,276
ferrying hundreds of
British red-coated regulars.
933
00:52:25,300 --> 00:52:29,370
General Gage's
occupying army had arrived.
934
00:52:30,640 --> 00:52:32,456
The crowds that lined the street
935
00:52:32,480 --> 00:52:35,756
were for the most part silent and sullen.
936
00:52:35,780 --> 00:52:38,556
But it was not the history
being made that impressed
937
00:52:38,580 --> 00:52:41,726
young John greenwood that day.
938
00:52:41,750 --> 00:52:45,636
It was the irresistible music
played by afro-Caribbean
939
00:52:45,660 --> 00:52:49,876
men and boys in colorful uniforms.
940
00:52:49,900 --> 00:52:51,806
I was so fond of
hearing the fife and drum
941
00:52:51,830 --> 00:52:54,706
played by the British
that somehow or another,
942
00:52:54,730 --> 00:52:57,146
I got an old split fife, and fixed it
943
00:52:57,170 --> 00:52:59,576
by puttying up the
crack to make it sound,
944
00:52:59,600 --> 00:53:02,646
and then learned to play several tunes.
945
00:53:02,670 --> 00:53:04,356
I believe it was the sole cause
946
00:53:04,380 --> 00:53:06,986
of all my travails and disasters.
947
00:53:07,010 --> 00:53:11,056
Before long, the boy
was playing well enough
948
00:53:11,080 --> 00:53:14,166
to become a fifer for a local militia.
949
00:53:14,190 --> 00:53:16,496
"The flag of our
company," he remembered,
950
00:53:16,520 --> 00:53:18,596
"was an English flag."
951
00:53:18,620 --> 00:53:20,830
They would not be English forever.
952
00:53:23,230 --> 00:53:25,106
Half the newly arrived troops
953
00:53:25,130 --> 00:53:28,206
were housed in
barracks on castle island,
954
00:53:28,230 --> 00:53:30,646
but orders from London had been clear.
955
00:53:30,670 --> 00:53:33,586
It was "his majesty's pleasure," they said,
956
00:53:33,610 --> 00:53:38,810
that the rest of the troops
"be quartered in that town."
957
00:53:40,310 --> 00:53:44,696
For 17 months, Boston
was an occupied city.
958
00:53:44,720 --> 00:53:48,390
The rattle of drums awakened
residents every morning.
959
00:53:49,550 --> 00:53:53,360
Passersby were routinely
stopped and searched.
960
00:53:54,930 --> 00:53:58,376
Many soldiers had brought
their wives and children;
961
00:53:58,400 --> 00:54:02,806
others courted Boston girls,
or were pursued by them.
962
00:54:02,830 --> 00:54:06,546
40 troops were married
during the occupation,
963
00:54:06,570 --> 00:54:10,540
and more than 100 of their
offspring were baptized.
964
00:54:11,580 --> 00:54:14,656
But some soldiers got
drunk, robbed people,
965
00:54:14,680 --> 00:54:17,996
insulted women, profaned the sabbath.
966
00:54:18,020 --> 00:54:22,790
There were brawls, stabbings,
suits and counter suits.
967
00:54:24,320 --> 00:54:28,566
From London, Benjamin
Franklin was concerned.
968
00:54:28,590 --> 00:54:30,276
Some indiscretion on the part
969
00:54:30,300 --> 00:54:34,476
of Boston's warmer
people, or of the soldiery,
970
00:54:34,500 --> 00:54:36,746
may occasion a tumult.
971
00:54:36,770 --> 00:54:40,546
And if blood is once
drawn, there is no foreseeing
972
00:54:40,570 --> 00:54:43,780
how far the mischief may spread.
973
00:54:46,240 --> 00:54:49,486
On the evening of march 5, 1770,
974
00:54:49,510 --> 00:54:53,056
there were tussles between
bostonians and British soldiers
975
00:54:53,080 --> 00:54:54,590
all across the city.
976
00:54:55,720 --> 00:54:58,366
At the royal customs
house, a crowd of young men
977
00:54:58,390 --> 00:55:01,536
surrounded a lone
sentry and pelted him with
978
00:55:01,560 --> 00:55:04,736
snowballs and chunks of ice.
979
00:55:04,760 --> 00:55:08,006
Convinced a city-wide
uprising was underway,
980
00:55:08,030 --> 00:55:09,876
captain Thomas Preston raced
981
00:55:09,900 --> 00:55:13,146
several armed grenadiers to the scene.
982
00:55:13,170 --> 00:55:18,556
More snowballs and rocks
and oyster shells greeted them.
983
00:55:18,580 --> 00:55:21,726
They fixed bayonets.
984
00:55:21,750 --> 00:55:23,626
Somebody starts
ringing the church bells,
985
00:55:23,650 --> 00:55:28,096
which in Boston is a sign for fire.
986
00:55:28,120 --> 00:55:30,136
Some people are bringing buckets
987
00:55:30,160 --> 00:55:32,296
to be part of a bucket brigade.
988
00:55:32,320 --> 00:55:35,436
Some people are drawn by the noise.
989
00:55:35,460 --> 00:55:38,176
It's very hard, in fact impossible,
990
00:55:38,200 --> 00:55:43,800
to know what happened, which
is that somebody yells, "fire."
991
00:55:50,040 --> 00:55:53,586
All we know really is that
when the smoke cleared,
992
00:55:53,610 --> 00:55:57,920
there are 5 people dead or dying.
993
00:55:59,480 --> 00:56:01,926
The first was a tall dock-worker...
994
00:56:01,950 --> 00:56:05,396
part native-American,
part African-American...
995
00:56:05,420 --> 00:56:08,066
named crisp us attucks.
996
00:56:08,090 --> 00:56:11,206
The second was a
rope maker named Samuel gray,
997
00:56:11,230 --> 00:56:14,246
who was standing next to attucks.
998
00:56:14,270 --> 00:56:18,046
The third was James Caldwell,
a sailor who was in town,
999
00:56:18,070 --> 00:56:22,470
it was said, to call upon
the girl he hoped to marry.
1000
00:56:24,310 --> 00:56:27,556
The terrified crowd began to scatter.
1001
00:56:27,580 --> 00:56:30,896
John greenwood's older
brother Isaac was there, too,
1002
00:56:30,920 --> 00:56:34,526
and escaped unharmed,
but a ricocheting ball
1003
00:56:34,550 --> 00:56:38,496
hit their friend Samuel
Maverick in the back.
1004
00:56:38,520 --> 00:56:41,090
He died in agony the following morning.
1005
00:56:42,230 --> 00:56:44,236
Maverick, an apprentice,
1006
00:56:44,260 --> 00:56:46,476
had shared a bed in
the greenwood home
1007
00:56:46,500 --> 00:56:48,976
with the now 9-year-old John,
1008
00:56:49,000 --> 00:56:51,846
who recalled that after his friend's death,
1009
00:56:51,870 --> 00:56:55,486
he deliberately slept
in pitch-black darkness,
1010
00:56:55,510 --> 00:56:59,356
hoping "to see his spirit."
1011
00:56:59,380 --> 00:57:01,786
People start arguing, already,
1012
00:57:01,810 --> 00:57:05,550
even before they go to
bed, about what happened.
1013
00:57:06,750 --> 00:57:10,996
Paul revere creates probably
the most famous engraving
1014
00:57:11,020 --> 00:57:16,976
of the 18th century, which
he titles the "bloody massacre."
1015
00:57:17,000 --> 00:57:21,576
The British army is very
anxious to try to spin this
1016
00:57:21,600 --> 00:57:24,646
as a story of self-defense...
1017
00:57:24,670 --> 00:57:28,740
But the language of
massacre is the one that holds.
1018
00:57:30,540 --> 00:57:34,456
A fifth man, a leather maker
named Patrick carr,
1019
00:57:34,480 --> 00:57:37,026
would die several days later.
1020
00:57:37,050 --> 00:57:40,826
10,000 mourners accompanied
the coffins of the dead
1021
00:57:40,850 --> 00:57:44,436
to the old granary cemetery.
1022
00:57:44,460 --> 00:57:47,936
The fatal fifth of march
can never be forgotten.
1023
00:57:47,960 --> 00:57:49,866
The horrors of that dreadful night
1024
00:57:49,890 --> 00:57:52,876
are but too deeply
impressed on our hearts...
1025
00:57:52,900 --> 00:57:56,446
when our streets were stained
with the blood of our brethren;
1026
00:57:56,470 --> 00:57:58,876
and our eyes were
tormented with the sight
1027
00:57:58,900 --> 00:58:02,146
of the mangled bodies of the dead.
1028
00:58:02,170 --> 00:58:03,740
Joseph Warren.
1029
00:58:04,810 --> 00:58:06,986
Not everyone was grieving.
1030
00:58:07,010 --> 00:58:10,026
An anglican clergyman, mather byles,
1031
00:58:10,050 --> 00:58:13,466
asked a fellow cleric, "which is better",
1032
00:58:13,490 --> 00:58:17,466
"to be ruled by one
tyrant 3,000 miles away
1033
00:58:17,490 --> 00:58:21,830
or by 3,000 tyrants not a mile away."
1034
00:58:23,800 --> 00:58:26,536
Captain Preston was found not guilty
1035
00:58:26,560 --> 00:58:29,106
of ordering his men to fire.
1036
00:58:29,130 --> 00:58:33,176
The other 8 soldiers
were put on trial separately.
1037
00:58:33,200 --> 00:58:36,686
Samuel Adams' younger
cousin, John Adams,
1038
00:58:36,710 --> 00:58:41,486
risking his reputation, served
as the soldiers' attorney.
1039
00:58:41,510 --> 00:58:44,956
Most of his clients
were acquitted as well.
1040
00:58:44,980 --> 00:58:48,026
Two were found guilty of manslaughter.
1041
00:58:48,050 --> 00:58:50,366
They were branded on their right thumbs
1042
00:58:50,390 --> 00:58:53,966
so that if they were ever
charged with another crime,
1043
00:58:53,990 --> 00:58:57,560
they could not make a
claim of innocence again.
1044
00:58:58,760 --> 00:59:00,546
The British government was relieved
1045
00:59:00,570 --> 00:59:03,006
by the outcome of the trials.
1046
00:59:03,030 --> 00:59:06,346
Most of the regulars were
withdrawn to castle William...
1047
00:59:06,370 --> 00:59:07,946
their harbor fortress.
1048
00:59:07,970 --> 00:59:10,686
Once again, American colonists
1049
00:59:10,710 --> 00:59:13,286
had forced the British to back down
1050
00:59:13,310 --> 00:59:16,856
and parliament had
already repealed all but one
1051
00:59:16,880 --> 00:59:18,826
of the townshend acts.
1052
00:59:18,850 --> 00:59:22,690
Only the duty on tea remained.
1053
00:59:28,760 --> 00:59:32,836
Yorktown stood unrivaled in Virginia;
1054
00:59:32,860 --> 00:59:36,606
its commanding view,
its vast expanse of water,
1055
00:59:36,630 --> 00:59:38,946
its excellent harbor.
1056
00:59:38,970 --> 00:59:41,916
It was the seat of wealth and elegance,
1057
00:59:41,940 --> 00:59:45,616
one of the most delightful
situations in america,
1058
00:59:45,640 --> 00:59:49,150
at least, my infantine
imagination painted it so.
1059
00:59:50,480 --> 00:59:52,620
Betsy ambler.
1060
00:59:53,790 --> 00:59:58,196
Betsy ambler was 6 years old in 1771...
1061
00:59:58,220 --> 01:00:02,636
the oldest child in a prominent
yorktown, Virginia family.
1062
01:00:02,660 --> 01:00:04,036
A young Thomas Jefferson
1063
01:00:04,060 --> 01:00:07,176
had once hoped to marry
her mother, Rebecca,
1064
01:00:07,200 --> 01:00:11,416
but she had married
jacquelin ambler instead.
1065
01:00:11,440 --> 01:00:13,786
He insisted that all his daughters
1066
01:00:13,810 --> 01:00:16,286
get a proper education.
