American History is blatant for shedding positive light on the victory of the Patriots in the American Revolution. The spotlight the patriots find themselves in is by no means wrong or undeserving. These are the people we can thank today for our freedom. They spoke against British rule and demanded their own government apart from Britain. They despised being ruled, the taxes and the control. They felt used and hatred towards Britain and anyone who supported them. These people wanted to create their own nation, where control from other monarchies or governments was no longer beneficial to the colonists. They fought to the death for their freedom. They demanded their own human rights. And what is so compelling about the Patriots, is their success. …show more content…
An example of the Tory outlaws and the indians that terrorized with them are feared outlaw tories under Sir John Butler; “Sir John Butler and his loyalists, and his natives who were much feared on the northern New York- Pennsylvania frontier, rough havoc on civilian and militiamen alike at the so-called Wyoming Valley massacre in July and the Cherry Valley massacre in November of 1778.” Outlaw tories were made of Iroquois Indians and white men. Although the outlaw tories were merciless and were feared many of the other types of loyalist people were not aggressive. In fact, many loyalist were not vocal about their opinions at all; "the great majority were cowed conservatives or moderate, men and women not anxious for martyrdom, quite incapable of the mental and moral as well as physical strain of being a devoted extremes in the crisis of the …show more content…
Leadership of the Iroquois Indians did not allow their people to take sides because of fear its devastation and loss it would bring. Warriors form the tribe would choose their owns sides which couldn't be controlled. The Iroquois did make treaties with the British for food and possessions . The Iroquois Indians used their relationship with the crown for su believed that because of their loyalty to the crown, their land would stay in their possession. A large majority sided with the British crown and fought side-by-side with them in the revolution and also raids that were talked about earlier in this
Benjamin Franklin’s piece A narrative of the late massacres, in Lancaster County focus on the brutal murder of the Indian and how the city of Lancaster handled the massacre. Indians faced many issues while trying to live in peace. Now, we know through past history much of the lands that we are calling America belong to the Natives first. So, during the Revolution war and the French Indian War, more and more land been taken from the Six Nations and forcing the tribe(s) to relocate to find a new home. During the time of the massacre, the remain tribes of the Six Nation had left and reside at Conestogoe.
continued. Lord Dunmore, who was the Governor of Virginia, launched an attack on Native Indians in Kentucky and Pennsylvania clearing way for expansion in 1774. Dunmore was the Royal Governor of Virginia at the beginning of the American Revolution. He is known for the Dunmore Resolution, which in 1775 declared martial law granting freedom to slaves who would escape and join the British. Treaties were signed with the Indians, so Daniel Boone did not expect any further problems.
Retrieved February 02, 2017, from http://www.thehistoryreader.com/modern-history/three-reasons-the-british-should-have-won-the-revolutionary-war/ Ferling, J. (2010, January). Myths of the American Revolution. Retrieved February 02, 2017, from http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/myths-of-the-american-revolution-10941835/?no-ist Nelson, P. D. (1978, December). British Conduct of the American Revolutionary War: A Review of Interpretations.
It’s not much of an argument to say that the British should have in fact won the American Revolution. The British were a force to be reckoned with. At the time, they had the world’s strongest army, an unopposed navy, and primarily dominance over the colonies. However, due to losses at key battles, the Americans were able to overcome this huge obstacle set upon their path.
Native Americans form a significant portion of the loyalists for both political and economic
Iroquois Confederacy Background Guide History and Practices of the Iroquois Confederacy When the French, Dutch, and English began to penetrate present-day upstate New York in the early seventeenth century, they encountered the remarkable political system of the Hodenosaunee or “People of the Longhouse.” Five Iroquoian nations (in the 18th century it became six) - the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas, and Senecas - occupied the region form the Hudson valley in the east to Lake Erie in the west and cooperated in a League that preserved peace among its members and exerted tremendous influence upon its neighbors. This League of the Iroquois, as the Europeans called it, played a dominant role in the history of northeastern North America before
In this essay I will show you how the so called patriots of the American Revolution may have actually been terrorists. Since history is written by the victor the American Revolutionaries are considered heroes, but the definition of terrorism and the acts of today’s terrorists may cause you to see those heroes in a new light. Unfortunately the term terrorism wasn’t coined until the tail end of or after the revolution, meaning that the revolutionaries would never have actually been called terrorists. Although going off of today’s definition of terrorism which is “The use of violence and intimidation to achieve a goal especially political” the revolutionaries would have been terrorists, considering some of the violent actions the revolutionaries
The colonist were patriots because they were being oppressed by the British and they were trying to have freedoms like every human has the right to. The British taxed the colonist for almost everything that they could which included the Tea act, stamp act, and the sugar act. (Burgan) Because of these reasons to them they were doing the right thing to do in the situation that they were in.
