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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:01,978 Announcer: Major funding 2 00:00:02,002 --> 00:00:03,045 for "The American Revolution" 3 00:00:03,069 --> 00:00:04,480 was provided by The Better Angels Society 4 00:00:04,504 --> 00:00:05,748 and its members 5 00:00:05,772 --> 00:00:06,949 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 6 00:00:06,973 --> 00:00:08,951 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 7 00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:10,853 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 8 00:00:10,877 --> 00:00:14,390 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 9 00:00:14,414 --> 00:00:17,526 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 10 00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,861 the Lilly Endowment, 11 00:00:18,885 --> 00:00:21,030 and by Better Angels Society members: 12 00:00:21,054 --> 00:00:23,366 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 13 00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,068 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 14 00:00:26,092 --> 00:00:27,837 Additional support was provided by 15 00:00:27,861 --> 00:00:29,905 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 16 00:00:29,929 --> 00:00:31,540 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 17 00:00:31,564 --> 00:00:33,676 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 18 00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,111 the Park Foundation, 19 00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:36,846 and by Better Angels Society members: 20 00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 21 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,551 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 22 00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:46,022 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 23 00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,724 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 24 00:00:48,748 --> 00:00:50,259 John and Catherine Debs, 25 00:00:50,283 --> 00:00:52,128 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 26 00:00:52,152 --> 00:00:53,963 and these additional members. 27 00:00:53,987 --> 00:00:55,398 "The American Revolution" 28 00:00:55,422 --> 00:00:57,033 was made possible with support 29 00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:59,268 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 30 00:00:59,292 --> 00:01:02,062 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 31 00:01:03,129 --> 00:01:05,274 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 32 00:01:05,298 --> 00:01:07,543 an impact felt around the world. 33 00:01:07,567 --> 00:01:12,848 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 34 00:01:12,872 --> 00:01:14,984 and hope for a new tomorrow 35 00:01:15,008 --> 00:01:17,186 to turn the tide of history 36 00:01:17,210 --> 00:01:20,447 and set the American story in motion. 37 00:01:25,018 --> 00:01:27,863 What would you like the power to do? 38 00:01:27,887 --> 00:01:29,456 Bank of America. 39 00:01:34,027 --> 00:01:40,176 ♪ 40 00:01:40,200 --> 00:01:42,078 Voice: From a small spark, 41 00:01:42,102 --> 00:01:44,046 kindled in America, 42 00:01:44,070 --> 00:01:47,540 a flame has arisen not to be extinguished. 43 00:01:48,641 --> 00:01:51,887 Without consuming, it winds its progress 44 00:01:51,911 --> 00:01:53,556 from nation to nation, 45 00:01:53,580 --> 00:01:56,416 and conquers by a silent operation. 46 00:01:57,317 --> 00:01:59,762 Man finds himself changed 47 00:01:59,786 --> 00:02:03,165 and discovers that the strength and powers of despotism 48 00:02:03,189 --> 00:02:07,002 consist wholly in the fear of resisting it, 49 00:02:07,026 --> 00:02:09,338 and that, in order to be free, 50 00:02:09,362 --> 00:02:13,075 it is sufficient that he wills it. 51 00:02:13,099 --> 00:02:14,610 Thomas Paine. 52 00:02:14,634 --> 00:02:16,703 [Explosion] 53 00:02:19,506 --> 00:02:21,808 [Drum beating slow rhythm] 54 00:02:32,485 --> 00:02:36,432 Voice: We know our lands are now become more valuable. 55 00:02:36,456 --> 00:02:40,503 The White people think we do not know their value, 56 00:02:40,527 --> 00:02:45,574 but we are sensible that the land is everlasting. 57 00:02:45,598 --> 00:02:49,812 Canasatego, Spokesman for the Six Nations. 58 00:02:49,836 --> 00:02:51,580 [Woman singing in Native American language] 59 00:02:51,604 --> 00:02:54,316 Narrator: Long before 13 British colonies 60 00:02:54,340 --> 00:02:57,319 made themselves into the United States, 61 00:02:57,343 --> 00:03:00,689 the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy... 62 00:03:00,713 --> 00:03:07,263 Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Tuscarora, Oneida, and Mohawk... 63 00:03:07,287 --> 00:03:09,732 Had created a union of their own 64 00:03:09,756 --> 00:03:12,501 that they called the Haudenosaunee... 65 00:03:12,525 --> 00:03:15,762 A democracy that had flourished for centuries. 66 00:03:16,763 --> 00:03:20,342 Voice: We heartily recommend union. 67 00:03:20,366 --> 00:03:23,245 We are a powerful confederacy. 68 00:03:23,269 --> 00:03:25,548 And by your observing the same methods 69 00:03:25,572 --> 00:03:28,083 our wise forefathers have taken, 70 00:03:28,107 --> 00:03:31,453 you will acquire fresh strength and power. 71 00:03:31,477 --> 00:03:34,857 Therefore, whatever befalls you, 72 00:03:34,881 --> 00:03:38,127 never fall out one with another. [Canasatego] 73 00:03:38,151 --> 00:03:41,030 ♪ 74 00:03:41,054 --> 00:03:43,699 Narrator: In the spring of 1754, 75 00:03:43,723 --> 00:03:47,503 the celebrated scientist and writer Benjamin Franklin 76 00:03:47,527 --> 00:03:51,531 proposed that the British colonies form a similar union. 77 00:03:52,699 --> 00:03:56,779 He printed a cartoon of a snake cut into pieces 78 00:03:56,803 --> 00:04:00,807 above the dire warning "Join, or Die." 79 00:04:02,575 --> 00:04:05,554 A few weeks later at Albany, New York, 80 00:04:05,578 --> 00:04:08,991 Franklin and other delegates from 7 colonies 81 00:04:09,015 --> 00:04:12,394 agreed to his Plan of Union... 82 00:04:12,418 --> 00:04:15,764 And then went home to try and sell it. 83 00:04:15,788 --> 00:04:19,435 But when the plan was presented at the colonial capitals, 84 00:04:19,459 --> 00:04:23,072 each of the individual legislatures rejected it 85 00:04:23,096 --> 00:04:27,876 because they did not want to give up their autonomy. 86 00:04:27,900 --> 00:04:29,245 [Cannonfire] 87 00:04:29,269 --> 00:04:33,616 The plan died, but the idea would survive. 88 00:04:33,640 --> 00:04:38,287 20 years later, "Join, or Die" would be a rallying cry 89 00:04:38,311 --> 00:04:42,057 in the most consequential revolution in history. 90 00:04:42,081 --> 00:04:50,081 ♪ 91 00:05:50,817 --> 00:05:54,063 Voice: We are in the very midst of a revolution 92 00:05:54,087 --> 00:05:56,899 the most complete, unexpected, and remarkable 93 00:05:56,923 --> 00:05:59,726 of any in the history of nations. 94 00:06:00,760 --> 00:06:04,073 Objects of the most stupendous magnitude, 95 00:06:04,097 --> 00:06:06,408 and measures in which the lives and liberties 96 00:06:06,432 --> 00:06:11,046 of millions yet unborn are intimately interested, 97 00:06:11,070 --> 00:06:13,382 are now before us. 98 00:06:13,406 --> 00:06:15,150 John Adams. 99 00:06:15,174 --> 00:06:16,809 [Explosion] 100 00:06:19,545 --> 00:06:21,990 Narrator: The American Revolution was not just 101 00:06:22,014 --> 00:06:25,661 a clash between Englishmen over Indian land, 102 00:06:25,685 --> 00:06:28,530 taxes, and representation, 103 00:06:28,554 --> 00:06:31,066 but a bloody struggle that would engage 104 00:06:31,090 --> 00:06:32,935 more than 2 dozen nations, 105 00:06:32,959 --> 00:06:36,538 European as well as Native American, 106 00:06:36,562 --> 00:06:39,408 that also somehow came to be about 107 00:06:39,432 --> 00:06:42,702 the noblest aspirations of humankind. 108 00:06:45,371 --> 00:06:48,350 It was fought in hundreds of places, 109 00:06:48,374 --> 00:06:50,719 from the forests of Quebec 110 00:06:50,743 --> 00:06:54,857 to the backcountry of Georgia and the Carolinas; 111 00:06:54,881 --> 00:06:58,193 from the rough seas off England, France 112 00:06:58,217 --> 00:07:00,028 and in the Caribbean, 113 00:07:00,052 --> 00:07:03,432 to the towns and orchards of Indian Country. 