1067
01:00:16,310 --> 01:00:19,186
He was a planter and
merchant in yorktown,
1068
01:00:19,210 --> 01:00:21,986
the bustling deep water
port near Virginia's
1069
01:00:22,010 --> 01:00:25,326
colonial capital at williamsburg.
1070
01:00:25,350 --> 01:00:30,166
On yorktown docks, enslaved
africans entered america,
1071
01:00:30,190 --> 01:00:34,360
and the tobacco they
harvested went out to the world.
1072
01:00:35,630 --> 01:00:39,106
Though Betsy's father was
the royal collector of customs,
1073
01:00:39,130 --> 01:00:42,806
he and his family had grown
more and more sympathetic
1074
01:00:42,830 --> 01:00:46,316
to their neighbors' calls for Liberty.
1075
01:00:46,340 --> 01:00:47,846
Young as I was,
1076
01:00:47,870 --> 01:00:51,816
the word "Liberty" so
constantly sounding in my ears
1077
01:00:51,840 --> 01:00:54,356
seemed to convey an idea of everything
1078
01:00:54,380 --> 01:00:57,496
that was desirable on earth.
1079
01:00:57,520 --> 01:00:59,856
True, that in attaining it,
1080
01:00:59,880 --> 01:01:03,150
I was to see every comfort abandoned.
1081
01:01:06,590 --> 01:01:10,136
Thomas hut chin son,
governor of Massachusetts:
1082
01:01:10,160 --> 01:01:13,406
There is now a disposition
in all the colonies
1083
01:01:13,430 --> 01:01:16,906
to let the controversy
with the kingdom subside.
1084
01:01:16,930 --> 01:01:19,476
Hancock and most of the party are quiet
1085
01:01:19,500 --> 01:01:25,080
and all of them abate of their
virulence, except Samuel Adams.
1086
01:01:26,110 --> 01:01:28,626
For 2 years, Samuel Adams
1087
01:01:28,650 --> 01:01:31,156
kept up a steady stream of essays,
1088
01:01:31,180 --> 01:01:33,526
in which he warned again and again
1089
01:01:33,550 --> 01:01:35,896
that the lull was only temporary,
1090
01:01:35,920 --> 01:01:40,290
that parliament remained
bent on imposing tyranny.
1091
01:01:47,000 --> 01:01:48,406
Those who have interests
1092
01:01:48,430 --> 01:01:52,116
in keeping the political
story alive and growing,
1093
01:01:52,140 --> 01:01:55,716
have to really work to
keep it front and center,
1094
01:01:55,740 --> 01:01:57,886
to define the problem
as something present
1095
01:01:57,910 --> 01:02:00,426
in the minds of ordinary people.
1096
01:02:00,450 --> 01:02:03,896
Why would I care about
this as a... as a woman?
1097
01:02:03,920 --> 01:02:06,620
Why would I care about
this as a small farmer?
1098
01:02:08,290 --> 01:02:11,566
In 1772, events beyond Boston
1099
01:02:11,590 --> 01:02:13,566
gave Adams the ammunition he needed
1100
01:02:13,590 --> 01:02:17,836
to spread his radical message
throughout the colonies.
1101
01:02:17,860 --> 01:02:21,046
In April, when a sawmill
owner in New Hampshire
1102
01:02:21,070 --> 01:02:24,216
was charged with
commandeering pine trees
1103
01:02:24,240 --> 01:02:27,616
earmarked for the
masts of royal warships,
1104
01:02:27,640 --> 01:02:29,816
a mob drove the British officials
1105
01:02:29,840 --> 01:02:32,840
who came to arrest him out of town.
1106
01:02:34,010 --> 01:02:35,986
In June, when the "gaspรยรยฉe,"
1107
01:02:36,010 --> 01:02:37,896
a British customs schooner,
1108
01:02:37,920 --> 01:02:40,596
ran aground while chasing smugglers,
1109
01:02:40,620 --> 01:02:44,966
angry Rhode islanders set it afire.
1110
01:02:44,990 --> 01:02:47,436
And that fall, Adams learned that
1111
01:02:47,460 --> 01:02:50,576
beginning the following
year, the British treasury
1112
01:02:50,600 --> 01:02:54,146
would use the revenue
from tea to pay the salaries
1113
01:02:54,170 --> 01:02:57,316
of the most important
Massachusetts officials,
1114
01:02:57,340 --> 01:03:00,586
including all the colony's judges.
1115
01:03:00,610 --> 01:03:04,316
The judges' first loyalty
would now be to the crown,
1116
01:03:04,340 --> 01:03:06,116
not the colonists.
1117
01:03:06,140 --> 01:03:10,050
There would be no way
to ensure impartial justice.
1118
01:03:11,280 --> 01:03:15,726
Adams drafted a fiery response.
1119
01:03:15,750 --> 01:03:19,066
Among the natural rights
of the colonists are these:
1120
01:03:19,090 --> 01:03:23,236
First, a right to life; Secondly, to Liberty;
1121
01:03:23,260 --> 01:03:26,536
thirdly to property; Together with the right
1122
01:03:26,560 --> 01:03:30,470
to support and defend them
in the best manner they can.
1123
01:03:32,700 --> 01:03:34,386
Printed copies of his writings
1124
01:03:34,410 --> 01:03:37,856
were sent to town meetings
throughout the colony.
1125
01:03:37,880 --> 01:03:40,856
So-called committees of correspondence
1126
01:03:40,880 --> 01:03:43,286
soon linked advocates of resistance
1127
01:03:43,310 --> 01:03:48,066
in more than 100
Massachusetts towns and districts.
1128
01:03:48,090 --> 01:03:53,120
Eventually, their network
would spread into other colonies.
1129
01:03:54,260 --> 01:03:55,906
"Committees of correspondence"
1130
01:03:55,930 --> 01:03:58,736
is an effort to try to bring
1131
01:03:58,760 --> 01:04:01,276
all of the colonies onto the same page,
1132
01:04:01,300 --> 01:04:03,946
to make them feel as if
they have a common cause,
1133
01:04:03,970 --> 01:04:06,676
words which had really
not been used before.
1134
01:04:06,700 --> 01:04:09,846
And it's through those
committees that, essentially,
1135
01:04:09,870 --> 01:04:12,156
the revolutionary spirit diffuses itself
1136
01:04:12,180 --> 01:04:14,426
throughout the colonies.
1137
01:04:14,450 --> 01:04:17,026
Let not the iron hand of tyranny
1138
01:04:17,050 --> 01:04:20,456
ravish our laws and seize
the badge of freedom.
1139
01:04:20,480 --> 01:04:23,396
Is it not high time for
the people of this country
1140
01:04:23,420 --> 01:04:29,006
explicitly to declare whether
they will be freemen or slaves?
1141
01:04:29,030 --> 01:04:31,030
Samuel Adams.
1142
01:04:34,270 --> 01:04:37,006
I need not point out the absurdity
1143
01:04:37,030 --> 01:04:39,746
of your exertions for Liberty,
1144
01:04:39,770 --> 01:04:42,316
while you have slaves in your houses.
1145
01:04:42,340 --> 01:04:46,186
If you are sensible
that slavery is, in itself,
1146
01:04:46,210 --> 01:04:49,286
and in its consequences, a great evil,
1147
01:04:49,310 --> 01:04:51,456
why will you not pity and relieve
1148
01:04:51,480 --> 01:04:55,366
the poor, distressed, enslaved africans?
1149
01:04:55,390 --> 01:04:57,150
Caesar sarter.
1150
01:04:58,390 --> 01:05:01,606
Slavery as a metaphor
is in the conversation
1151
01:05:01,630 --> 01:05:03,136
from the beginning.
1152
01:05:03,160 --> 01:05:04,536
Everywhere there's slavery,
1153
01:05:04,560 --> 01:05:07,806
there are people thinking about freedom.
1154
01:05:07,830 --> 01:05:11,216
Nothing shows the desire for freedom
1155
01:05:11,240 --> 01:05:14,340
like the struggles of subject peoples.
1156
01:05:16,010 --> 01:05:20,886
I, young in life, by seeming cruel fate
1157
01:05:20,910 --> 01:05:24,496
was snatch'd from
afric's fancy'd happy seat:
1158
01:05:24,520 --> 01:05:28,526
What pangs excruciating must molest,
1159
01:05:28,550 --> 01:05:33,166
what sorrows labour
in my parent's breast?
1160
01:05:33,190 --> 01:05:38,176
Steel'd was that soul
and by no misery mov'd
1161
01:05:38,200 --> 01:05:42,246
that from a father seiz'd his babe Belov'd:
1162
01:05:42,270 --> 01:05:49,046
Such, such my case.
And can I then but pray
1163
01:05:49,070 --> 01:05:53,686
others may never feel tyrannic sway?
1164
01:05:53,710 --> 01:05:55,450
Phillis wheatley.
1165
01:05:56,710 --> 01:05:59,926
Phillis wheatley, who was
stolen from senegambia
1166
01:05:59,950 --> 01:06:03,936
in west Africa and taken to
Massachusetts as a young girl,
1167
01:06:03,960 --> 01:06:08,836
was renamed for the slave
ship the "phillis" that brought her
1168
01:06:08,860 --> 01:06:12,136
and the wheatley family that bought her.
1169
01:06:12,160 --> 01:06:15,506
In Boston, the wheatleys
saw to her education,
1170
01:06:15,530 --> 01:06:18,276
and as a teenager, still enslaved,
1171
01:06:18,300 --> 01:06:22,386
her "poems on various
subjects, religious and moral"
1172
01:06:22,410 --> 01:06:25,816
won favor on both sides of the Atlantic.
1173
01:06:25,840 --> 01:06:28,086
It was the first published book
1174
01:06:28,110 --> 01:06:30,680
by an African-American writer.
1175
01:06:31,980 --> 01:06:34,366
How well the cry for Liberty,
1176
01:06:34,390 --> 01:06:36,366
and the reverse disposition
1177
01:06:36,390 --> 01:06:41,206
for the exercise of oppressive
power over others agree,
1178
01:06:41,230 --> 01:06:43,436
I humbly think it does not require
1179
01:06:43,460 --> 01:06:47,430
the penetration of a
philosopher to determine.
1180
01:06:48,870 --> 01:06:50,306
I wish most sincerely
1181
01:06:50,330 --> 01:06:53,276
there was not a slave in the province.
1182
01:06:53,300 --> 01:06:56,586
It always appeared a most
iniquitous scheme to me...
1183
01:06:56,610 --> 01:06:59,856
fight ourselves for what we
are daily robbing and plundering
1184
01:06:59,880 --> 01:07:03,956
from those who have as good
a right to freedom as we have.
1185
01:07:03,980 --> 01:07:06,956
You know my mind upon this subject.
1186
01:07:06,980 --> 01:07:09,050
Abigail Adams.
1187
01:07:10,190 --> 01:07:12,866
Ye men of sense and virtue...
1188
01:07:12,890 --> 01:07:15,606
ye advocates for American Liberty...
1189
01:07:15,630 --> 01:07:20,036
bear a testimony against a vice
which degrades human nature
1190
01:07:20,060 --> 01:07:22,776
and dissolves that
universal tie of benevolence
1191
01:07:22,800 --> 01:07:26,016
which should connect all
the children of men together
1192
01:07:26,040 --> 01:07:28,246
in one great family.
1193
01:07:28,270 --> 01:07:31,756
The plant of Liberty
is of so tender a nature
1194
01:07:31,780 --> 01:07:36,656
that it cannot thrive long in
the neighborhood of slavery.
1195
01:07:36,680 --> 01:07:38,480
Benjamin rush.
1196
01:07:39,820 --> 01:07:42,626
Part of what happens in the years before
1197
01:07:42,650 --> 01:07:46,966
the American war is that
liberties are kind of broken out
1198
01:07:46,990 --> 01:07:49,306
of a national context.
1199
01:07:49,330 --> 01:07:51,376
These are not English liberties.
1200
01:07:51,400 --> 01:07:54,446
These are transcendent liberties.
1201
01:07:54,470 --> 01:07:59,476
These are liberties
that all individuals have
1202
01:07:59,500 --> 01:08:02,510
by the nature of being human.
1203
01:08:05,910 --> 01:08:07,756
Heave away!
