Samuel Meeker storms into the Meeker tavern in a muddy uniform one rainy and wet day on April 1775. With a hungry stomach and a smile on his face he claims : "We've just beaten the British in Massachusetts!” which makes father extremely mad. You see, Father is loyal to the English government and King, or as Sam would say, Lobsterbacks. They get into an argument, which isn’t unusual between Sam and Father. Later, when the brothers are outside together Sam reveals to Tim his plan to steal their father's gun to fight-with the Patriots. Tim protests, says that stealing the gun would be a sin. Also, fighting with the patriots could get him killed, and it would be betraying Father and the King. But Sam won’t give in. The next morning, Sam is gone-and so is the gun.…
“Mama, Mama,” cried the baby while pointing at the woman. He sat down playing with his dead mother’s hair. They looked like they were murdered. A couple hours later the baby fell asleep on his mother. That night Jonathan could not go anywhere because his foot was tied to one of the Hessian’s foot. He quietly untied the rope from his foot, went outside, grabbed the baby and headed towards the tavern. While the baby was sleeping on Jonathan’s shoulder, Jonathan walked through the woods in cold harsh weather. Finally he had reached the tavern.…
In his speech to the Virginia Convention on March 23, 1775, lawyer Patrick Henry addressed delegates of the St. John’s Church in Richmond, Virginia, on the issue of the inevitable war with Britain. Henry’s purpose was to encourage the delegation to take up arms in the form of a militia and actively resist the oppression of Britain. By using a series of rhetorical questions and appealing to the delegation’s religious tendencies as well as their strong senses of patriotism, Henry delivered a powerful speech to encourage them to act on their hopes of liberty.…
Right after the battle at Lexington and Concord, around 20,000 men, specifically Minutemen, surrounded Boston, clearly outnumbering the British troops. With high hopes that the English King would address the Americans’ grievances, the Second Continental Congress decided to meet in Philadelphia. They, however, had no concrete intention of being independent from Britain. To make sure that their voices were heard, they sent a second list of their grievances to Parliament. They also decided that they needed money for a new navy and army, selecting George Washington to be the commander of the army. Despite the fact that Washington had never commanded a full on army, he was tall and looked like a leader, which gave the colonists hope. He possessed many of the qualities that a real leader needs: patience, courage, self-discipline, and a great sense of justice. He was quite fit to be a leader, and a great one at that.…
His early reactions to Perkins as a militant who was decidedly unlikable are simultaneously paired with Rice’s unexplained desire to gain this “gruff, defiant, and confident” man’s approval. The story is a gripping account of the mystifying merging of two lives in such a way that Spencer Perkins’ passing brought with it a pain that in the beginning brought Chris Rice to his knees.…
This was the first major step for the Americans, towards the direction of complete independence from the British Crown. They recognized and supported the war, appointed a general, and offered the Olive Branch Petition to the King, who…
One night when the northern soldiers, nicknamed “Djellabas” for their arab clothing, shelled and attacked his village. During the violent attack, John runs out of view from the soldiers and hides with the man whom he thought was his father. Once the attacks end, John finds himself alone and naked, with a family friend from his village that he had mistaken for his father named Abraham. The two flee into the scorching hot desert and begin to walk east towards ethiopia to find safety.…
It is often said to remember important mistakes, crimes, declines, anything negative so that, "History does not repeat itself." Some of the notable mistakes include strategic errors in wars; such as the French, in World War I, stacking the Maginot Line while the Germans marched around it, and in World War II doing the exact same thing. Other mistakes include incidents on domestic soil in which protests turn violent such as the Boston Massacre in 1770 and the Kent State Shootings in 1970. Other than each happening on Mondays and occurring almost two hundred years apart, the two draw deeper comparisons to one another which caused widespread protest leaving marks in American history. Upon reviewing these two cases it triggers the question, did history repeat itself?…
In a time when peace treaties were given out, because of wars that ended like, the French and Native American war. Acts were placed and also repealed as in the Sugar and Stamp Act, because of this it caused the colonists to become outraged and create an uprising of rebellion. The House of Burgesses reacts strongly against British policies as the Boston Massacre happens when a british solider fires into a mob of colonists and the Committee of Correspondence is created by Samuel Adams, which begins the American Revolution. The American Revolution ends with the battle of Yorktown, which is know as the major battle in the Revolutionary war and resulted in America becoming independent. Settlers in the eighteenth-century America formed rebellion groups like, the Paxton Boys, Shay’s Rebellion, and the Whiskey Rebellion.…
“I felt the old rage of helplessness. But as for Chris – he gave no sign of feeling anything. He was sitting on the big wing-backed sofa curled into the bay window like a black and giant seashell. He began to talk to me, quite easily, just as though he had not heard a word my grandfather was saying. This method proved to be the one Chris always used in any dealings with my grandfather.…
The colonists were in every right, aspect and mind not only justified but also it was about time that they stood of and actually take action against the British. The choice of going to war with them, was the only choice that they had. All diplimatical options that they had ceased to stand a chance against the tyrant Britain. From the very beginning when the colonists felt upset against their mother country and the way that they went about the law making, up until the beginning of the war, they tried all diplimatical options that they had by sending letters. When they didn’t work then they had no other means but to declare war.…
The Return of Martin Guerre written by Natalie Davis gives the audience a rare glimpse into the world of peasant life in sixteenth century France. It also allows a modern day audience a chance to examine and to compare their own identities and questions of self. What makes the story so interesting to modern day viewers and readers is how relevant the story and the people in it are to our own times. This story is about a history of everyday people rather than royalty and generals, history's usual subjects.…
When James Madison and The House of Representatives decided to vote for a war, almost all of America felt that they did not have a choice to disagree. Madison said in his declaration of war, “We behold, in fine, on the side of Great Britain a state of war against the United States.” [Doc 4] Great Britain was kidnapping American sailors and forcing them to work for the British navy. The British navy had many deserters, so they stopped American ships to search for those deserters and captured everyone on…
was present at the Boston massacre. Two years after, his military reading came in handy when he…
1776: Adoption of the Declaration of Independence; Jonathan Odell’s ‘The Pausing American Loyalist’ is published in Middlesex Journal; ‘The Congress’ is composed.…