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    Revolutionary War DBQ

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    British control led to the Revolutionary War Bang! There goes that infamous shot heard around the world fired from Lexington on April 19, 1775. Some say that this was the First conflict of the revolutionary war, but what caused it? Was it a miscommunicated accident, too much British control, or was it from just pure hatred. The British implemented many different taxes and acts that the colonists believed were unfair such as the Stamp, Tea and Intolerable acts which increased british control…

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    In his novel, The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution, Alfred F. Young approaches, researches, and answers several inquiries surrounding the Boston Tea Party. He has also done extensive research into the life of a participant in the events of December 16, 1773, George Robert Twelves Hewes. Young provides his readers with an in-depth understanding of Hewes and his connection to the Tea Party and the Revolution in order to answer questions even historians did not…

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    such a time that France felt more confident of the American rebels chance for victory, since France did not want risk another losing war with England, but with the American victory at Saratoga in 1777 and the rumors of a possible settlement with the colonies propelled France openly into the arms of the Americans with the signing of a treaty in 1778. With the entry of France in 1778 and later Spain in 1779 the strategic military situation for England and its military struggle to subdue the…

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    as a foreign oppressor, they did not want independence at that time until Common Sense. Pained worked for Pennsylvania Magazine and gained experience before writing his masterpiece. It amazes how "Common Sense" made such a huge impact on this 13 colonies and how this was the beginning of the Independence of American from the British Government I do not even think he thought of just how important this was going to become. It was the way Thomas Paine wrote it, what made such a big impact. He was…

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    n this undated letter, written at the request of Jeremy Belknap, corresponding secretary of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Paul Revere summarizes his activities on 18-19 April 1775: he recounts how Dr. Joseph Warren urged him to ride to Lexington (to warn John Hancock and Samuel Adams of British troop movements); how he had previously arranged with some fellow Patriots to signal the direction of those movements by placing signal lanterns in the steeple of Old North Church; and how he left…

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    Revolution its Common Sense What is persuasion? It means to convince, to induce someone to believe in something. Thomas Paine was truly the king (though he may not favor that analogy) of persuasion. In his work Common Sense Paine does not give anyone else a chance to give their opinion because he will already be convincing them otherwise. With his Classical writing structure Paine is very firm and confident in what he is saying. In every word he is influencing the reader to believe what he does…

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    Silas Deane died from consuming laudanum laced with poison by Edward Bancroft, who thought Deane had to be silenced from knowing something he shouldn’t have. Benjamin Franklin had shared a lodge with both Deane and Bancroft during their business in Paris. The documents received by Franklin had been somehow leaked into the public since “Lord Stormont and the British newspapers made embarrassingly accurate accusations about French aid” (9). It was either Deane or Bancroft that relayed what those…

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    Franklin Saves the Peace In Franklin Saves the Peace By Thomas Fleming the thesis was how Benjamin Franklin helped to save the peace and how it resulted in the American independence. “Benjamin Franklin was the American, ambassador to France,” (75). Benjamin Franklin was a great negotiator which allowed him to work so well with the British. He also knew how to analyze situations well and figure out the best option as he did better than anyone else. The main points the support the thesis are…

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    I will be discussing ‘The Petition of the Nobles’ and the ‘Defense of William of Orange’. ‘The Petition of the Nobles’ was brought forth by a group of nobles who objected the laws against Protestantism and the unjust sentences passed down upon them by Phillip the King of Spain. The ‘Defense of William of Orange’ was written by William after Phillip II called for his elimination by assassination in ‘The Proscription of William the Silent’ (March 1580) due to his role in being the leader in the…

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    The Military Revolution was a notion first introduced by Michael Roberts in an inaugural lecture at Queens University, Belfast in 1956. In this lecture; entitled The Military Revolution, 1560 – 1660, Roberts outlines a series of military advances that lead to an upheaval of European society (Roberts 1967). The change that this so called “revolution” instigated drastically reconfigured the understanding and experience of war for Europeans. Storrs and Scott noted this particularly in the context…

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