1204
01:08:07,780 --> 01:08:09,826
The Americans have made a discovery,
1205
01:08:09,850 --> 01:08:13,896
or think they have made one,
that we mean to oppress them.
1206
01:08:13,920 --> 01:08:17,196
We have made a discovery,
or think we have made one,
1207
01:08:17,220 --> 01:08:20,466
that they intend to rise in rebellion.
1208
01:08:20,490 --> 01:08:24,076
Our severity has
increased their ill behavior.
1209
01:08:24,100 --> 01:08:29,876
We know not how to advance.
They know not how to retreat.
1210
01:08:29,900 --> 01:08:33,976
Some party must give way.
1211
01:08:34,000 --> 01:08:36,110
Edmund Burke.
1212
01:08:37,210 --> 01:08:41,726
In October of 1773, 7 ships set out
1213
01:08:41,750 --> 01:08:45,396
from Plymouth, England
for north American ports.
1214
01:08:45,420 --> 01:08:49,766
The cargo hold of each
was filled with crates of tea.
1215
01:08:49,790 --> 01:08:53,966
It all belonged to the
crown-chartered east India company,
1216
01:08:53,990 --> 01:08:56,636
which was on the brink of bankruptcy.
1217
01:08:56,660 --> 01:09:00,906
To save the company, lord
north, the prime minister,
1218
01:09:00,930 --> 01:09:03,746
had won passage of a new tea act,
1219
01:09:03,770 --> 01:09:09,246
designed to undercut smuggling
and reduce the cost of tea.
1220
01:09:09,270 --> 01:09:12,256
It seemed to parliament
like a "win-win-win."
1221
01:09:12,280 --> 01:09:16,526
Shore up the east India
company, take it more in-house
1222
01:09:16,550 --> 01:09:18,696
as a governmental organization,
1223
01:09:18,720 --> 01:09:21,666
and give Americans
cheaper, non-smuggled tea
1224
01:09:21,690 --> 01:09:23,296
at the same time.
1225
01:09:23,320 --> 01:09:24,796
But colonial merchants
1226
01:09:24,820 --> 01:09:27,466
who had profited
handsomely from smuggling
1227
01:09:27,490 --> 01:09:30,406
portrayed the new law
as yet another assault
1228
01:09:30,430 --> 01:09:32,776
on American rights.
1229
01:09:32,800 --> 01:09:36,646
John Adams wrote that
immediate resistance was necessary
1230
01:09:36,670 --> 01:09:40,016
because of its "attack
upon a fundamental principle
1231
01:09:40,040 --> 01:09:42,146
of the constitution."
1232
01:09:42,170 --> 01:09:45,456
No American had
consented to the tea tax;
1233
01:09:45,480 --> 01:09:49,056
therefore, no American need pay it.
1234
01:09:49,080 --> 01:09:53,696
Government-appointed tea
agents were to be persuaded...
1235
01:09:53,720 --> 01:09:59,066
or coerced... into
refusing to receive any tea.
1236
01:09:59,090 --> 01:10:01,106
In Charleston, south Carolina,
1237
01:10:01,130 --> 01:10:04,376
the sons of Liberty "convinced" an agent
1238
01:10:04,400 --> 01:10:07,436
not to accept the
shipment meant for him.
1239
01:10:07,460 --> 01:10:10,346
In Philadelphia, the
governor of Pennsylvania
1240
01:10:10,370 --> 01:10:15,386
talked a ship's captain
into sailing back to britain.
1241
01:10:15,410 --> 01:10:20,416
In Boston, when 3 of the
ships loaded with tea arrived,
1242
01:10:20,440 --> 01:10:24,796
thousands of bostonians and
supporters from outlying towns
1243
01:10:24,820 --> 01:10:27,296
gathered at the old south meeting house
1244
01:10:27,320 --> 01:10:30,596
and declared that the tea
should remain on board
1245
01:10:30,620 --> 01:10:33,220
and be sent back to britain.
1246
01:10:34,530 --> 01:10:40,406
On December 16, 1773,
hundreds looked on from shore
1247
01:10:40,430 --> 01:10:45,246
as between 50 and 60
men... rich as well as poor...
1248
01:10:45,270 --> 01:10:48,716
all crudely disguised
as native Americans,
1249
01:10:48,740 --> 01:10:53,256
climbed into boats and
headed for the ships.
1250
01:10:53,280 --> 01:10:55,926
They dress like Indians, kinda.
1251
01:10:55,950 --> 01:10:59,496
It's an expression of
what it is to be American.
1252
01:10:59,520 --> 01:11:00,826
When you claim to be Indian,
1253
01:11:00,850 --> 01:11:04,296
you're claiming to be here, aboriginal,
1254
01:11:04,320 --> 01:11:05,796
part of this continent.
1255
01:11:05,820 --> 01:11:07,806
And you're drawing a really bright line
1256
01:11:07,830 --> 01:11:10,290
between yourself and
the mother country.
1257
01:11:11,660 --> 01:11:15,446
The men banged open 342 crates
1258
01:11:15,470 --> 01:11:19,070
and poured more than 46
tons of tea into the harbor.
1259
01:11:20,370 --> 01:11:22,416
No other property was disturbed.
1260
01:11:22,440 --> 01:11:24,516
And when one of the boarders was seen
1261
01:11:24,540 --> 01:11:28,086
filling his coat pockets with fistfuls of tea,
1262
01:11:28,110 --> 01:11:31,526
he received a "severe bruising."
1263
01:11:31,550 --> 01:11:34,096
This is an assault on the property
1264
01:11:34,120 --> 01:11:35,426
of the east India company,
1265
01:11:35,450 --> 01:11:38,666
and it's an assault upon the pride
1266
01:11:38,690 --> 01:11:41,066
and the power of parliament.
1267
01:11:41,090 --> 01:11:43,636
So, it's a very big deal.
1268
01:11:43,660 --> 01:11:45,476
Protesting taxes is one thing.
1269
01:11:45,500 --> 01:11:47,676
Destroying private property
1270
01:11:47,700 --> 01:11:50,946
worth thousands of pounds sterling,
1271
01:11:50,970 --> 01:11:52,700
that's something else.
1272
01:11:55,970 --> 01:11:59,686
In Manhattan, the king
had grown so unpopular
1273
01:11:59,710 --> 01:12:03,456
in some quarters that royal
officials thought it prudent
1274
01:12:03,480 --> 01:12:06,626
to surround his statue with an iron fence.
1275
01:12:06,650 --> 01:12:10,196
A law warning of the dire
consequences for anyone
1276
01:12:10,220 --> 01:12:12,196
who dared deface the statue...
1277
01:12:12,220 --> 01:12:14,766
Did not prevent one new yorker
1278
01:12:14,790 --> 01:12:17,860
from firing a musket
ball through its cheek...
1279
01:12:19,130 --> 01:12:22,270
And another one through its neck.
1280
01:12:27,400 --> 01:12:30,046
The study of the human character
1281
01:12:30,070 --> 01:12:36,126
opens at once a beautiful and
a deformed picture of the soul.
1282
01:12:36,150 --> 01:12:42,626
We there find a noble principle
implanted in the nature of man.
1283
01:12:42,650 --> 01:12:46,696
But when the checks of
conscience are thrown aside,
1284
01:12:46,720 --> 01:12:53,176
or the moral sense weakened,
humanity is obscured.
1285
01:12:53,200 --> 01:12:56,306
Mercy Otis Warren.
1286
01:12:56,330 --> 01:12:57,746
The most shocking cruelty
1287
01:12:57,770 --> 01:12:59,716
was exercised a few nights ago
1288
01:12:59,740 --> 01:13:03,286
upon a poor old man named Malcolm.
1289
01:13:03,310 --> 01:13:05,716
There's no law that knows a punishment
1290
01:13:05,740 --> 01:13:11,156
for the greatest crimes beyond
what this is, of cruel torture.
1291
01:13:11,180 --> 01:13:12,950
Ann hulton.
1292
01:13:14,390 --> 01:13:18,096
In Boston, in January of 1774,
1293
01:13:18,120 --> 01:13:21,806
a small boy on a sled
accidentally ran into
1294
01:13:21,830 --> 01:13:25,536
a minor customs official
named John Malcolm,
1295
01:13:25,560 --> 01:13:28,606
who cursed and threatened to beat him.
1296
01:13:28,630 --> 01:13:31,776
When George Hewes, who
had helped dump the tea
1297
01:13:31,800 --> 01:13:34,686
into Boston harbor, tried to intervene,
1298
01:13:34,710 --> 01:13:38,210
Malcolm knocked him
unconscious with his cane.
1299
01:13:39,910 --> 01:13:42,826
Malcolm was hauled from his house.
1300
01:13:42,850 --> 01:13:45,456
He was stripped nearly naked,
1301
01:13:45,480 --> 01:13:49,326
hot tar was poured over
him, scalding his flesh,
1302
01:13:49,350 --> 01:13:52,960
and then he was covered with feathers.
1303
01:13:54,630 --> 01:13:57,036
Tarring and feathering
is something that has
1304
01:13:57,060 --> 01:14:00,776
come down to us as an
almost kind of comical thing
1305
01:14:00,800 --> 01:14:04,106
because you see these people
with chicken feathers on them,
1306
01:14:04,130 --> 01:14:08,046
but this is hideous stuff.
1307
01:14:08,070 --> 01:14:14,480
Boiling pitch is poured
onto somebody's skin.
1308
01:14:15,710 --> 01:14:19,696
The burns are unbelievable.
1309
01:14:19,720 --> 01:14:25,466
And it's all part, also, of a
kind of spectacle of violence
1310
01:14:25,490 --> 01:14:27,166
that is a really important part of this.
1311
01:14:27,190 --> 01:14:29,606
And this is why the
feathers are put on, in part.
1312
01:14:29,630 --> 01:14:31,676
It's that you are trying to humiliate
1313
01:14:31,700 --> 01:14:34,260
and shame the victim.
1314
01:14:35,970 --> 01:14:38,646
Hundreds jeered as Malcolm was pulled
1315
01:14:38,670 --> 01:14:41,286
through the freezing streets for 5 hours.
1316
01:14:41,310 --> 01:14:45,316
His assailants stopped
here and there to whip him.
1317
01:14:45,340 --> 01:14:50,810
It would be 8 weeks before
he was able to leave his bed.
1318
01:14:53,550 --> 01:14:55,496
Boston has been the ringleader
1319
01:14:55,520 --> 01:14:57,666
of all violence and opposition
1320
01:14:57,690 --> 01:15:01,206
to the execution of
the laws of this country.
1321
01:15:01,230 --> 01:15:05,476
Boston has not only therefore
to answer for its own violence
1322
01:15:05,500 --> 01:15:09,346
but for having incited
other places to tumults.
1323
01:15:09,370 --> 01:15:12,516
Lord north, prime minister.
1324
01:15:12,540 --> 01:15:14,516
Lord north hoped, he said,
1325
01:15:14,540 --> 01:15:18,086
to make america lie
"prostrate at his feet."
1326
01:15:18,110 --> 01:15:22,226
They "must fear you," he
added, "before they will love you."
1327
01:15:22,250 --> 01:15:24,826
Now that they had
destroyed crown property,
1328
01:15:24,850 --> 01:15:29,090
it was clear that much
of america was not afraid.
1329
01:15:30,050 --> 01:15:33,336
North would do his best to change that.
1330
01:15:33,360 --> 01:15:37,906
In the process, he would try
to end every vestige of self-rule
1331
01:15:37,930 --> 01:15:42,146
prized by the people of Massachusetts.
1332
01:15:42,170 --> 01:15:46,016
First, the prime minister
convinced the parliament
1333
01:15:46,040 --> 01:15:50,046
to repeal that colony's
long-standing charter,
1334
01:15:50,070 --> 01:15:52,956
then dissolved the
elected assembly again
1335
01:15:52,980 --> 01:15:55,656
and limited each town and village
1336
01:15:55,680 --> 01:15:59,396
to just one town meeting a year.
1337
01:15:59,420 --> 01:16:03,526
The port of Boston would
be closed until all its residents
1338
01:16:03,550 --> 01:16:08,966
had paid in full for the tea
just 60 of them had destroyed.