114 00:07:03,456 --> 00:07:04,733 [Gunshots] 115 00:07:04,757 --> 00:07:07,136 The fighting would take place on roads 116 00:07:07,160 --> 00:07:09,204 and in villages and cities; 117 00:07:09,228 --> 00:07:12,374 by woods and fields, 118 00:07:12,398 --> 00:07:16,512 and along waterways with old American names: 119 00:07:16,536 --> 00:07:20,582 the Susquehanna, the Tennessee, and the Ohio; 120 00:07:20,606 --> 00:07:24,853 the Oriskany, the Catawba, and the Chesapeake; 121 00:07:24,877 --> 00:07:27,656 and along waters with newer names: 122 00:07:27,680 --> 00:07:31,160 the Charles, the Hudson, and the Schuylkill; 123 00:07:31,184 --> 00:07:35,364 the Brandywine, the Cooper, and the Ashley; 124 00:07:35,388 --> 00:07:37,723 and finally the York. 125 00:07:39,792 --> 00:07:42,704 The war grew out of a multitude of grievances 126 00:07:42,728 --> 00:07:45,174 lodged against the British Parliament 127 00:07:45,198 --> 00:07:46,542 by British subjects 128 00:07:46,566 --> 00:07:49,344 living an ocean away in 13 129 00:07:49,368 --> 00:07:52,138 otherwise disunited colonies. 130 00:07:53,906 --> 00:07:56,618 It was also a savage civil war 131 00:07:56,642 --> 00:07:58,887 that pitted brother against brother, 132 00:07:58,911 --> 00:08:03,692 neighbor against neighbor, American against American, 133 00:08:03,716 --> 00:08:06,395 killing tens of thousands of them. 134 00:08:06,419 --> 00:08:08,497 [Gunfire] 135 00:08:08,521 --> 00:08:10,232 Voice: However great the blessings 136 00:08:10,256 --> 00:08:14,136 to be derived from a revolution in government, 137 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:17,473 the scenes of anarchy, cruelty, and blood, 138 00:08:17,497 --> 00:08:19,608 which usually precede it, 139 00:08:19,632 --> 00:08:21,810 and the difficulty of uniting a majority 140 00:08:21,834 --> 00:08:23,779 in favor of any system, 141 00:08:23,803 --> 00:08:26,181 are sufficient to make every person 142 00:08:26,205 --> 00:08:27,916 who has been an eyewitness 143 00:08:27,940 --> 00:08:31,878 recoil at the prospect of overturning empires. 144 00:08:33,012 --> 00:08:34,547 Abigail Adams. 145 00:08:36,148 --> 00:08:39,061 Narrator: The American Revolution was the first war 146 00:08:39,085 --> 00:08:42,664 ever fought proclaiming the unalienable rights 147 00:08:42,688 --> 00:08:44,257 of all people. 148 00:08:45,291 --> 00:08:48,770 It would change the course of human events. 149 00:08:48,794 --> 00:08:51,240 ♪ 150 00:08:51,264 --> 00:08:55,067 Man: It's our creation myth, our creation story. 151 00:08:56,636 --> 00:08:59,114 It tells us who we are, where we came from, uh, 152 00:08:59,138 --> 00:09:01,049 what our forebears believed, and, and, 153 00:09:01,073 --> 00:09:02,518 and what they were willing to die for. 154 00:09:02,542 --> 00:09:04,353 That's the most profound question 155 00:09:04,377 --> 00:09:07,389 any people can ask themselves. 156 00:09:07,413 --> 00:09:10,559 Woman: What the American Revolution gave the United States 157 00:09:10,583 --> 00:09:15,731 was an actual idea of a moment of origin, 158 00:09:15,755 --> 00:09:19,835 which many other countries in the world don't have. 159 00:09:19,859 --> 00:09:23,705 And it has invested these particular years 160 00:09:23,729 --> 00:09:27,876 of these particular people with a set of stakes 161 00:09:27,900 --> 00:09:31,580 that are so far beyond what any set of events 162 00:09:31,604 --> 00:09:34,149 and any set of people can plausibly carry 163 00:09:34,173 --> 00:09:37,252 that it has made the way that Americans 164 00:09:37,276 --> 00:09:41,247 think about this period very unreal and detached. 165 00:09:44,617 --> 00:09:45,994 Man: One of the most remarkable aspects 166 00:09:46,018 --> 00:09:47,763 of the Revolutionary War is that you had 167 00:09:47,787 --> 00:09:49,431 such different places 168 00:09:49,455 --> 00:09:51,958 come together as one nation. 169 00:09:53,125 --> 00:09:57,940 I'm not sure there is a state, anywhere in the world, 170 00:09:57,964 --> 00:10:01,476 in the late 18th century, that has as wide variety 171 00:10:01,500 --> 00:10:03,912 of people who inhabit it, um, 172 00:10:03,936 --> 00:10:06,248 and so, it really is actually kind of remarkable, 173 00:10:06,272 --> 00:10:09,851 the way that that nation ends up cohering, 174 00:10:09,875 --> 00:10:13,855 not around culture, not around religion, 175 00:10:13,879 --> 00:10:15,958 not around ancient history. 176 00:10:15,982 --> 00:10:19,261 It was coming together around a set of purposes and ideals 177 00:10:19,285 --> 00:10:21,530 for one common cause. 178 00:10:21,554 --> 00:10:23,765 [Soldier shouting orders] 179 00:10:23,789 --> 00:10:25,968 Voice: Events like these have seldom, 180 00:10:25,992 --> 00:10:30,872 if ever before, taken place on the stage of human action. 181 00:10:30,896 --> 00:10:33,709 For who has before seen a disciplined army 182 00:10:33,733 --> 00:10:36,845 formed from such raw materials? 183 00:10:36,869 --> 00:10:39,481 Who that was not a witness could imagine that men 184 00:10:39,505 --> 00:10:42,818 who came from the different parts of the continent, 185 00:10:42,842 --> 00:10:46,955 strongly disposed to despise and quarrel with each other, 186 00:10:46,979 --> 00:10:51,283 would become but one patriotic band of brothers? 187 00:10:52,885 --> 00:10:54,429 George Washington. 188 00:10:54,453 --> 00:11:02,453 ♪ 189 00:11:03,729 --> 00:11:06,298 [Gunfire] 190 00:11:12,672 --> 00:11:14,449 Voice: We have great reason to believe 191 00:11:14,473 --> 00:11:17,085 you intend to drive us away. 192 00:11:17,109 --> 00:11:19,221 Why do you come to fight in the land 193 00:11:19,245 --> 00:11:20,822 that God has given us? 194 00:11:20,846 --> 00:11:23,992 Why don't you fight in the old country and on the sea? 195 00:11:24,016 --> 00:11:26,862 Why do you come to fight on our land? 196 00:11:26,886 --> 00:11:29,464 Shingas, Lenape Nation. 197 00:11:29,488 --> 00:11:32,467 ♪ 198 00:11:32,491 --> 00:11:35,437 Narrator: For several generations, violent conquest 199 00:11:35,461 --> 00:11:40,075 and Old-World diseases had decimated Native populations 200 00:11:40,099 --> 00:11:43,945 between the Atlantic Ocean and the Appalachian Mountains, 201 00:11:43,969 --> 00:11:46,682 where, by the middle of the 18th century, 202 00:11:46,706 --> 00:11:50,819 13 distinct British colonies were established 203 00:11:50,843 --> 00:11:55,991 south of French Canada and north of Spanish Florida. 204 00:11:56,015 --> 00:11:58,994 Now, as land speculators and settlers 205 00:11:59,018 --> 00:12:02,898 eyed the Ohio River Valley beyond the Appalachians, 206 00:12:02,922 --> 00:12:06,568 the paramount question became who would control 207 00:12:06,592 --> 00:12:08,761 the North American interior. 208 00:12:10,362 --> 00:12:13,709 Both Protestant Britain and Catholic France... 209 00:12:13,733 --> 00:12:16,378 Ancient enemies that had already fought 210 00:12:16,402 --> 00:12:18,313 3 wars in North America... 211 00:12:18,337 --> 00:12:20,449 Claimed the region. 212 00:12:20,473 --> 00:12:22,918 So did a host of Indian nations 213 00:12:22,942 --> 00:12:26,054 who had lived and farmed and hunted there 214 00:12:26,078 --> 00:12:28,314 for hundreds of generations. 215 00:12:30,649 --> 00:12:34,496 In 1754, to solidify Britain's claim, 216 00:12:34,520 --> 00:12:38,233 the Royal Colony of Virginia dispatched militia 217 00:12:38,257 --> 00:12:41,327 to protect their interests in the Ohio Country. 218 00:12:43,028 --> 00:12:47,242 The small force of militiamen and a handful of Native allies 219 00:12:47,266 --> 00:12:50,312 surrounded a group of unsuspecting French soldiers... 220 00:12:50,336 --> 00:12:52,013 Man: Fire! [Gunfire] 221 00:12:52,037 --> 00:12:53,806 and fired into them. 222 00:12:55,207 --> 00:12:58,987 Nearly half of the Frenchmen were killed or wounded. 223 00:12:59,011 --> 00:13:01,223 The rest surrendered. 224 00:13:01,247 --> 00:13:04,459 According to one of the Indians with the Virginians, 225 00:13:04,483 --> 00:13:08,330 the militia's 22-year-old commander had been the first 226 00:13:08,354 --> 00:13:11,533 to shoot into the enemy's encampment. 227 00:13:11,557 --> 00:13:14,369 If so, George Washington fired 228 00:13:14,393 --> 00:13:17,372 the very first shot of a global conflict 229 00:13:17,396 --> 00:13:21,109 that would come to be called the Seven Years' War 230 00:13:21,133 --> 00:13:24,470 and set the stage for the American Revolution. 231 00:13:26,305 --> 00:13:28,583 Soon after his surprise attack, 232 00:13:28,607 --> 00:13:30,152 a French and Indian force 233 00:13:30,176 --> 00:13:32,587 surrounded Washington and his men, 234 00:13:32,611 --> 00:13:36,291 forcing him, for the first and only time in his life, 235 00:13:36,315 --> 00:13:38,193 to surrender. 236 00:13:38,217 --> 00:13:40,996 A less prominent young man's military career 237 00:13:41,020 --> 00:13:43,131 might have ended there, 238 00:13:43,155 --> 00:13:46,868 but Washington was given a second chance the following year 239 00:13:46,892 --> 00:13:50,005 as aide-de-camp to General Edward Braddock, 240 00:13:50,029 --> 00:13:53,008 the British commander sent to dislodge the French 241 00:13:53,032 --> 00:13:54,500 at Fort Duquesne. 242 00:13:55,734 --> 00:13:58,713 Braddock was confident his red-coated British regulars 243 00:13:58,737 --> 00:14:04,319 could easily defeat anyone who stood between him and the fort. 244 00:14:04,343 --> 00:14:08,456 [Gunfire] But on July 9, 1755, 245 00:14:08,480 --> 00:14:13,295 a much smaller French and Indian force overwhelmed them. 246 00:14:13,319 --> 00:14:17,065 The British panicked. Braddock was mortally wounded. 