Laws leading to the American Revolution

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    From the very beginning of American history to the current day United States, equal opportunity has evolved to further incorporate more and more groups of people. With every step in the right path, there also seemed to be a backstep and vice versa. Starting from the beginning, the first major era in the American past was the Colonization and Settlement Period, approximately 1607-1750. During which settlers broke away from Britain but became confined within their villages and towns. The next era…

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    developed through the French Revolution. Most notable among them was the end of a justice system based on class distinctions and the removal of guilds. Together, they contributed to an increase in economic opportunity for the common man within these conquered nations by giving them the ability to improve their lives in ways that had literally been impossible before. There are accounts of men in Germany who managed to set up their own breweries and other businesses due to the new laws established…

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    I pledge Allegiance to the flag/of the United States of America/and to the Republic for which it stands, /one nation under God, indivisible, /with Liberty and Justice for all. While this was created over 100 years after the American Revolution, the Pledge of Allegiance rings loud for those who do and do not have the freedoms that are part of the United States Constitution, which was originally ratified in 1788. During that time, there were two distinct groups that were lobbying for their…

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    Jamestown Events

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    The United States is known for its lengthy history and historical development as the country dealt with revolutions, wars, slavery, and other significant events. However, there are ten events that are truly significant to America’s history and development. The first event would be the creation of Jamestown. Jamestown was created in 1605 when two groups of merchants who had formed joint stock companies that combined the investments of small shareholders, petitioned King James I for the right to…

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    and early 1900’s, American society was viewed as corrupt and disrupted. When the public was unsure of what to blame this corruption on, they blamed alcohol. Reformers, or people who advocated for change, began forming unions to end the production, transportation, and distribution of alcohol (Benson, Brannen, and Valentine). This Temperance Movement, which advocated Prohibition, began with the intention of correcting America’s corrupt tendencies. Shortly after the American Revolution, domestic…

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    in bootlegging and speakeasies, but many of these individuals who benefited by breaking the law lost much of their gains in the stock market crash of 1928. One of the major supporters of Prohibition in the U.S. was the anti-alcohol Ku Klux Klan (KKK). The Ku Klux Clan was revived in Atlanta in 1915 to defend Prohibition, which existed in Georgia at that time. Prohibition became one of the Klan’s leading issues and the Klan strongly supported both Prohibition and its strict enforcement. The KKK…

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    intellectual conflict over the constitutional conflict between the thirteen American colonies and Great Britain. Britain was in debt from the war and wanted to use the colonies to help pay down that debt by enforcing various taxes and laws on the colonies. This paper will focus on the stamp act and the tea act which lead to resistance in the American colonies and resistance to the British Empire. This then led to the War for American Independence in 1775. The Seven Years’ War was fought between…

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    occurred on 5th of March 1770 before the start of the American Revolution in Boston, Massachusetts. During the evening hours of that day, a fight broke between British Soldiers and colonial residents at the Customs House on King Street. Due to the tension created by the resentful riot in Boston, British soldiers fired shots at the rioting mob, and as a result, several people were wounded and consequently leading to the death of five American civilians namely Samuel Gray, James Coldwell, Samuel…

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    Proclamation of 1763 was issued by the British to keep American colonists from moving westward, but this caused more conflict between American colonists and the British because the colonists wanted more land. Native Americans living in the west felt threatened by the colonists because it was their land that the colonists wanted. Unfortunately, for the Native Americans, the British did not win the American Revolution and thus begun the abuse against Native American rights by the United States…

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    Economic causes in the 1700, France faces financial ruin. Louis XIV, who died in 1715 had left enormous debt created by wars and luxurious living. France’s debt continues to grow. Further European wars as well as aid to colonists during the American Revolution emptied the royal treasury. Both Louis XV and Louis XVI borrowed heavily from bankers. They still spent lavishly on luxuries and on gifts for favourite nobles. France’s inefficient and unfair system of taxation made it impossible for the…

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