1339
01:16:08,990 --> 01:16:13,676
That came to nearly 5
British pounds per taxpayer...
1340
01:16:13,700 --> 01:16:17,606
more than a craftsman made in a month.
1341
01:16:17,630 --> 01:16:20,976
It means no ships going
in, no ships going out,
1342
01:16:21,000 --> 01:16:24,386
no work for sailors,
no work for merchants.
1343
01:16:24,410 --> 01:16:27,116
It means hunger in Boston.
1344
01:16:27,140 --> 01:16:29,926
British officers were
also now empowered
1345
01:16:29,950 --> 01:16:32,626
to commandeer vacant homes and barns
1346
01:16:32,650 --> 01:16:34,996
to quarter their troops.
1347
01:16:35,020 --> 01:16:37,796
Americans would
denounce the new laws
1348
01:16:37,820 --> 01:16:40,390
as the "intolerable acts."
1349
01:16:42,330 --> 01:16:43,966
In England on leave,
1350
01:16:43,990 --> 01:16:47,836
general Gage was
summoned by George III.
1351
01:16:47,860 --> 01:16:50,976
He told the king what he wanted to hear.
1352
01:16:51,000 --> 01:16:52,716
The people of Massachusetts
1353
01:16:52,740 --> 01:16:55,716
pretended to be "lyons," he said.
1354
01:16:55,740 --> 01:16:58,186
But if England sent in enough troops,
1355
01:16:58,210 --> 01:17:02,586
they would undoubtedly
"prove very meek."
1356
01:17:02,610 --> 01:17:05,526
General Gage was given a new title...
1357
01:17:05,550 --> 01:17:07,496
governor of Massachusetts
1358
01:17:07,520 --> 01:17:09,726
in addition to commander-in-chief...
1359
01:17:09,750 --> 01:17:16,036
to enforce the new acts,
end Boston's resistance,
1360
01:17:16,060 --> 01:17:18,436
and demonstrate to all the colonies
1361
01:17:18,460 --> 01:17:22,706
the folly of defying
their king and parliament.
1362
01:17:22,730 --> 01:17:27,616
Gage and 4 fresh
regiments set sail for Boston
1363
01:17:27,640 --> 01:17:31,680
in mid-April, 1774.
1364
01:17:33,210 --> 01:17:35,856
The British government
sees this as a police action,
1365
01:17:35,880 --> 01:17:37,926
that if they can punish Boston
1366
01:17:37,950 --> 01:17:41,926
and shut down Massachusetts,
contain the rebellion,
1367
01:17:41,950 --> 01:17:45,266
that the other colonies
would get the message
1368
01:17:45,290 --> 01:17:49,266
and that order could be
restored with some grumbling.
1369
01:17:49,290 --> 01:17:53,306
I think the British government
is genuinely surprised,
1370
01:17:53,330 --> 01:17:56,606
to see the ways that
the other 12 colonies
1371
01:17:56,630 --> 01:18:00,946
rally to Massachusetts' cause.
1372
01:18:00,970 --> 01:18:03,916
You are not gonna have
an American revolution
1373
01:18:03,940 --> 01:18:06,916
unless you have Virginia onboard.
1374
01:18:06,940 --> 01:18:10,656
And the leaders of
Massachusetts understood this.
1375
01:18:10,680 --> 01:18:12,496
It was not going to be easy.
1376
01:18:12,520 --> 01:18:15,826
There were deep prejudices
between the two regions
1377
01:18:15,850 --> 01:18:18,766
because of the differences
in their ethnic mix
1378
01:18:18,790 --> 01:18:22,406
and in the nature of their cultures.
1379
01:18:22,430 --> 01:18:25,776
And they hadn't previously
had any kind of trust
1380
01:18:25,800 --> 01:18:27,460
for one another.
1381
01:18:29,030 --> 01:18:31,546
But in Virginia, the house of burgesses
1382
01:18:31,570 --> 01:18:35,986
declared a day of "fasting,
humiliation and prayer"
1383
01:18:36,010 --> 01:18:39,356
in solidarity with the
people of Massachusetts.
1384
01:18:39,380 --> 01:18:42,156
And when the royal
governor lord dunmore
1385
01:18:42,180 --> 01:18:45,696
declared the very
idea an insult to the king
1386
01:18:45,720 --> 01:18:47,926
and dissolved the assembly,
1387
01:18:47,950 --> 01:18:53,196
its members reconvened in
williamsburg's Raleigh tavern.
1388
01:18:53,220 --> 01:18:56,206
The virginians warned
that "an attack made"
1389
01:18:56,230 --> 01:18:59,776
"on one of our sister
colonies is an attack made
1390
01:18:59,800 --> 01:19:02,176
on all British america"
1391
01:19:02,200 --> 01:19:04,646
and called for a "continental congress"
1392
01:19:04,670 --> 01:19:07,076
to meet in Philadelphia in September
1393
01:19:07,100 --> 01:19:11,616
to see how the colonies
might resist together.
1394
01:19:11,640 --> 01:19:14,926
All the 13 colonies except Georgia...
1395
01:19:14,950 --> 01:19:17,756
where people were afraid
to lose British protection
1396
01:19:17,780 --> 01:19:22,466
in the event of an Indian
war... agreed to take part.
1397
01:19:22,490 --> 01:19:26,566
The prime minister's effort to
intimidate the other colonies
1398
01:19:26,590 --> 01:19:28,866
by punishing Massachusetts
1399
01:19:28,890 --> 01:19:32,530
had instead begun to unite them.
1400
01:19:34,030 --> 01:19:35,876
Lebanon, Connecticut.
1401
01:19:35,900 --> 01:19:37,846
Yesterday, the bells of the town
1402
01:19:37,870 --> 01:19:40,616
early began to toll a solemn peal,
1403
01:19:40,640 --> 01:19:42,346
and continued the whole day.
1404
01:19:42,370 --> 01:19:46,086
The shops in town
were all shut and silent.
1405
01:19:46,110 --> 01:19:48,356
Our brethren in Boston are suffering
1406
01:19:48,380 --> 01:19:51,596
for their noble exertions
in the cause of Liberty...
1407
01:19:51,620 --> 01:19:54,456
the common cause of all america...
1408
01:19:54,480 --> 01:19:57,766
and we are heartily willing
to unite our little powers
1409
01:19:57,790 --> 01:20:01,120
for the just rights and
privileges of our country.
1410
01:20:02,860 --> 01:20:04,936
Now news of a new offense
1411
01:20:04,960 --> 01:20:08,036
by the king's ministers...
the Quebec act...
1412
01:20:08,060 --> 01:20:12,946
would bind them still
more tightly together.
1413
01:20:12,970 --> 01:20:16,086
The British decide that
it would make sense
1414
01:20:16,110 --> 01:20:19,416
to Grant a degree of civil liberties
1415
01:20:19,440 --> 01:20:22,956
to those French-speaking
catholics in Quebec
1416
01:20:22,980 --> 01:20:27,256
in order to integrate them
into British governance
1417
01:20:27,280 --> 01:20:29,196
and make sure that
they have a population
1418
01:20:29,220 --> 01:20:32,596
that can sort of live with British authority.
1419
01:20:32,620 --> 01:20:36,566
Protestants, who equated
the papacy with despotism,
1420
01:20:36,590 --> 01:20:38,306
were outraged.
1421
01:20:38,330 --> 01:20:43,076
The act also extended
Quebec's borders west and south,
1422
01:20:43,100 --> 01:20:46,016
adding to the fury of land speculators
1423
01:20:46,040 --> 01:20:48,386
and would-be settlers.
1424
01:20:48,410 --> 01:20:50,786
To British colonists, the Quebec act
1425
01:20:50,810 --> 01:20:53,586
was another slap in the face.
1426
01:20:53,610 --> 01:20:57,386
The British government
is looking more and more,
1427
01:20:57,410 --> 01:21:00,856
with each of these acts, like the problem,
1428
01:21:00,880 --> 01:21:04,790
instead of the protector
that it's supposed to be.
1429
01:21:06,790 --> 01:21:10,236
That summer, beginning
in western Massachusetts,
1430
01:21:10,260 --> 01:21:14,536
in town after town,
crowds of angry armed men
1431
01:21:14,560 --> 01:21:18,246
forced the resignations
of the councilors, judges,
1432
01:21:18,270 --> 01:21:22,416
and magistrates
appointed by general Gage.
1433
01:21:22,440 --> 01:21:27,910
Juries refused to serve.
Courts closed down.
1434
01:21:29,280 --> 01:21:32,856
When Gage learned that rebels
in the towns surrounding Boston
1435
01:21:32,880 --> 01:21:36,896
had quietly begun to remove
some of the precious gunpowder
1436
01:21:36,920 --> 01:21:39,566
every town was allotted for its defense,
1437
01:21:39,590 --> 01:21:43,406
he sent 250 soldiers to
the stone powder-house
1438
01:21:43,430 --> 01:21:46,736
in Charles town to confiscate it.
1439
01:21:46,760 --> 01:21:51,916
Angry colonists saw the raid
as yet another provocation.
1440
01:21:51,940 --> 01:21:54,316
The Massachusetts assembly
1441
01:21:54,340 --> 01:21:58,356
defiantly reconstituted
itself and soon set about
1442
01:21:58,380 --> 01:22:02,156
creating a clandestine
provincial fighting force,
1443
01:22:02,180 --> 01:22:04,996
tens of thousands strong.
1444
01:22:05,020 --> 01:22:06,356
March!
1445
01:22:06,380 --> 01:22:08,156
There had been organized town militias
1446
01:22:08,180 --> 01:22:10,966
in new England since the earliest days
1447
01:22:10,990 --> 01:22:13,466
in case of trouble with Indians.
1448
01:22:13,490 --> 01:22:17,066
Every man between
the ages of 16 and 60
1449
01:22:17,090 --> 01:22:20,960
was expected to arm
himself and take part.
1450
01:22:22,370 --> 01:22:24,676
It was also now
suggested that each town
1451
01:22:24,700 --> 01:22:29,246
assign a quarter of its
militiamen to a special company,
1452
01:22:29,270 --> 01:22:34,386
ready to act, they said,
at "a minute's warning."
1453
01:22:34,410 --> 01:22:38,750
Neighboring colonies followed
the Massachusetts example.
1454
01:22:39,950 --> 01:22:42,596
The Connecticut
assembly urged every town
1455
01:22:42,620 --> 01:22:48,136
to double its supply of
gunpowder, ball, and flints.
1456
01:22:48,160 --> 01:22:51,266
Rhode Island ordered all militia officers
1457
01:22:51,290 --> 01:22:54,506
to make their men ready
to "march to the assistance"
1458
01:22:54,530 --> 01:22:58,740
of any sister colony"
whenever they were needed.
1459
01:23:00,200 --> 01:23:03,486
The line of conduct
seems now chalked out.
1460
01:23:03,510 --> 01:23:07,316
The new England governments
are in a state of rebellion.
1461
01:23:07,340 --> 01:23:10,686
Blows must decide whether
they are to be subject
1462
01:23:10,710 --> 01:23:14,126
to this country or independent.
1463
01:23:14,150 --> 01:23:16,690
King George III.
1464
01:23:21,830 --> 01:23:23,466
Philadelphia...
1465
01:23:23,490 --> 01:23:27,876
the regularity and elegance
of this city are very striking.
1466
01:23:27,900 --> 01:23:32,146
It is situated upon a neck
of land about 2 miles wide
1467
01:23:32,170 --> 01:23:35,440
between the river Delaware
and the river schuylkill.
1468
01:23:36,670 --> 01:23:40,086
And the uniformity of this
city is disagreeable to some.
1469
01:23:40,110 --> 01:23:42,086
I like it.
1470
01:23:42,110 --> 01:23:44,226
Front street is near the
river, then 2nd street,
1471
01:23:44,250 --> 01:23:47,896
3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th.
1472
01:23:47,920 --> 01:23:51,266
The cross streets are named
for forest and fruit trees...
1473
01:23:51,290 --> 01:23:54,266
pear street, apple street, walnut street,
1474
01:23:54,290 --> 01:23:57,406
Chestnut street, et cetera.
1475
01:23:57,430 --> 01:23:59,730
John Adams.