247 00:14:17,089 --> 00:14:20,302 The Command fell to Washington. 248 00:14:20,326 --> 00:14:23,138 Two horses were shot from under him. 249 00:14:23,162 --> 00:14:26,641 Musket balls ripped through his hat and jacket. 250 00:14:26,665 --> 00:14:29,845 He ordered a retreat and managed to get most of his men 251 00:14:29,869 --> 00:14:31,637 safely off the battlefield. 252 00:14:34,073 --> 00:14:37,352 Washington learned two valuable lessons: 253 00:14:37,376 --> 00:14:40,755 British troops were not invincible, 254 00:14:40,779 --> 00:14:43,124 and there was no shame in retreating 255 00:14:43,148 --> 00:14:45,451 if you could live to fight another day. 256 00:14:47,586 --> 00:14:51,199 He was hailed as a hero and given overall command 257 00:14:51,223 --> 00:14:53,401 of Virginia's militia. 258 00:14:53,425 --> 00:14:55,971 But after his appeal for a Royal commission 259 00:14:55,995 --> 00:14:58,440 in the British Army was rejected, 260 00:14:58,464 --> 00:15:03,211 he retired from military service in 1758 261 00:15:03,235 --> 00:15:06,481 and returned to his plantation at Mount Vernon, 262 00:15:06,505 --> 00:15:10,442 filled with resentment at how the British had treated him. 263 00:15:11,510 --> 00:15:13,521 Man: And he comes to view the people in London 264 00:15:13,545 --> 00:15:17,926 as people who have a condescending view of Americans. 265 00:15:17,950 --> 00:15:19,928 They think of him as inferior. 266 00:15:19,952 --> 00:15:22,364 They didn't give him a commission. 267 00:15:22,388 --> 00:15:25,333 I mean, when Washington is told that he didn't get a commission, 268 00:15:25,357 --> 00:15:27,736 he doesn't think that means he's inferior. 269 00:15:27,760 --> 00:15:30,596 He thinks that means the British are really stupid. 270 00:15:31,997 --> 00:15:34,576 Voice: There can be no sufficient reason given 271 00:15:34,600 --> 00:15:37,112 why we, who spend our blood and treasure 272 00:15:37,136 --> 00:15:39,481 in defense of the King's Dominions, 273 00:15:39,505 --> 00:15:42,474 are not entitled to equal preferment. 274 00:15:43,575 --> 00:15:46,988 We can't conceive that being Americans should deprive us 275 00:15:47,012 --> 00:15:49,381 of the benefits of British subjects. [Washington] 276 00:15:51,350 --> 00:15:53,628 [Cannonfire] 277 00:15:53,652 --> 00:15:55,697 Man: The Seven Years' War, against Britain's 278 00:15:55,721 --> 00:15:57,832 imperial rivals, France and Spain, 279 00:15:57,856 --> 00:15:59,801 is fought not only in North America. 280 00:15:59,825 --> 00:16:02,704 It's fought in the Caribbean, it's fought in Africa, 281 00:16:02,728 --> 00:16:06,241 it's fought in India, it's fought in the Philippines. 282 00:16:06,265 --> 00:16:09,044 So, even though it starts in the Ohio backcountry, 283 00:16:09,068 --> 00:16:11,146 with a dispute between colonists 284 00:16:11,170 --> 00:16:13,348 and the French and their Indian allies, 285 00:16:13,372 --> 00:16:16,017 it mushrooms into a global campaign 286 00:16:16,041 --> 00:16:18,954 that touches Europe and all parts of the world. 287 00:16:18,978 --> 00:16:22,123 The American colonies are just one piece 288 00:16:22,147 --> 00:16:25,160 on a broad, global Imperial chessboard 289 00:16:25,184 --> 00:16:28,129 as far as British policymakers are concerned. 290 00:16:28,153 --> 00:16:29,798 Narrator: Remembered in North America 291 00:16:29,822 --> 00:16:32,067 as the French and Indian War, 292 00:16:32,091 --> 00:16:34,169 the fighting went on for years 293 00:16:34,193 --> 00:16:36,838 until a series of British victories, 294 00:16:36,862 --> 00:16:39,808 won by regulars and colonial troops, 295 00:16:39,832 --> 00:16:43,745 ended the French Empire's presence on the continent, 296 00:16:43,769 --> 00:16:46,214 gave Britain Spanish Florida, 297 00:16:46,238 --> 00:16:50,442 and more than tripled the lands claimed by England's King. 298 00:16:51,977 --> 00:16:54,289 Man: France transfers to Britain 299 00:16:54,313 --> 00:16:57,016 all of its territory in North America. 300 00:16:58,217 --> 00:17:00,962 But it's a little bit like the Greek myths, you know, 301 00:17:00,986 --> 00:17:02,664 never wish for something too much 302 00:17:02,688 --> 00:17:04,833 'cause you might get what you wished for. 303 00:17:04,857 --> 00:17:07,002 The British, in North America, 304 00:17:07,026 --> 00:17:08,670 have been hoping and praying 305 00:17:08,694 --> 00:17:12,874 for the defeat of the French for 80 years. 306 00:17:12,898 --> 00:17:16,911 And now they're victorious. Church bells are ringing. 307 00:17:16,935 --> 00:17:19,547 This is the moment we've all hoped for. 308 00:17:19,571 --> 00:17:23,218 And then it all begins to go to hell in a hand basket. 309 00:17:23,242 --> 00:17:31,242 ♪ 310 00:17:33,685 --> 00:17:39,100 Woman: Britishness in America is just everywhere. 311 00:17:39,124 --> 00:17:41,403 In Boston, the Town House 312 00:17:41,427 --> 00:17:44,139 sits at the center of Queen and King Streets. 313 00:17:44,163 --> 00:17:46,775 The London Bookshop was around the corner. 314 00:17:46,799 --> 00:17:49,210 The Crown Coffee House. 315 00:17:49,234 --> 00:17:53,882 The sort of ideal of, uh, fashion, 316 00:17:53,906 --> 00:17:55,917 of political currency, 317 00:17:55,941 --> 00:17:59,254 of the basis of one's rights 318 00:17:59,278 --> 00:18:01,389 and that sense of home. 319 00:18:01,413 --> 00:18:03,725 They talk about Britain even when they have 320 00:18:03,749 --> 00:18:06,251 never been there as home. 321 00:18:08,487 --> 00:18:12,500 Narrator: On Saturday, December 27, 1760, 322 00:18:12,524 --> 00:18:16,204 a British frigate anchored in Boston harbor. 323 00:18:16,228 --> 00:18:19,240 It brought with it big news. 324 00:18:19,264 --> 00:18:22,677 King George II had died in October. 325 00:18:22,701 --> 00:18:28,083 His 22-year-old grandson now reigned as George III. 326 00:18:28,107 --> 00:18:30,385 Crowds cheered. 327 00:18:30,409 --> 00:18:33,621 Bostonians were proud to be part of what had become 328 00:18:33,645 --> 00:18:38,226 the most far-flung empire on Earth. 329 00:18:38,250 --> 00:18:41,196 Man: In the 18th century, the belief was, 330 00:18:41,220 --> 00:18:43,398 who in the world has got it right? 331 00:18:43,422 --> 00:18:46,701 Only one people on Earth... The British. 332 00:18:46,725 --> 00:18:49,838 They have a mixed constitution, constitutional monarch, 333 00:18:49,862 --> 00:18:51,106 House of Lords, 334 00:18:51,130 --> 00:18:53,908 an elected House of Commons. 335 00:18:53,932 --> 00:18:55,844 You got an element of democracy, 336 00:18:55,868 --> 00:18:59,681 element of aristocracy, element of monarchy. 337 00:18:59,705 --> 00:19:02,283 The 3 of them will check and balance each other 338 00:19:02,307 --> 00:19:06,488 and produce the perfect combination. 339 00:19:06,512 --> 00:19:09,357 Vincent Brown: We tend to think of the British Empire in America 340 00:19:09,381 --> 00:19:11,159 as the 13 North American colonies 341 00:19:11,183 --> 00:19:12,894 that became the United States. 342 00:19:12,918 --> 00:19:15,797 But Great Britain actually had 26 colonies in America. 343 00:19:15,821 --> 00:19:18,433 And, by far, the most important of those, 344 00:19:18,457 --> 00:19:21,369 the most profitable, the most militarily significant, 345 00:19:21,393 --> 00:19:23,471 and the best politically connected of those colonies 346 00:19:23,495 --> 00:19:25,640 were those colonies in the Caribbean. 347 00:19:25,664 --> 00:19:28,843 The territories that tended to have the most slaves, 348 00:19:28,867 --> 00:19:32,180 and exploit enslaved labor most intensively, 349 00:19:32,204 --> 00:19:34,449 tended to be the most profitable colonies. 350 00:19:34,473 --> 00:19:36,851 So, if you look at North America, for example, 351 00:19:36,875 --> 00:19:39,587 Massachusetts is the least profitable colony 352 00:19:39,611 --> 00:19:41,589 in North America and it's got 353 00:19:41,613 --> 00:19:44,559 the smallest percentage of slaves in its territory. 354 00:19:44,583 --> 00:19:46,327 The most profitable colony in North America 355 00:19:46,351 --> 00:19:47,996 is South Carolina. 356 00:19:48,020 --> 00:19:51,232 Then, when you get to a place like Jamaica or Barbados, 357 00:19:51,256 --> 00:19:53,835 where 90% of the population is enslaved, 358 00:19:53,859 --> 00:19:55,203 then you're really talking. 359 00:19:55,227 --> 00:19:56,671 That's where the money is being made 360 00:19:56,695 --> 00:19:58,439 and that's also why that's where 361 00:19:58,463 --> 00:20:01,300 the Royal Navy warships are concentrated. 362 00:20:03,535 --> 00:20:05,847 Narrator: But the 13 contiguous colonies 363 00:20:05,871 --> 00:20:09,884 that clung to the Atlantic seaboard were the most populous. 364 00:20:09,908 --> 00:20:13,855 The colonists' numbers had doubled every 25 years. 