Another reason why the colonists were enraged with the British was due to the fact they made treaties with the Native Americans. This treaty was named The 1763 Royal Proclamation and it opposed the colonists’ expansion at the expense of the Native Americans. Basically the British government tried to limit how far the colonists could expand and the colonists did not have sympathy for the idea of the Crown’s responsibilities for agreements with the Native Americans. The colonists thought they were entitled to the land and the government over seas did not understand their need and desire for expansion. In fact the colonists did not respect this proclamation and flat out refused to follow it.
Even though Native American involvement during the Revolutionary War is often overlooked. they played a significant role. Not only did the war determine which direction in history America would take, but it also progressed the downfall of the Native Americans. They lost land and freedoms while America gained it. Both sides in the war wanted the Native Americans to stay neutral, however most Native Americans sided with the English during the American Revolution.
The colonists portrayed the natives as uncivilized barbarians, and John Smith’s account is the epitome of this idea. His portrayal of the story reflects the natives as inferiors while displaying the colonists as superior individuals who always have the upper hand. Smith describes how for “six or seven weeks those barbarians kept him prisoner,” however he was able to improve their image in the natives’ eyes so much that “those savages admired him more than their own” and he was able to gain back his freedom (Smith 63). John Smith uses bias in his account in order to generate a better look for himself over the natives. He expresses the overall general consensus in how the colonists felt about the natives, portraying them as overwhelmingly barbaric and savage-like who captured him for such a long period.
Imperialism/Colonization and the Haudenosaunee The year of 1142 marked the formation of the Haudenosaunee; A year when the group of alliances was exempt of all the tangible social, political and economic legacies that historical globalization would later impose. Centuries before Europeans arrived, the area now called upper New York State was occupied by six First Nation tribes, the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and the Tuscora. Prior to the proposal of creating a confederacy, these nations had their own separate territories, and were often at war with each other. With the collective creation of the Great Law of Peace, they were governed under a constitution that symbolized political alliance, unity, and shaped the basis of their
Despite the fact that they were willing to help the colonists, the colonists had quickly disregarded them and called them savages. Thomas Hariot, who described the “New World” to be so beautiful quickly belittled the Indians “ But how manie yeeres or ages haue passed since, they say they can make no relation, hauing no letters nor other such meanes as we to keepe recordes of the particularities of times past, but onelie tradition from father to sonne”(Hariot pg. 26). Overtime the Indians became agitated with losing their land, the most famous account of the Indians becoming fed up was the Tuscarora War, where the Tuscarora Indians rose up and fought the colonists and they would have probably won if they would have gotten help from the neighboring tribes. However, they lost and were sentenced by the colonists to live on reservations. After feeling like they had full control over the Indians they moved onto controlling another group, African Americans, or also known as the
A patriot was a person who wanted the American colonies to gain their independence from Britain. They wanted their own country called the United States, they felt that they were being treated unfairly by the British and wanted out of British rule. Some famous well known patriots are, Paul Revere, John Adams, Samuel Adams, Patrick Henry, George Washington who led the Continental Army, and Thomas Jefferson who wrote the Declaration of Independence. Another commonly used name for the Patriots were “Rebels” or “The Sons of Liberty”. Loyalists were people who wanted to stay part of Britain and remain British citizens.
The “Sons of Liberty” or the “Sons of Violence”? Only about 50% or less of the colonists, in the New World, supported the Sons of Liberty and defied the king, while all the others remained loyal to England. Many disagree whether the Sons of Liberty were heroes or if they were violent criminals. However, they were fighting for charitable reasons and their intentions were well meant a majority of the time.