1476
01:24:00,930 --> 01:24:03,276
In the Autumn of 1774,
1477
01:24:03,300 --> 01:24:05,746
when 12 colonies sent delegates
1478
01:24:05,770 --> 01:24:07,646
to the continental congress,
1479
01:24:07,670 --> 01:24:11,046
Philadelphia was the
logical place to assemble.
1480
01:24:11,070 --> 01:24:13,656
It was home to some 40,000 people
1481
01:24:13,680 --> 01:24:16,826
and was the most populous
city in British america...
1482
01:24:16,850 --> 01:24:21,766
larger than New York, more
than twice the size of Boston.
1483
01:24:21,790 --> 01:24:26,096
The delegates met in the newly
constructed carpenters' hall,
1484
01:24:26,120 --> 01:24:29,106
hoping to develop a
common means of resistance
1485
01:24:29,130 --> 01:24:33,606
while still somehow
remaining within the empire.
1486
01:24:33,630 --> 01:24:35,076
It would not be easy.
1487
01:24:35,100 --> 01:24:38,616
Adjacent colonies
quarreled over borders.
1488
01:24:38,640 --> 01:24:41,916
Small ones feared
domination by large ones.
1489
01:24:41,940 --> 01:24:47,986
And half the delegates
were lawyers, fond of arguing.
1490
01:24:48,010 --> 01:24:51,426
This assembly is like
no other that ever existed.
1491
01:24:51,450 --> 01:24:54,126
Every man in it is a "great man"...
1492
01:24:54,150 --> 01:24:57,326
an orator, a critic, a
statesman... and therefore
1493
01:24:57,350 --> 01:25:00,536
every man upon every
question must show his oratory,
1494
01:25:00,560 --> 01:25:04,260
his criticism, and his political abilities.
1495
01:25:05,960 --> 01:25:09,606
You have a group of
men who have hailed from
1496
01:25:09,630 --> 01:25:11,506
essentially different countries,
1497
01:25:11,530 --> 01:25:13,316
who observe different religions,
1498
01:25:13,340 --> 01:25:14,916
who conform to different habits,
1499
01:25:14,940 --> 01:25:17,816
who are really meeting
each other for the first time.
1500
01:25:17,840 --> 01:25:21,656
No one is really sure what to do, at first.
1501
01:25:21,680 --> 01:25:23,356
Is this meant to be a negotiation?
1502
01:25:23,380 --> 01:25:25,456
Is this meant to be
another boycott effort?
1503
01:25:25,480 --> 01:25:27,896
Is this meant to be some
kind of serious rupture
1504
01:25:27,920 --> 01:25:29,566
with the mother country?
1505
01:25:29,590 --> 01:25:32,836
Their plan is to frighten and intimidate.
1506
01:25:32,860 --> 01:25:35,406
But supposing the worst,
you have nothing to fear
1507
01:25:35,430 --> 01:25:38,836
from anyone but the
new England provinces.
1508
01:25:38,860 --> 01:25:41,276
As for the southern
people, they talk very high,
1509
01:25:41,300 --> 01:25:43,306
but it's nothing more than words.
1510
01:25:43,330 --> 01:25:46,346
Their numerous slaves in
the bowels of their country
1511
01:25:46,370 --> 01:25:50,146
and the Indians at their backs
will always keep them quiet.
1512
01:25:50,170 --> 01:25:51,840
Thomas Gage.
1513
01:25:53,080 --> 01:25:55,256
General Gage assured London
1514
01:25:55,280 --> 01:25:57,956
the congress was a "motley crew,"
1515
01:25:57,980 --> 01:26:01,296
unlikely to achieve anything.
1516
01:26:01,320 --> 01:26:04,266
The "motley crew" included
some of the colonies'
1517
01:26:04,290 --> 01:26:06,296
leading political figures...
1518
01:26:06,320 --> 01:26:09,806
Samuel and John Adams
from Massachusetts;
1519
01:26:09,830 --> 01:26:13,136
John Jay, a young
attorney from New York,
1520
01:26:13,160 --> 01:26:17,246
convinced some solution short
of war with the mother country
1521
01:26:17,270 --> 01:26:18,846
must still be found;
1522
01:26:18,870 --> 01:26:22,946
and Patrick Henry, who
argued that ties with britain
1523
01:26:22,970 --> 01:26:24,886
had already been severed.
1524
01:26:24,910 --> 01:26:28,556
"The distinctions between
virginians, pennsylvanians,
1525
01:26:28,580 --> 01:26:33,196
"new yorkers and new englanders,
are no more," Henry said.
1526
01:26:33,220 --> 01:26:37,466
"I am not a virginian, but an American."
1527
01:26:37,490 --> 01:26:42,406
But a fellow delegate from
Virginia spoke for many.
1528
01:26:42,430 --> 01:26:45,136
"Independency" was not the wish
1529
01:26:45,160 --> 01:26:49,370
of any "thinking man
in all North America."
1530
01:26:50,500 --> 01:26:52,646
I shall not undertake to say
1531
01:26:52,670 --> 01:26:55,016
where the line between Great Britain
1532
01:26:55,040 --> 01:26:57,186
and the colonies should be drawn,
1533
01:26:57,210 --> 01:26:58,916
but I am clearly of opinion
1534
01:26:58,940 --> 01:27:00,856
that one ought to be drawn.
1535
01:27:00,880 --> 01:27:04,426
The crisis is arrived when
we must assert our rights
1536
01:27:04,450 --> 01:27:08,966
or submit to every imposition
that can be heaped upon us;
1537
01:27:08,990 --> 01:27:13,566
till custom and use will make
us as tame and abject slaves
1538
01:27:13,590 --> 01:27:18,436
as the blacks we rule over
with such arbitrary sway.
1539
01:27:18,460 --> 01:27:20,630
George Washington.
1540
01:27:21,970 --> 01:27:26,246
Most people in 1774
would say they're British.
1541
01:27:26,270 --> 01:27:29,216
They wouldn't say they're Americans.
1542
01:27:29,240 --> 01:27:35,226
The change happens in '75,
'76, and the major source of it
1543
01:27:35,250 --> 01:27:40,056
is a thing that's created called
the "continental association."
1544
01:27:40,080 --> 01:27:44,466
The association is an
engine for creating revolution.
1545
01:27:44,490 --> 01:27:48,536
The continental association
was not a committee,
1546
01:27:48,560 --> 01:27:51,706
but a phased program
that forbade Americans
1547
01:27:51,730 --> 01:27:57,446
from importing British goods
as of December 1, 1774,
1548
01:27:57,470 --> 01:28:03,146
from consuming British
goods as of march 1, 1775,
1549
01:28:03,170 --> 01:28:07,156
and barred them from exporting
American goods to britain
1550
01:28:07,180 --> 01:28:09,556
beginning on September 10th...
1551
01:28:09,580 --> 01:28:13,850
if London still had not
given in to their demands.
1552
01:28:14,880 --> 01:28:17,626
Among the so-called "British goods"
1553
01:28:17,650 --> 01:28:20,136
the delegates intended to boycott
1554
01:28:20,160 --> 01:28:24,336
were enslaved africans...
whom they agreed not to import
1555
01:28:24,360 --> 01:28:28,430
after December 1, 1775.
1556
01:28:29,630 --> 01:28:31,876
The delegates made
plans to hold a second
1557
01:28:31,900 --> 01:28:36,486
continental congress in
Philadelphia in 6 months.
1558
01:28:36,510 --> 01:28:40,186
"We must change our
habits," John Adams wrote,
1559
01:28:40,210 --> 01:28:42,656
"our prejudices, our palates,
1560
01:28:42,680 --> 01:28:45,696
"our taste in dress, furniture,
1561
01:28:45,720 --> 01:28:49,726
equipage, architecture, et cetera."
1562
01:28:49,750 --> 01:28:52,596
To make sure Americans did so,
1563
01:28:52,620 --> 01:28:55,506
every community was
expected to establish its
1564
01:28:55,530 --> 01:28:58,906
own committee of safety in order to
1565
01:28:58,930 --> 01:29:03,506
"attentively observe the
conduct of all persons."
1566
01:29:03,530 --> 01:29:06,176
By the spring of 1775,
1567
01:29:06,200 --> 01:29:11,246
some 7,000 men had been
elected to serve on such committees
1568
01:29:11,270 --> 01:29:12,956
throughout the colonies,
1569
01:29:12,980 --> 01:29:17,486
tasked with spying on their
neighbors, opening their mail,
1570
01:29:17,510 --> 01:29:19,856
poring over merchants' records
1571
01:29:19,880 --> 01:29:23,866
in search of suspicious transactions.
1572
01:29:23,890 --> 01:29:27,666
Most of those suspected of
failing to observe the boycott
1573
01:29:27,690 --> 01:29:30,906
or who were overheard
criticizing resistance
1574
01:29:30,930 --> 01:29:35,476
were ostracized, their
names and supposed crimes
1575
01:29:35,500 --> 01:29:37,776
printed in the local newspaper,
1576
01:29:37,800 --> 01:29:41,900
their neighbors forbidden
even to speak with them.
1577
01:29:43,140 --> 01:29:47,016
Every town, every Hamlet, every village
1578
01:29:47,040 --> 01:29:50,756
has a committee of
safety and inspection.
1579
01:29:50,780 --> 01:29:52,796
And they go house to house.
1580
01:29:52,820 --> 01:29:54,856
You have to take a "loyalty oath."
1581
01:29:54,880 --> 01:29:57,566
There's millions of conversations.
1582
01:29:57,590 --> 01:30:00,960
And that's when the change happens.
1583
01:30:02,160 --> 01:30:05,736
If we must be enslaved,
let it be by a king at least,
1584
01:30:05,760 --> 01:30:10,046
not by a parcel of upstart,
lawless committeemen.
1585
01:30:10,070 --> 01:30:12,076
If I must be devoured,
let me be devoured
1586
01:30:12,100 --> 01:30:15,646
by the jaws of a lion,
and not gnawed to death
1587
01:30:15,670 --> 01:30:17,716
by rats and vermin.
1588
01:30:17,740 --> 01:30:19,980
Reverend Samuel sea bury.
1589
01:30:21,110 --> 01:30:24,726
Harassed, shamed, shunned, censored,
1590
01:30:24,750 --> 01:30:28,596
sometimes attacked,
opponents of resistance...
1591
01:30:28,620 --> 01:30:31,996
called "loyalists"... saw
the committees of safety
1592
01:30:32,020 --> 01:30:35,790
as more tyrannical than
parliament could ever be.
1593
01:30:37,130 --> 01:30:39,806
There was a sense of brutality
1594
01:30:39,830 --> 01:30:42,676
that went with the patriot cause that said,
1595
01:30:42,700 --> 01:30:45,916
"no, you are wrong, and we are right."
1596
01:30:45,940 --> 01:30:48,576
To be a loyalist didn't
mean that you were evil.
1597
01:30:48,600 --> 01:30:53,686
It just meant that you
felt a great sense of loyalty
1598
01:30:53,710 --> 01:30:56,056
to the country that
had made the prosperity
1599
01:30:56,080 --> 01:30:59,196
that was the American
colonies at this point possible.
1600
01:30:59,220 --> 01:31:02,796
The loyalists are
essentially the conservatives.
1601
01:31:02,820 --> 01:31:05,166
They're the people who
believe in law and order.
1602
01:31:05,190 --> 01:31:08,236
They don't like mobs.
They don't like committees
1603
01:31:08,260 --> 01:31:09,330
telling them what to do.
1604
01:31:10,730 --> 01:31:14,276
They don't see king
George III as a tyrant.
1605
01:31:14,300 --> 01:31:16,506
We are preparing for war.
1606
01:31:16,530 --> 01:31:18,816
To fight with whom?
1607
01:31:18,840 --> 01:31:20,946
Not with France and Spain,
1608
01:31:20,970 --> 01:31:23,716
whom we have been used
to think our natural enemies...
1609
01:31:23,740 --> 01:31:27,816
but with Great Britain,
our parent country.
1610
01:31:27,840 --> 01:31:30,956
My heart recoils at the thought.
1611
01:31:30,980 --> 01:31:32,980
Andrew eliot.