365 00:20:13,879 --> 00:20:18,293 By 1763, the population... Black and White... 366 00:20:18,317 --> 00:20:20,686 Had reached almost 2 million. 367 00:20:21,720 --> 00:20:24,065 Christopher Brown: And those settlers produce 368 00:20:24,089 --> 00:20:25,400 for the Empire, 369 00:20:25,424 --> 00:20:27,302 but they also consume. 370 00:20:27,326 --> 00:20:28,970 They provide markets. 371 00:20:28,994 --> 00:20:33,041 They purchase goods that are manufactured in Britain. 372 00:20:33,065 --> 00:20:36,344 It's the fastest-growing part of the British economy, 373 00:20:36,368 --> 00:20:38,947 is the trades with North America. 374 00:20:38,971 --> 00:20:42,350 Man: The British Empire expanded enormously 375 00:20:42,374 --> 00:20:45,486 as a result of the Seven Years' War. 376 00:20:45,510 --> 00:20:47,655 There's real anxiety that unless this empire 377 00:20:47,679 --> 00:20:50,425 is tied together more tightly, 378 00:20:50,449 --> 00:20:53,528 by central control and direction, 379 00:20:53,552 --> 00:20:56,231 it will start to fragment, in much the same way as the 380 00:20:56,255 --> 00:20:59,534 Roman Empire was assumed to have collapsed. 381 00:20:59,558 --> 00:21:02,003 Narrator: For more than 150 years, 382 00:21:02,027 --> 00:21:05,440 London had treated its North American colonies 383 00:21:05,464 --> 00:21:08,109 with what one British politician would call 384 00:21:08,133 --> 00:21:10,612 "salutary neglect." 385 00:21:10,636 --> 00:21:14,282 Each colony was part of the King's dominions, 386 00:21:14,306 --> 00:21:16,684 but in most of them, legislatures, 387 00:21:16,708 --> 00:21:19,354 elected by propertied White men, 388 00:21:19,378 --> 00:21:21,723 made laws, levied taxes, 389 00:21:21,747 --> 00:21:25,593 and decided how they'd be spent. 390 00:21:25,617 --> 00:21:30,465 Slavery was legal everywhere, from New Hampshire to Georgia. 391 00:21:30,489 --> 00:21:32,934 Many of the Black people living in the colonies 392 00:21:32,958 --> 00:21:36,371 had been born there or in the Caribbean. 393 00:21:36,395 --> 00:21:39,741 But tens of thousands were from West Africa... 394 00:21:39,765 --> 00:21:44,579 Captured from what is now Senegal, Gambia, and Gabon; 395 00:21:44,603 --> 00:21:48,049 Angola, Congo, and the Ivory Coast; 396 00:21:48,073 --> 00:21:50,976 Nigeria, Cameroon, and Ghana. 397 00:21:52,144 --> 00:21:54,789 Christopher Brown: I think it's easy to underestimate 398 00:21:54,813 --> 00:22:00,752 the sheer diversity and variety, um, in the colonies. 399 00:22:01,753 --> 00:22:04,332 Close to the majority of the population 400 00:22:04,356 --> 00:22:06,625 in the southern colonies are African. 401 00:22:07,759 --> 00:22:10,204 There are French Huguenots; there are Germans. 402 00:22:10,228 --> 00:22:12,531 There's Scots. There's Scots-Irish. 403 00:22:13,632 --> 00:22:16,177 There are Native people, not just on the frontiers, 404 00:22:16,201 --> 00:22:20,505 but actually living in the heart of the 13 colonies. 405 00:22:21,840 --> 00:22:26,054 Man: Most of the population of North America is Indigenous. 406 00:22:26,078 --> 00:22:27,889 70%, 80% of the continent is still controlled 407 00:22:27,913 --> 00:22:30,024 by Indigenous people, politically, 408 00:22:30,048 --> 00:22:32,694 economically, and militarily. 409 00:22:32,718 --> 00:22:35,196 It's not a separate place, it's not this timeless space 410 00:22:35,220 --> 00:22:37,632 where Native people are sort of existing in harmony 411 00:22:37,656 --> 00:22:39,434 with nature and that they have no interest 412 00:22:39,458 --> 00:22:41,202 in the outside world. 413 00:22:41,226 --> 00:22:42,537 Native people want the good stuff 414 00:22:42,561 --> 00:22:44,605 that Europeans are bringing. 415 00:22:44,629 --> 00:22:46,207 Europeans want the wealth 416 00:22:46,231 --> 00:22:48,109 that they can get from Native people. 417 00:22:48,133 --> 00:22:51,779 Native powers are as important to the global market economy 418 00:22:51,803 --> 00:22:55,741 as a place like Virginia or a place like New York. 419 00:22:57,776 --> 00:22:59,921 Voice: If there is a country in the world 420 00:22:59,945 --> 00:23:02,790 where concord, according to common calculation, 421 00:23:02,814 --> 00:23:06,461 would be least expected, it is America. 422 00:23:06,485 --> 00:23:11,132 Made up as it is of people from different nations, 423 00:23:11,156 --> 00:23:12,834 speaking different languages, 424 00:23:12,858 --> 00:23:15,870 and more different in their modes of worship, 425 00:23:15,894 --> 00:23:18,473 it would appear that the union of such a people 426 00:23:18,497 --> 00:23:19,765 was impracticable. 427 00:23:21,032 --> 00:23:22,501 Thomas Paine. 428 00:23:23,869 --> 00:23:27,115 Narrator: In Britain, 2% of the population... 429 00:23:27,139 --> 00:23:29,150 Lords and lesser gentry... 430 00:23:29,174 --> 00:23:31,652 Owned 2/3 of all the land, 431 00:23:31,676 --> 00:23:34,055 and most people had for centuries 432 00:23:34,079 --> 00:23:36,190 lived "dependent" lives, 433 00:23:36,214 --> 00:23:37,825 either as tenant farmers, 434 00:23:37,849 --> 00:23:41,028 working land belonging to aristocrats, 435 00:23:41,052 --> 00:23:44,990 or as landless laborers working for an employer. 436 00:23:46,858 --> 00:23:49,871 For most free White men in the colonies, 437 00:23:49,895 --> 00:23:53,064 North America was a land of opportunity. 438 00:23:54,299 --> 00:23:57,311 Taylor: The people who are coming from Northern Britain, 439 00:23:57,335 --> 00:23:59,914 as well as a lot of Scots-Irish, 440 00:23:59,938 --> 00:24:02,550 often are bringing the resentments that they'd been 441 00:24:02,574 --> 00:24:04,952 pushed off their lands by landlords. 442 00:24:04,976 --> 00:24:06,854 And so, there's a great sensitivity 443 00:24:06,878 --> 00:24:10,725 about any kind of financial exaction 444 00:24:10,749 --> 00:24:13,327 that could be a slippery slope 445 00:24:13,351 --> 00:24:15,696 leading to the kinds of dependence 446 00:24:15,720 --> 00:24:17,965 that they had escaped from. 447 00:24:17,989 --> 00:24:21,402 Narrator: The colonies were overwhelmingly agricultural. 448 00:24:21,426 --> 00:24:23,438 Just 3 seaport towns... 449 00:24:23,462 --> 00:24:26,040 Philadelphia, Boston, and New York... 450 00:24:26,064 --> 00:24:29,010 Were home to more than 10,000 people. 451 00:24:29,034 --> 00:24:32,580 And 2 out of 3 farmers were independent, 452 00:24:32,604 --> 00:24:34,906 proud owners of their land. 453 00:24:35,774 --> 00:24:37,952 Others were indentured servants, 454 00:24:37,976 --> 00:24:40,855 hoping that once they fulfilled their contract, 455 00:24:40,879 --> 00:24:43,882 that they, too, could prosper on their own. 456 00:24:44,950 --> 00:24:46,727 Woman: For Americans, land and liberty 457 00:24:46,751 --> 00:24:49,564 are completely intertwined. 458 00:24:49,588 --> 00:24:54,068 White Americans see their liberty as being founded 459 00:24:54,092 --> 00:24:57,772 on not being a peasant on somebody's else's land. 460 00:24:57,796 --> 00:25:01,042 Preserving, promoting that liberty for White Americans, 461 00:25:01,066 --> 00:25:04,278 to them, means taking Native land. 462 00:25:04,302 --> 00:25:06,914 There is no other answer. 463 00:25:06,938 --> 00:25:10,818 Calloway: American colonists had been looking forward 464 00:25:10,842 --> 00:25:14,655 to the glorious day when the French and their Indian allies 465 00:25:14,679 --> 00:25:16,557 would be defeated, 466 00:25:16,581 --> 00:25:19,427 and British subjects would 467 00:25:19,451 --> 00:25:22,163 sweep over the Appalachian Mountains, 468 00:25:22,187 --> 00:25:24,699 looking for land. 469 00:25:24,723 --> 00:25:27,335 Woman: Maps at the time show the colonies 470 00:25:27,359 --> 00:25:31,772 extending well into the interior. 471 00:25:31,796 --> 00:25:34,976 We often see maps as benign, 472 00:25:35,000 --> 00:25:38,103 as descriptive, as without argument. 473 00:25:39,104 --> 00:25:41,849 But they're aspirational, in many ways. 474 00:25:41,873 --> 00:25:44,709 They're an argument rather than a conclusion. 475 00:25:45,777 --> 00:25:47,722 DuVal: Hundreds of Native nations 476 00:25:47,746 --> 00:25:51,616 still are completely intact, completely independent. 477 00:25:52,784 --> 00:25:54,762 In the north, is the powerful Haudenosaunee League, 478 00:25:54,786 --> 00:25:59,190 the Six Nations, including the Mohawks and the Senecas. 479 00:26:00,592 --> 00:26:03,237 To their south are the Shawnees, 480 00:26:03,261 --> 00:26:07,842 who have retaken the Ohio Valley in recent years 481 00:26:07,866 --> 00:26:10,044 and formed a huge confederacy 482 00:26:10,068 --> 00:26:12,914 that stretches from the Delawares, or the Lenapes, 483 00:26:12,938 --> 00:26:16,150 in the east to the powerful nations, 484 00:26:16,174 --> 00:26:19,110 including the Anishinaabe of the Great Lakes. 485 00:26:21,046 --> 00:26:25,059 South of there are the Chickasaws, the Cherokees, 486 00:26:25,083 --> 00:26:29,163 the Choctaws, the Creek Confederacy, or the Muscogees, 487 00:26:29,187 --> 00:26:33,358 and hundreds of other smaller nations. 