Parliament’s aggression towards the colonies reinforced the fact that colonist’s political, economic, and social ideas varied significantly with those of the British. This magnified the identity of the Americans. In addition, a large percentage of the colonists were not British in the least, but rather Dutch, or Scots-Irish, or some other race and had no loyalty to the Crown whatsoever. This is demonstrated in Document H when it is explained that an American is a strange mixture of Blood that one cannot find in another country, however while it is said that these people come from all over it is also stated that Americans drop their past prejudices and manners and embrace the new American ones.Why would the proud colonists listen to an assembly 3000 miles away, when they had their own representative assemblies that spoke for their interests? It is precisely this question that colonists were asking on the eve of the Revolution. For all these reasons the colonist had an identity to unify themselves as Americans by the eve of the Revolutionary
Parliament’s aggression towards the colonies reinforced the fact that colonist’s political, economic, and social ideas varied significantly with those of the British. This magnified the identity of the Americans. In addition, a large percentage of the colonists were not British in the least, but rather Dutch, or Scots-Irish, or some other race and had no loyalty to the Crown whatsoever. This is demonstrated in Document H when it is explained that an American is a strange mixture of Blood that one cannot find in another country, however while it is said that these people come from all over it is also stated that Americans drop their past prejudices and manners and embrace the new American ones.Why would the proud colonists listen to an assembly 3000 miles away, when they had their own representative assemblies that spoke for their interests? It is precisely this question that colonists were asking on the eve of the Revolution. For all these reasons the colonist had an identity to unify themselves as Americans by the eve of the Revolutionary