1612
01:31:36,620 --> 01:31:37,996
If a civil war commences
1613
01:31:38,020 --> 01:31:40,536
between Great Britain and her colonies,
1614
01:31:40,560 --> 01:31:43,766
either the mother country,
by one great exertion,
1615
01:31:43,790 --> 01:31:46,736
may ruin both herself and america,
1616
01:31:46,760 --> 01:31:49,576
or the Americans, by a lingering contest,
1617
01:31:49,600 --> 01:31:52,046
will gain an independency.
1618
01:31:52,070 --> 01:31:55,686
And in this case and
whilst a new, a flourishing,
1619
01:31:55,710 --> 01:31:58,786
and an extensive empire
of freemen is established
1620
01:31:58,810 --> 01:32:00,756
on the other side of the Atlantic,
1621
01:32:00,780 --> 01:32:03,426
you will be left to the bare possession
1622
01:32:03,450 --> 01:32:05,756
of your foggy islands.
1623
01:32:05,780 --> 01:32:08,020
Catharine macaulay.
1624
01:32:09,120 --> 01:32:12,096
General Gage now warned London:
1625
01:32:12,120 --> 01:32:14,836
"The whole continent
has embraced the cause
1626
01:32:14,860 --> 01:32:17,166
of the town of Boston."
1627
01:32:17,190 --> 01:32:21,776
If you think 10,000 men
sufficient, send 20,000.
1628
01:32:21,800 --> 01:32:24,806
You will save both blood
and treasure in the end.
1629
01:32:24,830 --> 01:32:28,776
A large force will terrify
and engage many to join you.
1630
01:32:28,800 --> 01:32:31,386
A middling one will encourage resistance
1631
01:32:31,410 --> 01:32:33,986
and gain no friends.
1632
01:32:34,010 --> 01:32:37,126
But general Gage
was sent far fewer men
1633
01:32:37,150 --> 01:32:38,726
than he'd hoped for.
1634
01:32:38,750 --> 01:32:40,956
And he was ordered to move decisively
1635
01:32:40,980 --> 01:32:44,626
against the rebels
and arrest their leaders.
1636
01:32:44,650 --> 01:32:49,166
Samuel Adams and John
Hancock had fled Boston
1637
01:32:49,190 --> 01:32:53,836
and found refuge with friends
in Lexington, a small town...
1638
01:32:53,860 --> 01:32:57,706
just 750 people and 400 cows...
1639
01:32:57,730 --> 01:33:00,716
on the road to the
larger town of Concord,
1640
01:33:00,740 --> 01:33:04,240
some 18 miles northwest of Boston.
1641
01:33:05,710 --> 01:33:07,786
Gage planned to send troops
1642
01:33:07,810 --> 01:33:10,086
through Lexington to Concord,
1643
01:33:10,110 --> 01:33:12,956
where he had been
told arms and provisions
1644
01:33:12,980 --> 01:33:17,196
meant for a size able
rebel army were hidden.
1645
01:33:17,220 --> 01:33:21,760
Success would depend
on the strictest secrecy.
1646
01:33:23,160 --> 01:33:27,476
Late on the evening of April 18, 1775,
1647
01:33:27,500 --> 01:33:30,576
700 British regulars were awakened,
1648
01:33:30,600 --> 01:33:32,576
not told where they were going,
1649
01:33:32,600 --> 01:33:37,416
and silently marched through
the dark empty streets of Boston.
1650
01:33:37,440 --> 01:33:40,256
A fleet of boats was
waiting to row them across
1651
01:33:40,280 --> 01:33:44,126
the Charles river to
the Cambridge marshes.
1652
01:33:44,150 --> 01:33:46,226
For all the care the British had taken
1653
01:33:46,250 --> 01:33:49,796
to keep their plans
secret, Dr. Joseph Warren,
1654
01:33:49,820 --> 01:33:54,196
one of Boston's leading
rebels, got wind of it.
1655
01:33:54,220 --> 01:33:56,506
You don't move 1,000 men out of Boston
1656
01:33:56,530 --> 01:34:01,876
in the middle of the night
without arousing a response.
1657
01:34:01,900 --> 01:34:06,246
American rebel leaders send warning.
1658
01:34:06,270 --> 01:34:11,616
Two men, William dawes and a
silversmith named Paul revere,
1659
01:34:11,640 --> 01:34:16,626
are sent in different routes to
alert Samuel Adams and others
1660
01:34:16,650 --> 01:34:20,920
in Lexington that the
British, in fact, are coming.
1661
01:34:22,820 --> 01:34:24,796
Before the two men left,
1662
01:34:24,820 --> 01:34:27,466
revere saw to it that 2 lanterns appeared
1663
01:34:27,490 --> 01:34:31,506
in the belfry of the old
north church just long enough
1664
01:34:31,530 --> 01:34:35,036
to alert sympathizers on
the mainland that the regulars
1665
01:34:35,060 --> 01:34:37,706
were crossing by water to Cambridge,
1666
01:34:37,730 --> 01:34:40,470
not marching overland through roxbury.
1667
01:34:42,410 --> 01:34:43,716
Time will never erase
1668
01:34:43,740 --> 01:34:45,886
the horrors of that midnight cry,
1669
01:34:45,910 --> 01:34:49,256
when we were roused from the
benign slumbers of the season
1670
01:34:49,280 --> 01:34:50,886
with the dire alarm,
1671
01:34:50,910 --> 01:34:54,956
that 1,000 of the troops of
George III were gone forth
1672
01:34:54,980 --> 01:34:56,726
to murder the peaceful inhabitants
1673
01:34:56,750 --> 01:34:59,436
of the surrounding villages.
1674
01:34:59,460 --> 01:35:01,020
Hannah winthrop.
1675
01:35:03,990 --> 01:35:10,006
Just after midnight on the
morning of April 19, 1775,
1676
01:35:10,030 --> 01:35:12,546
revere reached Lexington and the house
1677
01:35:12,570 --> 01:35:15,246
where Adams and Hancock were hiding.
1678
01:35:15,270 --> 01:35:18,846
"The regulars are
coming out!" He shouted.
1679
01:35:18,870 --> 01:35:22,610
The two rebel leaders fled into the night.
1680
01:35:24,150 --> 01:35:27,426
Lexington's militiamen,
summoned from their beds,
1681
01:35:27,450 --> 01:35:31,126
dressed, gathered up whatever
weapons they happened to own,
1682
01:35:31,150 --> 01:35:34,266
and hurried to the town green.
1683
01:35:34,290 --> 01:35:38,106
Their commander was
captain John Parker, a farmer,
1684
01:35:38,130 --> 01:35:42,476
who, like many of his 70 men,
had fought alongside the British
1685
01:35:42,500 --> 01:35:45,070
in the French and Indian war.
1686
01:35:47,100 --> 01:35:49,216
Then, shortly before dawn,
1687
01:35:49,240 --> 01:35:52,386
someone spotted 6
companies of redcoats...
1688
01:35:52,410 --> 01:35:57,456
about 250 men...
approaching at a rapid clip.
1689
01:35:57,480 --> 01:36:01,496
On horseback in the lead
was major John pitcairn,
1690
01:36:01,520 --> 01:36:07,366
a Scottish veteran with
nothing but scorn for colonists.
1691
01:36:07,390 --> 01:36:10,566
Captain Parker knew he
could not stop the British,
1692
01:36:10,590 --> 01:36:14,906
but he wanted to impress
them with his men's resolve.
1693
01:36:14,930 --> 01:36:18,076
Parker told them not to fire first.
1694
01:36:18,100 --> 01:36:21,646
A British officer shouted,
"throw down your arms,
1695
01:36:21,670 --> 01:36:25,470
ye villians, ye rebels, and disperse."
1696
01:36:27,040 --> 01:36:29,126
They begin to disperse.
1697
01:36:29,150 --> 01:36:32,820
Many of them turn their
backs and start to walk away.
1698
01:36:36,290 --> 01:36:38,696
A shot rings out.
1699
01:36:38,720 --> 01:36:41,636
No one knows where
the shot came from.
1700
01:36:41,660 --> 01:36:43,236
Fire!
1701
01:36:43,260 --> 01:36:46,836
That leads to promiscuous shooting...
1702
01:36:46,860 --> 01:36:49,600
Mostly by the British.
1703
01:36:52,100 --> 01:36:54,616
It's not a battle. It's not a skirmish.
1704
01:36:54,640 --> 01:36:57,116
It's a massacre.
1705
01:36:57,140 --> 01:36:59,686
Now blood has been shed.
1706
01:36:59,710 --> 01:37:04,086
Now the man on your left has
been shot through the head.
1707
01:37:04,110 --> 01:37:08,096
Your neighbor on the right
has been badly wounded.
1708
01:37:08,120 --> 01:37:11,190
You can't put that
genie back in the bottle.
1709
01:37:12,560 --> 01:37:16,706
8 militiamen died on the Lexington green.
1710
01:37:16,730 --> 01:37:21,236
9 more were wounded. The rest fled.
1711
01:37:21,260 --> 01:37:23,546
The fact that the British have fired on
1712
01:37:23,570 --> 01:37:27,176
their own people, which is how
it's viewed by the Americans,
1713
01:37:27,200 --> 01:37:30,316
causes an outrage that
takes it to a new level
1714
01:37:30,340 --> 01:37:34,256
in terms of resistance, a feeling that...
1715
01:37:34,280 --> 01:37:37,486
"They're killing us, and the only thing
1716
01:37:37,510 --> 01:37:40,326
"that we can do in
response is to kill them
1717
01:37:40,350 --> 01:37:45,626
as quickly as we can in
numbers as profound as we can."
1718
01:37:45,650 --> 01:37:47,596
Charge!
1719
01:37:47,620 --> 01:37:50,806
The British resumed their
march toward Concord,
1720
01:37:50,830 --> 01:37:54,500
now just 6 1/2 miles away.
1721
01:37:56,130 --> 01:37:59,416
Meanwhile, other riders
fanned out across the countryside
1722
01:37:59,440 --> 01:38:01,946
to spread word of what had happened.
1723
01:38:01,970 --> 01:38:05,746
Militiamen from nearby
towns rushed toward Concord.
1724
01:38:05,770 --> 01:38:10,986
"It seemed as if men came down
from the clouds," one man said.
1725
01:38:11,010 --> 01:38:13,896
It was not memories of the stamp act
1726
01:38:13,920 --> 01:38:17,066
or the tax on tea that rallied them.
1727
01:38:17,090 --> 01:38:21,536
"We always had governed
ourselves," one man remembered,
1728
01:38:21,560 --> 01:38:23,590
"and we always meant to."
1729
01:38:25,190 --> 01:38:28,576
In act on, 6 miles to the west of Concord,
1730
01:38:28,600 --> 01:38:32,006
40 minutemen gathered at
the home of their commander,
1731
01:38:32,030 --> 01:38:36,670
captain Isaac Davis, a
30-year-old gunsmith.
1732
01:38:38,140 --> 01:38:40,956
My husband said but little that morning.
1733
01:38:40,980 --> 01:38:43,786
He seemed serious and thoughtful.
1734
01:38:43,810 --> 01:38:46,156
As he led the company from the house,
1735
01:38:46,180 --> 01:38:48,026
he turned himself round
1736
01:38:48,050 --> 01:38:51,096
and seemed to have
something to communicate.
1737
01:38:51,120 --> 01:38:55,596
He only said, "take
good care of the children,"
1738
01:38:55,620 --> 01:38:58,666
and was soon out of sight.
1739
01:38:58,690 --> 01:39:00,800
Hannah Davis.
1740
01:39:02,870 --> 01:39:04,876
The British seized 2 Bridges
1741
01:39:04,900 --> 01:39:06,276
spanning the Concord river
1742
01:39:06,300 --> 01:39:08,570
and spread throughout the town.
1743
01:39:09,810 --> 01:39:11,286
They entered houses,
1744
01:39:11,310 --> 01:39:13,516
broke into barns and outbuildings.
1745
01:39:13,540 --> 01:39:16,786
Most of the arms and
provisions they'd hoped to find
1746
01:39:16,810 --> 01:39:18,786
had either been shifted elsewhere
1747
01:39:18,810 --> 01:39:20,596
or successfully hidden.