488 00:26:34,693 --> 00:26:37,905 These are nations that fight against each other, 489 00:26:37,929 --> 00:26:41,475 but also that increasingly, by the late 18th century, 490 00:26:41,499 --> 00:26:44,245 are making some larger confederacies, 491 00:26:44,269 --> 00:26:46,781 in part to try to fight against settlers 492 00:26:46,805 --> 00:26:49,608 who have been moving onto their land in recent years. 493 00:26:50,942 --> 00:26:52,620 [Thunder] 494 00:26:52,644 --> 00:26:55,723 Narrator: Beginning in the spring of 1763, 495 00:26:55,747 --> 00:26:58,326 in what was called Pontiac's War, 496 00:26:58,350 --> 00:27:01,529 warriors from at least a dozen Native nations 497 00:27:01,553 --> 00:27:05,433 overran many of the British forts along the Great Lakes 498 00:27:05,457 --> 00:27:07,535 and in the Ohio Valley 499 00:27:07,559 --> 00:27:09,136 and raided settlements, 500 00:27:09,160 --> 00:27:12,907 killing or capturing 2,000 colonists 501 00:27:12,931 --> 00:27:16,067 and driving out some 4,000 more. 502 00:27:17,002 --> 00:27:19,747 Many colonists responded by killing 503 00:27:19,771 --> 00:27:21,940 any Indian they encountered. 504 00:27:23,108 --> 00:27:25,119 Calloway: The Brits look at this situation and say, 505 00:27:25,143 --> 00:27:28,789 "OK, we've just inherited all of this empire. 506 00:27:28,813 --> 00:27:31,525 "How on earth are we gonna stop this kind of thing 507 00:27:31,549 --> 00:27:34,629 happening again and again, and again?" 508 00:27:34,653 --> 00:27:35,963 Narrator: The British concluded 509 00:27:35,987 --> 00:27:38,699 that Native Americans and colonists 510 00:27:38,723 --> 00:27:42,370 needed to be separated, at least for a time, 511 00:27:42,394 --> 00:27:47,174 and so, in 1763, a Royal Proclamation declared 512 00:27:47,198 --> 00:27:50,044 all the territory beyond the Appalachians 513 00:27:50,068 --> 00:27:53,905 off-limits to settlement or speculation. 514 00:27:55,640 --> 00:27:57,718 Man: That prohibits White settlers 515 00:27:57,742 --> 00:28:00,054 from moving into these interior worlds, 516 00:28:00,078 --> 00:28:02,590 the same interior worlds that many colonists 517 00:28:02,614 --> 00:28:04,659 felt like they had just fought for. 518 00:28:04,683 --> 00:28:08,129 And many settlers become outraged 519 00:28:08,153 --> 00:28:11,032 that, uh, the British Crown has any form 520 00:28:11,056 --> 00:28:15,369 of imperial, um, recognition of these Indigenous populations. 521 00:28:15,393 --> 00:28:19,807 A kind of racial animus has formed in the aftermath 522 00:28:19,831 --> 00:28:22,943 of the Seven Years' War, in which many British settlers 523 00:28:22,967 --> 00:28:26,047 come to resent all Indians. 524 00:28:26,071 --> 00:28:27,715 Christopher Brown: It's not because the British Government 525 00:28:27,739 --> 00:28:29,917 is especially concerned about Native Americans. 526 00:28:29,941 --> 00:28:33,120 It's because they don't want Americans spreading out, 527 00:28:33,144 --> 00:28:36,023 where they'll be even more difficult to control. 528 00:28:36,047 --> 00:28:39,827 Part of British policy is 529 00:28:39,851 --> 00:28:43,164 British settlers will stay near the coast. 530 00:28:43,188 --> 00:28:46,801 And part of the colonists' answer is, 531 00:28:46,825 --> 00:28:49,160 "No. Sorry, we're not doing that." 532 00:28:50,662 --> 00:28:52,673 Narrator: London hoped the Proclamation 533 00:28:52,697 --> 00:28:54,809 would pacify the frontier. 534 00:28:54,833 --> 00:28:57,978 Instead, it infuriated those would-be settlers 535 00:28:58,002 --> 00:28:59,980 poised to move west 536 00:29:00,004 --> 00:29:02,616 and frustrated land speculators 537 00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:05,076 who saw fortunes to be made there. 538 00:29:06,177 --> 00:29:09,023 Calloway: And that is a huge slap in the face 539 00:29:09,047 --> 00:29:13,894 and a blow to those elite colonial Americans 540 00:29:13,918 --> 00:29:17,431 who've been indulging in this investment. 541 00:29:17,455 --> 00:29:19,133 Who are these people? 542 00:29:19,157 --> 00:29:23,504 Household names: Benjamin Franklin, 543 00:29:23,528 --> 00:29:27,708 Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, 544 00:29:27,732 --> 00:29:29,200 George Washington. 545 00:29:32,003 --> 00:29:34,115 Narrator: After abandoning his dream of serving 546 00:29:34,139 --> 00:29:36,283 as an officer in the British Army, 547 00:29:36,307 --> 00:29:40,254 George Washington had married an enormously wealthy widow, 548 00:29:40,278 --> 00:29:44,859 Martha Dandridge Custis, and had made himself still wealthier 549 00:29:44,883 --> 00:29:48,095 speculating in western lands. 550 00:29:48,119 --> 00:29:50,054 He saw no reason to stop. 551 00:29:50,922 --> 00:29:53,167 The law was only a temporary measure 552 00:29:53,191 --> 00:29:56,504 to "quiet the minds of the Indians," he said, 553 00:29:56,528 --> 00:30:00,574 and he directed his land agent to defy the Proclamation 554 00:30:00,598 --> 00:30:04,578 and "secure [for him] some of the most valuable Lands" 555 00:30:04,602 --> 00:30:06,504 beyond the Appalachians. 556 00:30:07,739 --> 00:30:11,085 Man: I think the American Revolution was all about land. 557 00:30:11,109 --> 00:30:13,454 It's easy to make the political kinds of arguments, 558 00:30:13,478 --> 00:30:16,090 but I think underpinning all of that was 559 00:30:16,114 --> 00:30:18,259 the possibility of expansion, 560 00:30:18,283 --> 00:30:21,119 um, was the conflict with Indian people. 561 00:30:22,020 --> 00:30:24,198 Narrator: Now to enforce the hated law 562 00:30:24,222 --> 00:30:26,300 and to police the frontier, 563 00:30:26,324 --> 00:30:28,469 the British government resolved to station 564 00:30:28,493 --> 00:30:32,540 an army of 10,000 men in North America. 565 00:30:32,564 --> 00:30:34,341 The cost would be enormous... 566 00:30:34,365 --> 00:30:39,046 Some 360,000 British pounds a year. 567 00:30:39,070 --> 00:30:42,316 London did not have the money. 568 00:30:42,340 --> 00:30:47,021 Years of war on 4 continents had doubled the national debt. 569 00:30:47,045 --> 00:30:50,157 Britain was in the midst of a postwar depression, 570 00:30:50,181 --> 00:30:53,093 and British consumers were already burdened 571 00:30:53,117 --> 00:30:55,729 with higher taxes than were the subjects 572 00:30:55,753 --> 00:30:58,365 of any other European monarch. 573 00:30:58,389 --> 00:31:00,601 The average British subject paid 574 00:31:00,625 --> 00:31:03,871 26 shillings a year in taxes; 575 00:31:03,895 --> 00:31:07,775 the average New Englander paid just one. 576 00:31:07,799 --> 00:31:10,077 So, some bright spark has the idea, 577 00:31:10,101 --> 00:31:12,546 "Well, let's tax the American colonists." Right? 578 00:31:12,570 --> 00:31:15,216 They should pay their share because, after all, 579 00:31:15,240 --> 00:31:19,653 we fought the war for them, and this is to defend them. 580 00:31:19,677 --> 00:31:24,191 Narrator: In 1764, the Prime Minister, George Grenville, 581 00:31:24,215 --> 00:31:27,828 proposed a series of 3 parliamentary statutes, 582 00:31:27,852 --> 00:31:29,964 all meant to make the colonies 583 00:31:29,988 --> 00:31:32,223 help pay for their own defense. 584 00:31:33,258 --> 00:31:35,970 The Currency Act, which forbade the colonists 585 00:31:35,994 --> 00:31:38,038 from issuing their own money, 586 00:31:38,062 --> 00:31:41,175 angered the tobacco-growing gentry of Virginia, 587 00:31:41,199 --> 00:31:43,401 who were especially hard-hit. 588 00:31:44,669 --> 00:31:49,016 The Sugar Act imposed taxes on imports from the Caribbean, 589 00:31:49,040 --> 00:31:53,220 and to enforce it, the British Navy dispatched 44 ships 590 00:31:53,244 --> 00:31:56,891 to stop smuggling, enraging New Englanders, 591 00:31:56,915 --> 00:31:59,951 whose economy had long profited from it. 592 00:32:01,019 --> 00:32:04,265 The rest of the colonies were largely unaffected. 593 00:32:04,289 --> 00:32:07,868 London assumed Americans were too disunited, 594 00:32:07,892 --> 00:32:10,070 too divided by self-interest, 595 00:32:10,094 --> 00:32:13,431 to ever be able to present a united front. 596 00:32:14,599 --> 00:32:18,946 But now, Grenville introduced a third tax... 597 00:32:18,970 --> 00:32:20,514 The Stamp Act. 598 00:32:20,538 --> 00:32:24,609 It would affect nearly every colonist in every colony. 599 00:32:25,743 --> 00:32:29,657 No one would be able to obtain a license or a loan, 600 00:32:29,681 --> 00:32:32,092 transfer land or draft a will, 601 00:32:32,116 --> 00:32:35,262 earn a diploma, purchase a newspaper, 602 00:32:35,286 --> 00:32:37,665 or even buy a deck of cards 603 00:32:37,689 --> 00:32:42,102 unless it was printed or written on English-made paper 604 00:32:42,126 --> 00:32:45,906 that bore a stamp embossed by the Royal Treasury, 605 00:32:45,930 --> 00:32:48,266 for which they would have to pay. 606 00:32:49,667 --> 00:32:53,614 For the very first time, Parliament planned to tax 607 00:32:53,638 --> 00:32:56,483 the 13 colonies directly. 