1748
01:39:20,620 --> 01:39:24,466
But they did smash
open 60 barrels of flour
1749
01:39:24,490 --> 01:39:27,796
and destroyed several
wooden gun carriages
1750
01:39:27,820 --> 01:39:30,660
before setting it all ablaze.
1751
01:39:32,160 --> 01:39:35,506
The decision is made by
the American commanders
1752
01:39:35,530 --> 01:39:38,346
on the scene that we're
not gonna fight in Concord.
1753
01:39:38,370 --> 01:39:40,876
We will retreat across the Concord river,
1754
01:39:40,900 --> 01:39:42,246
across the north bridge,
1755
01:39:42,270 --> 01:39:45,846
and we will wait for
them on the other side.
1756
01:39:45,870 --> 01:39:49,556
By then, some 450 militiamen
1757
01:39:49,580 --> 01:39:52,126
were clustered together on a hillside
1758
01:39:52,150 --> 01:39:54,496
overlooking the north bridge,
1759
01:39:54,520 --> 01:39:58,526
still under strict orders not
to fire upon the king's troops
1760
01:39:58,550 --> 01:40:01,366
unless fired upon.
1761
01:40:01,390 --> 01:40:04,436
But when they saw
smoke rising from town,
1762
01:40:04,460 --> 01:40:08,436
they concluded that
Concord itself was burning.
1763
01:40:08,460 --> 01:40:11,276
At north bridge, the American soldiers,
1764
01:40:11,300 --> 01:40:14,816
the militiamen, see this
and they say to each other,
1765
01:40:14,840 --> 01:40:16,346
"they're burning down our town.
1766
01:40:16,370 --> 01:40:18,586
Are we gonna let them
burn down our town?"
1767
01:40:18,610 --> 01:40:23,256
And that's when they
march to the bridge.
1768
01:40:23,280 --> 01:40:25,926
3 companies of British regulars
1769
01:40:25,950 --> 01:40:27,896
now guarded the bridge.
1770
01:40:27,920 --> 01:40:30,566
Isaac Davis, the gunsmith from act on,
1771
01:40:30,590 --> 01:40:34,020
was picked to head the
column sent towards it.
1772
01:40:35,290 --> 01:40:39,936
Suddenly, without orders,
a redcoat fired his musket.
1773
01:40:39,960 --> 01:40:44,576
The front line of British troops
followed with a ragged volley.
1774
01:40:44,600 --> 01:40:48,346
A musket ball tore
through Isaac Davis' chest,
1775
01:40:48,370 --> 01:40:50,986
severing an artery and spraying blood
1776
01:40:51,010 --> 01:40:54,216
on two men coming up behind him.
1777
01:40:54,240 --> 01:40:57,386
Abner hosmer, another
member of his company,
1778
01:40:57,410 --> 01:40:59,556
was shot through the head.
1779
01:40:59,580 --> 01:41:02,526
"God damn them," a
militia captain shouted.
1780
01:41:02,550 --> 01:41:04,590
"Fire men, fire!"
1781
01:41:06,390 --> 01:41:11,066
At least 8 redcoats were
hit, including 4 officers.
1782
01:41:11,090 --> 01:41:14,776
The British began to
back away, then to run.
1783
01:41:14,800 --> 01:41:17,776
When one wounded
soldier struggled to his feet
1784
01:41:17,800 --> 01:41:19,246
and tried to follow,
1785
01:41:19,270 --> 01:41:23,210
a militiaman split his skull with a hatchet.
1786
01:41:24,540 --> 01:41:28,116
The British regulars regrouped
and began the long march
1787
01:41:28,140 --> 01:41:30,086
back to Boston.
1788
01:41:30,110 --> 01:41:32,526
Before the whole had quitted the town,
1789
01:41:32,550 --> 01:41:36,226
we were fired on from
houses and behind trees.
1790
01:41:36,250 --> 01:41:38,296
And before we had gone half a mile,
1791
01:41:38,320 --> 01:41:41,736
we were fired on from all
sides, but mostly from the rear,
1792
01:41:41,760 --> 01:41:43,666
where people had hid
themselves in houses
1793
01:41:43,690 --> 01:41:46,360
till we had passed and then fired.
1794
01:41:48,260 --> 01:41:50,670
Every step of the way
becomes more intense.
1795
01:41:52,170 --> 01:41:55,416
The sound of bullets
winging around them.
1796
01:41:55,440 --> 01:41:59,456
The sound of bullets hitting soldiers,
1797
01:41:59,480 --> 01:42:03,250
this deep thud, as if
you're beating a rug...
1798
01:42:04,550 --> 01:42:06,656
Screams of men who've been wounded
1799
01:42:06,680 --> 01:42:07,850
in the British column.
1800
01:42:09,150 --> 01:42:10,926
And it's beginning to look as though
1801
01:42:10,950 --> 01:42:13,596
the column could be destroyed.
1802
01:42:13,620 --> 01:42:16,036
The British were in complete disarray
1803
01:42:16,060 --> 01:42:18,666
as they staggered into Lexington.
1804
01:42:18,690 --> 01:42:21,176
But now filling the road ahead of them
1805
01:42:21,200 --> 01:42:25,630
were more than 1,000
much-needed reinforcements.
1806
01:42:26,770 --> 01:42:29,116
Two British Cannon
swept the Lexington green,
1807
01:42:29,140 --> 01:42:33,156
and one ball smashed through
the wall of the meetinghouse.
1808
01:42:33,180 --> 01:42:36,726
Several houses were set on fire,
1809
01:42:36,750 --> 01:42:40,256
but the redcoats were still outnumbered
1810
01:42:40,280 --> 01:42:43,196
and under relentless attack.
1811
01:42:43,220 --> 01:42:46,320
They resumed their retreat to Boston.
1812
01:42:48,520 --> 01:42:52,666
We retired for 15 miles
under an incessant fire,
1813
01:42:52,690 --> 01:42:55,936
which like a moving circle surrounded us
1814
01:42:55,960 --> 01:42:58,276
and followed us wherever we went.
1815
01:42:58,300 --> 01:43:01,846
It was impossible not to
lose a good many men.
1816
01:43:01,870 --> 01:43:04,210
General Hugh Percy.
1817
01:43:05,310 --> 01:43:07,056
The retreat from Concord
1818
01:43:07,080 --> 01:43:11,986
was a truly horrifying event
for many British soldiers.
1819
01:43:12,010 --> 01:43:14,496
It would have been a
fairly traumatic experience,
1820
01:43:14,520 --> 01:43:18,096
to put it mildly, to be
shot at from all sides
1821
01:43:18,120 --> 01:43:21,466
by people you didn't believe
were going to shoot at you.
1822
01:43:21,490 --> 01:43:24,466
In the village of monatomy,
1823
01:43:24,490 --> 01:43:27,076
the fighting was house-to-house.
1824
01:43:27,100 --> 01:43:29,476
A militiaman named Amos Farnsworth
1825
01:43:29,500 --> 01:43:32,946
remembered entering a
home to find a pool of blood
1826
01:43:32,970 --> 01:43:36,486
that half-covered his shoes.
1827
01:43:36,510 --> 01:43:38,686
The bloody field at monatomy
1828
01:43:38,710 --> 01:43:42,216
was strewed with mangled bodies.
1829
01:43:42,240 --> 01:43:45,456
We met one affectionate
father with a cart,
1830
01:43:45,480 --> 01:43:47,726
looking for his murderd son,
1831
01:43:47,750 --> 01:43:51,966
and picking up his neighbors
who had fallen in battle.
1832
01:43:51,990 --> 01:43:54,260
Hannah winthrop.
1833
01:43:56,120 --> 01:43:58,466
In Boston, crowds watched
1834
01:43:58,490 --> 01:44:01,106
as the redcoats straggled back.
1835
01:44:01,130 --> 01:44:08,640
The British had suffered 273
casualties, including 73 dead.
1836
01:44:11,140 --> 01:44:15,486
95 Americans had been hit
over the course of the day,
1837
01:44:15,510 --> 01:44:17,956
49 of them fatally.
1838
01:44:17,980 --> 01:44:22,966
Family members moved along
the road looking for missing sons
1839
01:44:22,990 --> 01:44:26,066
and brothers and fathers.
1840
01:44:26,090 --> 01:44:30,036
In act on that evening, Hannah
Davis and her 4 children
1841
01:44:30,060 --> 01:44:34,536
looked on as men of her
husband Isaac's militia company
1842
01:44:34,560 --> 01:44:37,570
carried his corpse through her door.
1843
01:44:39,700 --> 01:44:43,686
He was placed in my
bedroom till the funeral.
1844
01:44:43,710 --> 01:44:46,756
The bodies of abner
hosmer, one of the company,
1845
01:44:46,780 --> 01:44:49,256
and of James hayward,
who was killed in Lexington
1846
01:44:49,280 --> 01:44:53,996
in the afternoon, were brought
by their friends to the house,
1847
01:44:54,020 --> 01:44:57,750
where the funeral of the
three was attended together.
1848
01:45:00,890 --> 01:45:05,936
As April 19th drew to a
close, some 14,000 armed men
1849
01:45:05,960 --> 01:45:09,506
from 58 Massachusetts
towns and villages
1850
01:45:09,530 --> 01:45:12,446
were converging on Boston.
1851
01:45:12,470 --> 01:45:15,546
And as the news of
the bloodshed spread,
1852
01:45:15,570 --> 01:45:18,386
they would soon be joined by more men
1853
01:45:18,410 --> 01:45:21,756
from Rhode Island, New
Hampshire, and Connecticut,
1854
01:45:21,780 --> 01:45:26,026
until a 10-mile semicircle
of hundreds of campfires
1855
01:45:26,050 --> 01:45:31,090
stretched from roxbury to
Chelsea, cutting off Boston.
1856
01:45:32,920 --> 01:45:39,360
General Gage ordered his men
to dig in and prepare for a siege.
1857
01:45:40,630 --> 01:45:42,576
The British are pretty secure in Boston
1858
01:45:42,600 --> 01:45:44,076
because they have enough firepower,
1859
01:45:44,100 --> 01:45:47,546
they have enough manpower
to prevent the Americans
1860
01:45:47,570 --> 01:45:49,616
from pushing them out of Boston.
1861
01:45:49,640 --> 01:45:52,186
And they have the royal Navy.
1862
01:45:52,210 --> 01:45:56,086
But they are, essentially, surrounded.
1863
01:45:56,110 --> 01:45:59,456
It's not a true siege
because they've got passage
1864
01:45:59,480 --> 01:46:01,056
in and out of Boston harbor.
1865
01:46:01,080 --> 01:46:02,656
They can bring in supplies.
1866
01:46:02,680 --> 01:46:05,666
They can bring in
reinforcements, as need be.
1867
01:46:05,690 --> 01:46:08,736
But they can't get
outside of Boston proper.
1868
01:46:08,760 --> 01:46:10,836
So, the British empire, in new England,
1869
01:46:10,860 --> 01:46:13,536
at this point, consists
of about 1 square mile
1870
01:46:13,560 --> 01:46:15,630
of Boston itself.
1871
01:46:19,670 --> 01:46:21,516
When I reflect and consider
1872
01:46:21,540 --> 01:46:23,646
that the fight was between
those whose parents
1873
01:46:23,670 --> 01:46:27,486
but a few generations ago were brothers,
1874
01:46:27,510 --> 01:46:29,456
I shudder at the thought.
1875
01:46:29,480 --> 01:46:32,880
And there's no knowing
where our calamities will end.
1876
01:46:34,280 --> 01:46:35,550
John Andrews.
1877
01:46:36,550 --> 01:46:38,996
War never follows the script
1878
01:46:39,020 --> 01:46:43,036
that you have written for it
when you set out to make war.
1879
01:46:43,060 --> 01:46:45,566
The British objective
is, first and foremost,
1880
01:46:45,590 --> 01:46:46,906
to suppress the rebellion.
1881
01:46:46,930 --> 01:46:49,436
It's to teach the rascals a lesson.