608 00:32:56,507 --> 00:32:59,553 The Stamp Act was scheduled to go into effect 609 00:32:59,577 --> 00:33:02,680 on November 1, 1765. 610 00:33:04,015 --> 00:33:07,261 Taylor: Colonists said, "No taxation without representation." 611 00:33:07,285 --> 00:33:09,830 What they meant was, no taxation except by 612 00:33:09,854 --> 00:33:14,101 our elected Legislature, here in our particular colony. 613 00:33:14,125 --> 00:33:18,138 These taxes were very small, but the fear was, 614 00:33:18,162 --> 00:33:20,007 "If we give into this precedent, 615 00:33:20,031 --> 00:33:22,509 "if we pay the small Stamp Tax now, 616 00:33:22,533 --> 00:33:24,778 what will they do in the future?" 617 00:33:24,802 --> 00:33:26,180 [Gavel banging] 618 00:33:26,204 --> 00:33:28,282 Narrator: In the Virginia House of Burgesses, 619 00:33:28,306 --> 00:33:31,852 Patrick Henry introduced a series of resolutions 620 00:33:31,876 --> 00:33:35,622 asserting that only the General Assembly of that colony 621 00:33:35,646 --> 00:33:39,584 had the "right and power to lay taxes" on its people. 622 00:33:40,785 --> 00:33:44,331 Henry went on to declare that just as Julius Caesar 623 00:33:44,355 --> 00:33:46,500 had his assassin Brutus, 624 00:33:46,524 --> 00:33:50,771 George III should understand that some American resister 625 00:33:50,795 --> 00:33:54,441 was sure "to stand up in favor of his country." 626 00:33:54,465 --> 00:33:56,777 When some delegates shouted "Treason!" 627 00:33:56,801 --> 00:34:00,114 others who were present remembered he responded, 628 00:34:00,138 --> 00:34:03,083 "If this be treason, make the most of it!" 629 00:34:03,107 --> 00:34:05,052 [Gavel banging rapidly] 630 00:34:05,076 --> 00:34:08,422 In Boston, 42-year-old Samuel Adams 631 00:34:08,446 --> 00:34:10,424 helped rally the opposition 632 00:34:10,448 --> 00:34:13,427 against implementation of the Stamp Act. 633 00:34:13,451 --> 00:34:17,531 A failure as a brewer and as a collector of local taxes, 634 00:34:17,555 --> 00:34:21,335 Adams was a master of propaganda. 635 00:34:21,359 --> 00:34:23,337 His mission, he once explained, 636 00:34:23,361 --> 00:34:26,907 was to "keep the attention of [my] fellow-citizens 637 00:34:26,931 --> 00:34:29,067 awake to their grievances." 638 00:34:29,934 --> 00:34:31,612 Voice: If our trade may be taxed, 639 00:34:31,636 --> 00:34:33,047 why not our lands? 640 00:34:33,071 --> 00:34:34,515 Why not the produce of our lands 641 00:34:34,539 --> 00:34:37,985 and everything we possess or make use of? 642 00:34:38,009 --> 00:34:40,654 If taxes are laid upon us in any shape 643 00:34:40,678 --> 00:34:42,990 without our having a legal representation 644 00:34:43,014 --> 00:34:44,691 where they are paid, 645 00:34:44,715 --> 00:34:47,961 are we not reduced from the character of free subjects 646 00:34:47,985 --> 00:34:51,255 to the miserable state of tributary slaves? [Samuel Adams] 647 00:34:52,523 --> 00:34:55,069 Woman: In terms of masters of communication, 648 00:34:55,093 --> 00:34:57,771 Samuel Adams was really up there. 649 00:34:57,795 --> 00:35:01,075 He has an amazing ability to translate a concept 650 00:35:01,099 --> 00:35:03,644 into easily digested words. 651 00:35:03,668 --> 00:35:07,781 And, therefore, to make, um, what seem... what could seem 652 00:35:07,805 --> 00:35:09,716 like fairly abstract ideas 653 00:35:09,740 --> 00:35:13,520 very vital and very urgent, and he's tireless. 654 00:35:13,544 --> 00:35:16,490 So, he's able to produce page after page after page, 655 00:35:16,514 --> 00:35:19,817 new offenses, new crimes, new injustices. 656 00:35:21,719 --> 00:35:24,098 Narrator: Pamphleteers took up the cause, 657 00:35:24,122 --> 00:35:27,367 declaring the Stamp Act illegitimate. 658 00:35:27,391 --> 00:35:30,637 Most of the colonies' 24 weekly newspapers... 659 00:35:30,661 --> 00:35:35,142 The businesses that would be hit hardest... followed suit. 660 00:35:35,166 --> 00:35:38,011 Those that didn't faced being shut down 661 00:35:38,035 --> 00:35:40,438 by their journeymen and apprentices. 662 00:35:42,306 --> 00:35:44,451 Taylor: Newspapers are very important. 663 00:35:44,475 --> 00:35:49,690 The colonial public is more literate than any other people 664 00:35:49,714 --> 00:35:52,359 in the world outside of Scandinavia. 665 00:35:52,383 --> 00:35:55,696 There's also word of mouth, conversation, 666 00:35:55,720 --> 00:35:58,132 absolutely essential. 667 00:35:58,156 --> 00:36:00,400 Man: It became very common to discuss 668 00:36:00,424 --> 00:36:03,570 how you govern people and how people are free. 669 00:36:03,594 --> 00:36:08,733 These ideas had filtered into the general population. 670 00:36:10,401 --> 00:36:14,748 Narrator: Those ideas now led to protests in the streets. 671 00:36:14,772 --> 00:36:19,720 In Boston, in August of 1765, a crowd formed... 672 00:36:19,744 --> 00:36:22,556 Made up of men and a handful of women, 673 00:36:22,580 --> 00:36:25,526 free Blacks and runaway slaves, 674 00:36:25,550 --> 00:36:29,696 poorly paid or unemployed workers who resented the rich, 675 00:36:29,720 --> 00:36:32,366 and apprentices in their off-hours, 676 00:36:32,390 --> 00:36:34,225 just looking for trouble. 677 00:36:35,326 --> 00:36:37,538 They hanged in effigy the local man 678 00:36:37,562 --> 00:36:40,807 designated to become distributor of stamps 679 00:36:40,831 --> 00:36:44,344 and went on to invade the home of the lieutenant governor, 680 00:36:44,368 --> 00:36:46,747 destroying everything in sight 681 00:36:46,771 --> 00:36:49,683 and carrying off all of his furniture 682 00:36:49,707 --> 00:36:52,777 and 900 British pounds in cash. 683 00:36:54,712 --> 00:36:57,724 In Newport, Rhode Island, another mob surrounded 684 00:36:57,748 --> 00:37:00,827 the stamp distributor, forced him to resign, 685 00:37:00,851 --> 00:37:05,256 and to lead them in chants of "Property and Liberty." 686 00:37:06,624 --> 00:37:11,038 In Charleston, South Carolina, White anti-Stamp Act protestors 687 00:37:11,062 --> 00:37:14,608 marched through the streets chanting, "Liberty!" 688 00:37:14,632 --> 00:37:18,579 But when enslaved South Carolinians echoed their cries, 689 00:37:18,603 --> 00:37:21,315 frightened enslavers called out the militia 690 00:37:21,339 --> 00:37:23,241 to patrol the street. 691 00:37:24,475 --> 00:37:27,521 The Maryland appointee was driven from Annapolis 692 00:37:27,545 --> 00:37:29,947 with only the clothes on his back. 693 00:37:31,749 --> 00:37:35,529 By the time the Stamp Act was supposed to go into effect, 694 00:37:35,553 --> 00:37:39,933 none of the 13 colonies had an official in place 695 00:37:39,957 --> 00:37:41,559 willing to enforce it. 696 00:37:42,827 --> 00:37:44,805 Schiff: Part of our Revolution I think we have 697 00:37:44,829 --> 00:37:46,707 largely sanitized. 698 00:37:46,731 --> 00:37:50,577 I think we've forgotten much of the street warfare, 699 00:37:50,601 --> 00:37:54,648 of the anarchy, of the provocations that took place. 700 00:37:54,672 --> 00:37:58,285 Voice: A black cloud seems to hang over us. 701 00:37:58,309 --> 00:38:00,120 It appears to me that there will be an end 702 00:38:00,144 --> 00:38:06,293 to all government here, for the people are all running mad. 703 00:38:06,317 --> 00:38:07,852 James Parker. 704 00:38:09,587 --> 00:38:11,698 Narrator: When a crowd surrounded the British Army 705 00:38:11,722 --> 00:38:13,867 headquarters in New York City, 706 00:38:13,891 --> 00:38:18,038 General Thomas Gage made sure his men held their fire, 707 00:38:18,062 --> 00:38:22,042 for fear, he said, that 50,000 angry colonists 708 00:38:22,066 --> 00:38:26,003 would swarm into the city and start a civil war. 709 00:38:27,471 --> 00:38:29,349 General Gage was in charge of 710 00:38:29,373 --> 00:38:32,119 all British soldiers in North America. 711 00:38:32,143 --> 00:38:36,023 He had been sent to maintain peace on the frontier. 712 00:38:36,047 --> 00:38:40,494 Instead, he had found himself at loggerheads with colonists 713 00:38:40,518 --> 00:38:43,397 convinced they were being denied their rights 714 00:38:43,421 --> 00:38:45,499 as Englishmen. 715 00:38:45,523 --> 00:38:47,992 Gage understood what was happening. 716 00:38:48,759 --> 00:38:51,104 Voice: The spirit of democracy 717 00:38:51,128 --> 00:38:53,173 is strong amongst them. 718 00:38:53,197 --> 00:38:56,743 The question is not of the inexpediency of the Stamp Act 719 00:38:56,767 --> 00:38:59,880 or the inability of the colonies to pay the tax, 720 00:38:59,904 --> 00:39:03,417 but that it is contrary to their rights and not subject 721 00:39:03,441 --> 00:39:05,643 to the legislative power of Great Britain. [Gage] 722 00:39:06,777 --> 00:39:09,489 Conway: Thomas Gage was married to an American. 723 00:39:09,513 --> 00:39:12,159 He owned land in the colonies. 