1882
01:46:49,460 --> 01:46:52,006
It's to force them to acknowledge
1883
01:46:52,030 --> 01:46:55,976
the primacy of parliament
and the authority of the king.
1884
01:46:56,000 --> 01:46:58,316
And so, now the decision has been made
1885
01:46:58,340 --> 01:47:00,116
that we will use force.
1886
01:47:00,140 --> 01:47:04,686
And there's a presumption
that it won't take much...
1887
01:47:04,710 --> 01:47:07,596
But it's gonna go on for 8 years...
1888
01:47:07,620 --> 01:47:11,726
8 years, blood, treasure,
catastrophe, really,
1889
01:47:11,750 --> 01:47:14,736
for the British empire.
1890
01:47:14,760 --> 01:47:19,906
So, those initial shots
on Lexington green,
1891
01:47:19,930 --> 01:47:22,536
on the morning of April 19, 1775,
1892
01:47:22,560 --> 01:47:25,470
are going to have
profound repercussions.
1893
01:47:27,440 --> 01:47:29,816
The whole country was in a commotion,
1894
01:47:29,840 --> 01:47:34,540
and nothing was talked of
but war, Liberty, or death.
1895
01:47:36,580 --> 01:47:39,456
John greenwood was 14 that April.
1896
01:47:39,480 --> 01:47:41,056
His father had sent him away
1897
01:47:41,080 --> 01:47:44,726
2 years earlier to falmouth...
now Portland... Maine
1898
01:47:44,750 --> 01:47:48,866
to learn cabinet-making
as an apprentice to an uncle.
1899
01:47:48,890 --> 01:47:52,006
But when news of Lexington
and Concord reached him,
1900
01:47:52,030 --> 01:47:54,536
he asked to be allowed
to return to Boston
1901
01:47:54,560 --> 01:47:58,806
to make sure his parents
and siblings were safe.
1902
01:47:58,830 --> 01:48:03,040
He was worried that they
"would all be killed by the British."
1903
01:48:05,470 --> 01:48:11,850
It would take him 4 1/2 days
to walk the 100 miles to Boston.
1904
01:48:13,650 --> 01:48:16,426
As I stopped at the
taverns, out came my fife,
1905
01:48:16,450 --> 01:48:18,626
and I played them a tune or two.
1906
01:48:18,650 --> 01:48:20,336
They used to ask me where I came from
1907
01:48:20,360 --> 01:48:22,166
and where I was a-going to.
1908
01:48:22,190 --> 01:48:25,166
I told them I was a-going
to fight for my country.
1909
01:48:25,190 --> 01:48:28,406
They were astonished
such a little boy and alone
1910
01:48:28,430 --> 01:48:30,530
should have such courage.
1911
01:48:31,730 --> 01:48:33,276
When John reached Charles town,
1912
01:48:33,300 --> 01:48:35,676
he hoped to take a ferry to Boston,
1913
01:48:35,700 --> 01:48:37,886
but a sentry stopped him.
1914
01:48:37,910 --> 01:48:42,716
No one was allowed
into the besieged city.
1915
01:48:42,740 --> 01:48:46,156
It's terrifying to be a civilian in Boston,
1916
01:48:46,180 --> 01:48:48,956
regardless of your political affiliation.
1917
01:48:48,980 --> 01:48:52,326
Especially women and
children are just looking
1918
01:48:52,350 --> 01:48:55,066
for any way out.
1919
01:48:55,090 --> 01:48:59,666
Something like 12,000 people
of a town of about 16,000
1920
01:48:59,690 --> 01:49:01,906
manage to leave.
1921
01:49:01,930 --> 01:49:05,846
Unable to find his parents
among the refugees,
1922
01:49:05,870 --> 01:49:08,616
greenwood was invited
by 2 young militiamen
1923
01:49:08,640 --> 01:49:12,486
to share their quarters in
Cambridge... the empty,
1924
01:49:12,510 --> 01:49:15,316
looted home of a loyalist clergyman
1925
01:49:15,340 --> 01:49:17,456
who'd fled to the British.
1926
01:49:17,480 --> 01:49:22,226
His friends urged him to
enlist in their company as a fifer,
1927
01:49:22,250 --> 01:49:24,526
and he agreed.
1928
01:49:24,550 --> 01:49:27,536
They told me it was
only for eight months,
1929
01:49:27,560 --> 01:49:29,766
and that I would have
eight dollars a month,
1930
01:49:29,790 --> 01:49:33,066
and that they would quick
drive the British from Boston,
1931
01:49:33,090 --> 01:49:35,376
and then I could have an opportunity
1932
01:49:35,400 --> 01:49:37,000
of seeing my parents.
1933
01:49:45,470 --> 01:49:48,386
Britain has found means to unite us.
1934
01:49:48,410 --> 01:49:53,056
General Gage drew the
sword; And a war is commenced,
1935
01:49:53,080 --> 01:49:57,150
which the youngest of
us may not see the end of.
1936
01:49:58,720 --> 01:50:01,666
Benjamin Franklin
returned home from London
1937
01:50:01,690 --> 01:50:05,206
in time to attend the
second continental congress
1938
01:50:05,230 --> 01:50:08,236
that began meeting at the
Pennsylvania state house
1939
01:50:08,260 --> 01:50:14,016
in Philadelphia just 3 weeks
after Lexington and Concord.
1940
01:50:14,040 --> 01:50:18,216
Delegates from all 13
colonies now attended,
1941
01:50:18,240 --> 01:50:21,656
but they remained split
between those still hoping
1942
01:50:21,680 --> 01:50:25,886
for reconciliation and
those, like John Adams,
1943
01:50:25,910 --> 01:50:30,626
convinced a revolution
was now inevitable.
1944
01:50:30,650 --> 01:50:32,996
The cancer is too deeply rooted,
1945
01:50:33,020 --> 01:50:36,066
and too far spread to
be cured by anything
1946
01:50:36,090 --> 01:50:39,460
short of cutting it out entire.
1947
01:50:40,960 --> 01:50:43,706
From Boston, British general Hugh Percy
1948
01:50:43,730 --> 01:50:48,146
sent a warning to his
superiors in London.
1949
01:50:48,170 --> 01:50:50,046
Whoever looks upon the Americans
1950
01:50:50,070 --> 01:50:55,686
as an irregular mob will
find himself much mistaken.
1951
01:50:55,710 --> 01:50:57,926
They have men amongst them who know
1952
01:50:57,950 --> 01:51:00,296
very well what they are about.
1953
01:51:00,320 --> 01:51:02,096
You may depend upon it,
1954
01:51:02,120 --> 01:51:05,396
that as the rebels have
now had time to prepare,
1955
01:51:05,420 --> 01:51:08,320
they are determined to go through with it.
1956
01:51:11,730 --> 01:51:14,636
What a scene has opened upon us.
1957
01:51:14,660 --> 01:51:18,846
If we look back, we are
amazed at what is past.
1958
01:51:18,870 --> 01:51:23,276
If we look forward, we
must shudder at the view.
1959
01:51:23,300 --> 01:51:27,916
Our only comfort lies in
the justice of our cause.
1960
01:51:27,940 --> 01:51:32,186
All our worldly comforts
are now at stake...
1961
01:51:32,210 --> 01:51:34,796
our nearest and dearest connections
1962
01:51:34,820 --> 01:51:38,026
are hazarding their lives and properties.
1963
01:51:38,050 --> 01:51:40,996
God give them wisdom
and integrity sufficient
1964
01:51:41,020 --> 01:51:45,306
to the great cause in
which they are engaged.
1965
01:51:45,330 --> 01:51:47,230
Abigail Adams.
1966
01:52:55,000 --> 01:52:56,870
Next time on "the American revolution"...
1967
01:52:58,870 --> 01:53:00,546
Bunker hill...
1968
01:53:00,570 --> 01:53:03,946
40%. That's horrendously
high casualty rate
1969
01:53:03,970 --> 01:53:05,246
for the British army.
1970
01:53:05,270 --> 01:53:08,356
A rare opportunity... In the chaos of war,
1971
01:53:08,380 --> 01:53:11,326
they found a way to
escape their situation.
1972
01:53:11,350 --> 01:53:14,196
And the most important
words in American history.
1973
01:53:14,220 --> 01:53:17,526
We hold these truths to be self-evident
1974
01:53:17,550 --> 01:53:20,436
that all men are created equal.
1975
01:53:20,460 --> 01:53:26,390
When "the American
revolution" continues next time.
1976
01:53:28,000 --> 01:53:30,646
Scan this qr code with your smart device
1977
01:53:30,670 --> 01:53:33,176
to dive deeper into the story
of "the American revolution"
1978
01:53:33,200 --> 01:53:38,110
with interactives, games,
classroom materials, and more.
1979
01:53:45,680 --> 01:53:48,156
"The American revolution"
DVD and blu-ray,
1980
01:53:48,180 --> 01:53:50,126
as well as the companion
book and soundtrack,
1981
01:53:50,150 --> 01:53:53,966
are available online and in stores.
1982
01:53:53,990 --> 01:53:56,066
The series is also
available with pbs passport
1983
01:53:56,090 --> 01:53:59,160
and on Amazon prime video.
1984
01:54:38,070 --> 01:54:40,216
The American revolution caused
1985
01:54:40,240 --> 01:54:42,476
an impact felt around the world.
1986
01:54:42,500 --> 01:54:47,786
The fight would take
ingenuity, determination,
1987
01:54:47,810 --> 01:54:52,126
and hope for a new tomorrow
to turn the tide of history
1988
01:54:52,150 --> 01:54:55,380
and set the American story in motion.
1989
01:54:59,950 --> 01:55:02,796
What would you like the power to do?
1990
01:55:02,820 --> 01:55:04,390
Bank of america.
1991
01:55:07,700 --> 01:55:10,076
Major funding for "the
American revolution"
1992
01:55:10,100 --> 01:55:11,506
was provided by the better angels society
1993
01:55:11,530 --> 01:55:13,976
and its members Jeannie
and Jonathan lavine
1994
01:55:14,000 --> 01:55:15,976
with the crimson lion foundation
1995
01:55:16,000 --> 01:55:18,086
and the blavatnik family foundation.
1996
01:55:18,110 --> 01:55:21,416
Major funding was also
provided by David m. Rubenstein,
1997
01:55:21,440 --> 01:55:24,556
the Robert d. And Patricia
e. Kern family foundation,
1998
01:55:24,580 --> 01:55:25,886
the Lilly endowment,
1999
01:55:25,910 --> 01:55:28,056
and by better angels society members:
2000
01:55:28,080 --> 01:55:30,396
Eric and Wendy schmidt,
Stephen a. Schwarzman,
2001
01:55:30,420 --> 01:55:33,096
and Kenneth c. Griffin
with Griffin catalyst.
2002
01:55:33,120 --> 01:55:34,866
Additional support was provided by
2003
01:55:34,890 --> 01:55:36,936
the Arthur vining Davis foundations,
2004
01:55:36,960 --> 01:55:38,766
the pew charitable trusts,
2005
01:55:38,790 --> 01:55:40,706
Gilbert s. Omenn and Martha a. Darling,
2006
01:55:40,730 --> 01:55:42,136
the park foundation,
2007
01:55:42,160 --> 01:55:44,076
and by better angels society members:
2008
01:55:44,100 --> 01:55:47,046
Gilchrist and Amy berg,
Perry and Donna golkin,
2009
01:55:47,070 --> 01:55:49,576
the michelson foundation,
Jacqueline b. Mars,
2010
01:55:49,600 --> 01:55:53,046
the kissick family foundation,
Diane and hal brierley,
2011
01:55:53,070 --> 01:55:55,756
John h.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell,
2012
01:55:55,780 --> 01:55:57,286
John and Catherine debs,
2013
01:55:57,310 --> 01:55:59,156
the fuller ton family charitable fund,
2014
01:55:59,180 --> 01:56:00,996
and these additional members.
2015
01:56:01,020 --> 01:56:02,626
"The American revolution"
2016
01:56:02,650 --> 01:56:04,066
was made possible with support
2017
01:56:04,090 --> 01:56:06,296
from the corporation
for public broadcasting,
2018
01:56:06,320 --> 01:56:07,600
and viewers like you. Thank you.
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