724 00:39:12,183 --> 00:39:13,427 He was, in many ways, 725 00:39:13,451 --> 00:39:15,796 embedded within colonial society. 726 00:39:15,820 --> 00:39:19,299 So, he was particularly reluctant, I think, 727 00:39:19,323 --> 00:39:21,092 to engage in conflict. 728 00:39:22,293 --> 00:39:24,604 Taylor: In the colonial world and the European world, 729 00:39:24,628 --> 00:39:27,174 democracy had a bad name. 730 00:39:27,198 --> 00:39:30,544 It was a synonym for "anarchy." 731 00:39:30,568 --> 00:39:32,913 It had a reputation as being turbulent, 732 00:39:32,937 --> 00:39:36,650 as a system exploited by 733 00:39:36,674 --> 00:39:39,820 ruthless politicians called "demagogues"... 734 00:39:39,844 --> 00:39:44,224 People who pandered to the passions of common people 735 00:39:44,248 --> 00:39:48,428 in order to whip them up and get them to do passionate things, 736 00:39:48,452 --> 00:39:50,797 and to get government to serve them 737 00:39:50,821 --> 00:39:56,670 and to prey upon the property of more wealthy people. 738 00:39:56,694 --> 00:39:59,573 So, democracy is not the aspiration 739 00:39:59,597 --> 00:40:01,575 that creates the Revolution. 740 00:40:01,599 --> 00:40:04,277 The Revolution creates the conditions for people 741 00:40:04,301 --> 00:40:06,504 to aspire to have a democracy. 742 00:40:07,638 --> 00:40:09,816 Narrator: Meanwhile, hundreds of merchants 743 00:40:09,840 --> 00:40:12,786 in New York, Boston, and Philadelphia 744 00:40:12,810 --> 00:40:15,222 pledged to boycott British goods 745 00:40:15,246 --> 00:40:17,815 until the Stamp Act was repealed. 746 00:40:19,116 --> 00:40:22,763 To keep up the opposition, some lawyers, merchants, 747 00:40:22,787 --> 00:40:26,566 and skilled craftsmen established an association, 748 00:40:26,590 --> 00:40:30,203 the Sons of Liberty, and soon had chapters 749 00:40:30,227 --> 00:40:34,908 from Portsmouth, New Hampshire to Charleston, South Carolina 750 00:40:34,932 --> 00:40:36,066 working together. 751 00:40:37,568 --> 00:40:40,280 Voice: The colonies until now were ever at variance 752 00:40:40,304 --> 00:40:42,783 and foolishly jealous of each other; 753 00:40:42,807 --> 00:40:44,885 they are now united for their common defense 754 00:40:44,909 --> 00:40:47,721 against what they believe to be oppression; 755 00:40:47,745 --> 00:40:49,523 nor will they soon forget the weight 756 00:40:49,547 --> 00:40:52,526 which this close union gives them. 757 00:40:52,550 --> 00:40:54,018 Dr. Joseph Warren. 758 00:40:55,619 --> 00:40:57,364 Narrator: The colonies now accounted for 759 00:40:57,388 --> 00:40:59,533 1/3 of Britain's trade. 760 00:40:59,557 --> 00:41:01,802 With the boycott, some manufacturers 761 00:41:01,826 --> 00:41:04,871 were forced to close their doors. 762 00:41:04,895 --> 00:41:07,841 Thousands of workers lost their jobs. 763 00:41:07,865 --> 00:41:12,712 The town councils of 27 English trading and manufacturing towns 764 00:41:12,736 --> 00:41:14,738 pleaded for repeal. 765 00:41:16,040 --> 00:41:20,153 By mid-February 1766, the British cabinet 766 00:41:20,177 --> 00:41:23,223 was looking for a way out of the impasse. 767 00:41:23,247 --> 00:41:26,827 It asked Benjamin Franklin, then living in London 768 00:41:26,851 --> 00:41:29,062 as a lobbyist for Pennsylvania, 769 00:41:29,086 --> 00:41:31,565 to appear before the House of Commons, 770 00:41:31,589 --> 00:41:34,267 hoping that hearing from the best-known American 771 00:41:34,291 --> 00:41:36,837 on Earth would help. 772 00:41:36,861 --> 00:41:41,975 Franklin patiently answered 174 questions. 773 00:41:41,999 --> 00:41:45,345 What had been the colonists' attitude toward Great Britain 774 00:41:45,369 --> 00:41:48,248 before the Stamp Act was enacted? 775 00:41:48,272 --> 00:41:49,816 Voice: The best in the world. 776 00:41:49,840 --> 00:41:51,885 They had not only a respect 777 00:41:51,909 --> 00:41:54,654 but an affection for Great Britain; 778 00:41:54,678 --> 00:41:57,691 for its laws, its customs, its manners, 779 00:41:57,715 --> 00:41:59,726 and even a fondness for its fashions, 780 00:41:59,750 --> 00:42:01,919 which greatly increased the commerce. [Franklin] 781 00:42:03,354 --> 00:42:07,200 Narrator: "Would the colonies now accept a compromise?" he was asked. 782 00:42:07,224 --> 00:42:11,438 "No," he answered. "It was a matter of principle." 783 00:42:11,462 --> 00:42:16,643 "Might a military force compel the colonists to pay the tax?" 784 00:42:16,667 --> 00:42:18,912 "No," Franklin said. 785 00:42:18,936 --> 00:42:20,614 Voice: Suppose a military force 786 00:42:20,638 --> 00:42:22,549 is sent into America. 787 00:42:22,573 --> 00:42:24,718 They will find nobody in arms. 788 00:42:24,742 --> 00:42:26,820 What are they then to do? 789 00:42:26,844 --> 00:42:29,389 They cannot force a man to take stamps 790 00:42:29,413 --> 00:42:31,424 who chooses to do without them. 791 00:42:31,448 --> 00:42:34,094 They will not find a rebellion. 792 00:42:34,118 --> 00:42:36,763 They may indeed make one. [Franklin] 793 00:42:36,787 --> 00:42:38,865 ["Rule Britannia" playing] 794 00:42:38,889 --> 00:42:41,368 Narrator: 8 days after Franklin's testimony, 795 00:42:41,392 --> 00:42:45,605 the House of Commons voted to repeal the Stamp Act. 796 00:42:45,629 --> 00:42:48,608 British workers would return to their factories. 797 00:42:48,632 --> 00:42:52,069 Merchant vessels set sail again for the colonies. 798 00:42:53,237 --> 00:42:55,982 When the news reached America in April, 799 00:42:56,006 --> 00:42:58,218 the Sons of Liberty disbanded; 800 00:42:58,242 --> 00:43:02,889 their rights as Englishmen seemed to have been restored. 801 00:43:02,913 --> 00:43:06,092 New York commissioned a statue of King George, 802 00:43:06,116 --> 00:43:10,497 wearing a Roman toga, to be placed on the Bowling Green 803 00:43:10,521 --> 00:43:12,356 at the tip of Manhattan. 804 00:43:14,191 --> 00:43:19,072 But beginning in the summer of 1767, the British government, 805 00:43:19,096 --> 00:43:21,274 still struggling with war debt, 806 00:43:21,298 --> 00:43:26,713 would win passage of 5 new laws... the Townshend Acts. 807 00:43:26,737 --> 00:43:30,850 One of them especially angered colonists. 808 00:43:30,874 --> 00:43:36,022 It imposed new taxes on 4 items manufactured in England... 809 00:43:36,046 --> 00:43:40,527 Glass, lead, paper, and painter's colors... 810 00:43:40,551 --> 00:43:44,197 And on a fifth item, tea, grown in China 811 00:43:44,221 --> 00:43:48,868 but re-exported from Britain and loved by the colonists, 812 00:43:48,892 --> 00:43:51,195 rich and poor alike. 813 00:43:52,863 --> 00:43:55,442 Newspaper editors and pamphleteers 814 00:43:55,466 --> 00:43:57,811 denounced the new taxes. 815 00:43:57,835 --> 00:44:00,780 A revived and more militant Sons of Liberty 816 00:44:00,804 --> 00:44:04,074 called for a new boycott of British goods. 817 00:44:05,242 --> 00:44:08,321 Women, who normally played a subordinate role 818 00:44:08,345 --> 00:44:12,225 in public life and had almost no legal rights, 819 00:44:12,249 --> 00:44:15,328 joined the resistance by the thousands 820 00:44:15,352 --> 00:44:17,421 as "Daughters of Liberty." 821 00:44:18,756 --> 00:44:21,134 Woman: Crisis changes people. 822 00:44:21,158 --> 00:44:23,870 And it gave women different ideas 823 00:44:23,894 --> 00:44:25,763 about what they should be doing. 824 00:44:26,997 --> 00:44:29,909 DuVal: Women were the main consumers in colonial society 825 00:44:29,933 --> 00:44:34,204 and they were the ones who made sure the boycotts worked. 826 00:44:35,406 --> 00:44:36,916 Women stopped drinking tea. 827 00:44:36,940 --> 00:44:39,119 Women started making their own fabric. 828 00:44:39,143 --> 00:44:41,087 Women started making toys for their children. 829 00:44:41,111 --> 00:44:44,424 And they didn't just stop buying British things 830 00:44:44,448 --> 00:44:48,862 and start making their own things; they publicized it. 831 00:44:48,886 --> 00:44:52,132 Taylor: One of the key forms of political theater 832 00:44:52,156 --> 00:44:55,835 during the Resistance Movement would be for a local minister 833 00:44:55,859 --> 00:44:57,904 to invite the women of the community 834 00:44:57,928 --> 00:44:59,739 to come down to the church 835 00:44:59,763 --> 00:45:03,343 and to spend the day spinning and weaving cloth. 836 00:45:03,367 --> 00:45:05,812 And it would be a competition to see which community 837 00:45:05,836 --> 00:45:07,681 could produce the most homespun. 838 00:45:07,705 --> 00:45:09,716 It would be published in the newspaper. 839 00:45:09,740 --> 00:45:11,151 And these women would be praised as 840 00:45:11,175 --> 00:45:13,620 great American Patriots for having produced 841 00:45:13,644 --> 00:45:15,279 so much homespun cloth. 842 00:45:16,547 --> 00:45:17,924 DuVal: And reporters would report, 843 00:45:17,948 --> 00:45:19,759 "The ladies of Boston, 844 00:45:19,783 --> 00:45:21,528 "The ladies of New York 845 00:45:21,552 --> 00:45:23,430 "are the most patriotic. 846 00:45:23,454 --> 00:45:28,201 They are at the forefront of this protest movement." 847 00:45:28,225 --> 00:45:30,270 If women hadn't done that, the protest movement 848 00:45:30,294 --> 00:45:32,896 and eventually the Revolution would have gone nowhere. 849 00:45:33,997 --> 00:45:37,177 Voice: Let the Daughters of Liberty nobly arise, 850 00:45:37,201 --> 00:45:40,146 And though we've no voice but a negative here, 851 00:45:40,170 --> 00:45:43,883 Stand firmly resolved and bid them to see, 852 00:45:43,907 --> 00:45:48,388 That rather than freedom, we'll part with our tea. 853 00:45:48,412 --> 00:45:49,780 Hannah Griffitts. 854 00:45:51,081 --> 00:45:54,894 Voice: I wish to see America boast of Empire... 855 00:45:54,918 --> 00:45:59,766 Of Empire not established in the thralldom of nations 856 00:45:59,790 --> 00:46:02,969 but on a more equitable base. 857 00:46:02,993 --> 00:46:06,940 Though such a happy state, such an equal government, 858 00:46:06,964 --> 00:46:11,377 may be considered by some as a Utopian dream; 859 00:46:11,401 --> 00:46:16,416 yet, you and I can easily conceive of nations and states 860 00:46:16,440 --> 00:46:19,652 under more liberal plans. 861 00:46:19,676 --> 00:46:21,812 Mercy Otis Warren. 862 00:46:22,946 --> 00:46:25,458 Narrator: The political philosopher and historian 863 00:46:25,482 --> 00:46:29,496 Mercy Otis Warren would publish plays and poems 864 00:46:29,520 --> 00:46:31,498 that satirized Royal officials 865 00:46:31,522 --> 00:46:35,935 with names like Judge Meagre and Sir Spendall. 866 00:46:35,959 --> 00:46:38,705 No woman played a more important role 867 00:46:38,729 --> 00:46:40,364 in promoting resistance. 868 00:46:42,800 --> 00:46:46,179 Tensions with England continued to grow. 869 00:46:46,203 --> 00:46:49,149 In Boston, in June of 1768, 870 00:46:49,173 --> 00:46:53,853 a ship called the "Liberty" was seized by the Royal Navy. 871 00:46:53,877 --> 00:46:55,822 Its owner, John Hancock, 872 00:46:55,846 --> 00:46:58,124 was the richest merchant in the city, 873 00:46:58,148 --> 00:47:01,127 a prominent member of the Sons of Liberty... 874 00:47:01,151 --> 00:47:04,063 And a practiced smuggler. 875 00:47:04,087 --> 00:47:07,524 A big, angry crowd formed at the wharf. 876 00:47:08,859 --> 00:47:10,837 Voice: The mobs here are very different 877 00:47:10,861 --> 00:47:12,529 from those in Old England. 878 00:47:13,564 --> 00:47:15,909 These Sons of Violence are attacking houses, 879 00:47:15,933 --> 00:47:18,812 breaking windows, beating, stoning, and bruising 880 00:47:18,836 --> 00:47:21,748 several gentlemen belonging to the Customs. 881 00:47:21,772 --> 00:47:23,841 Ann Hulton. 882 00:47:24,741 --> 00:47:26,119 Voice: The town has been under 883 00:47:26,143 --> 00:47:28,655 a kind of democratical despotism 884 00:47:28,679 --> 00:47:30,990 for a considerable time. 885 00:47:31,014 --> 00:47:33,026 And it has not been safe for people to act 886 00:47:33,050 --> 00:47:35,628 or speak contrary to the sentiments 887 00:47:35,652 --> 00:47:38,498 of the ruling demagogues. 888 00:47:38,522 --> 00:47:39,957 Thomas Gage. 889 00:47:41,024 --> 00:47:43,837 Narrator: On orders from London, General Gage sent 890 00:47:43,861 --> 00:47:46,873 two regiments of regulars from Nova Scotia, 891 00:47:46,897 --> 00:47:50,300 not to defend Boston, but to police it. 892 00:47:51,301 --> 00:47:55,215 Most Bostonians were appalled. 893 00:47:55,239 --> 00:47:57,650 Woman: An army during wartime makes sense. 894 00:47:57,674 --> 00:47:59,319 Of course, you need that. 895 00:47:59,343 --> 00:48:02,789 But an army during peacetime is a standing army. 896 00:48:02,813 --> 00:48:05,959 And if you have an army during peacetime, 897 00:48:05,983 --> 00:48:09,295 the thinking is that its only use 898 00:48:09,319 --> 00:48:13,190 is to turn on poor, innocent subjects. 899 00:48:14,291 --> 00:48:18,238 Voice: To have a standing army! Good God! 900 00:48:18,262 --> 00:48:20,807 What can be worse to a people who have tasted 901 00:48:20,831 --> 00:48:23,076 the sweets of liberty? 902 00:48:23,100 --> 00:48:26,279 Things are come to an unhappy crisis. 903 00:48:26,303 --> 00:48:29,315 All confidence is at an end. 904 00:48:29,339 --> 00:48:31,951 And the moment there is any bloodshed, 905 00:48:31,975 --> 00:48:35,121 all affection will cease. 906 00:48:35,145 --> 00:48:37,047 Reverend Andrew Eliot. 907 00:48:40,584 --> 00:48:43,496 Voice: The spirit of emigration to America, 908 00:48:43,520 --> 00:48:46,366 which seems to be epidemic through Great Britain, 909 00:48:46,390 --> 00:48:49,802 is likely to depopulate the Mother Country, 910 00:48:49,826 --> 00:48:53,640 and leave our ancient kingdom the resort of owls and dragons, 911 00:48:53,664 --> 00:48:57,944 and other solitary animals, who shun the light, 912 00:48:57,968 --> 00:49:01,948 and seem displeased at the human race. 913 00:49:01,972 --> 00:49:04,017 "The Edinburgh Amusement." 914 00:49:04,041 --> 00:49:05,485 [Bell tolling] 915 00:49:05,509 --> 00:49:07,253 Narrator: The steadily rising tensions 916 00:49:07,277 --> 00:49:10,290 between England and its North American colonies 917 00:49:10,314 --> 00:49:12,692 did not slow the steady stream of 918 00:49:12,716 --> 00:49:15,361 English, Scots-Irish, German, 919 00:49:15,385 --> 00:49:18,264 and a small number of Jewish immigrants 920 00:49:18,288 --> 00:49:20,800 eager to carve out new lives 921 00:49:20,824 --> 00:49:23,226 within the North American interior. 922 00:49:24,294 --> 00:49:25,471 Christopher Brown: Part of what really sets 923 00:49:25,495 --> 00:49:27,907 the North American experience apart 924 00:49:27,931 --> 00:49:30,143 is just how many European settlers 925 00:49:30,167 --> 00:49:31,978 are coming to North America. 926 00:49:32,002 --> 00:49:33,479 [Horse nickers] 927 00:49:33,503 --> 00:49:36,783 And they keep coming. 15,000 a year. 928 00:49:36,807 --> 00:49:39,676 A kind of empire was already in view. 929 00:49:41,878 --> 00:49:43,957 Narrator: Thousands of new arrivals 930 00:49:43,981 --> 00:49:46,225 and American-born colonists 931 00:49:46,249 --> 00:49:48,661 poured down the Great Wagon Road 932 00:49:48,685 --> 00:49:54,067 that ran all the way from Philadelphia to the Carolinas. 933 00:49:54,091 --> 00:49:56,369 The backcountry there was already the home 934 00:49:56,393 --> 00:50:01,298 of Native peoples, including the Catawbas and Cherokees. 935 00:50:03,266 --> 00:50:05,178 Voice: Upon the whole, it is the best 936 00:50:05,202 --> 00:50:08,014 country in the world for a poor man to go to 937 00:50:08,038 --> 00:50:09,449 and do well. 938 00:50:09,473 --> 00:50:11,818 And the farther they go back in the country, 939 00:50:11,842 --> 00:50:14,311 the land turns richer and better. 940 00:50:15,979 --> 00:50:18,224 Here, a man of small substance, 941 00:50:18,248 --> 00:50:20,727 if upon a precarious footing at home, 942 00:50:20,751 --> 00:50:25,898 can, at once, secure to himself a handsome, independent living, 943 00:50:25,922 --> 00:50:29,026 and do well for himself and posterity. 944 00:50:30,861 --> 00:50:35,141 All modes of Christian worship are here tolerated. 945 00:50:35,165 --> 00:50:37,710 "Scotus Americanus." 946 00:50:37,734 --> 00:50:41,114 Taylor: Colonial America is a very Protestant place. 947 00:50:41,138 --> 00:50:45,018 And it's founded when the norm in Europe was that 948 00:50:45,042 --> 00:50:47,687 whoever your sovereign was got to set 949 00:50:47,711 --> 00:50:48,912 what the religion should be. 950 00:50:49,980 --> 00:50:52,492 Narrator: Congregationalism was the established church 951 00:50:52,516 --> 00:50:55,528 in nearly all New England colonies. 952 00:50:55,552 --> 00:50:57,997 The official religion in much of the South 953 00:50:58,021 --> 00:51:00,333 was the Church of England. 954 00:51:00,357 --> 00:51:02,435 But those who belonged to other faiths 955 00:51:02,459 --> 00:51:05,705 resented being forced by colonial legislatures 956 00:51:05,729 --> 00:51:10,510 to pay the salaries of clergymen who did not minister to them. 957 00:51:10,534 --> 00:51:13,746 None were more resentful than the backcountry settlers 958 00:51:13,770 --> 00:51:15,314 in the Carolinas... 959 00:51:15,338 --> 00:51:20,277 Baptists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, Methodists. 960 00:51:21,344 --> 00:51:24,524 Taylor: And what they hear from their ministers 961 00:51:24,548 --> 00:51:28,161 about whether resisting their sovereign 962 00:51:28,185 --> 00:51:29,562 or supporting their sovereign 963 00:51:29,586 --> 00:51:31,864 is the right thing to do as a Christian duty, 964 00:51:31,888 --> 00:51:33,866 that will matter a lot. 965 00:51:33,890 --> 00:51:36,269 [Drum beating rhythmically] 966 00:51:36,293 --> 00:51:38,604 Voice: I was born in Boston in America 967 00:51:38,628 --> 00:51:40,973 in the year 1760. 968 00:51:40,997 --> 00:51:44,444 In the time I was at school, the troubles began to come on. 969 00:51:44,468 --> 00:51:47,547 And I was told the day of judgment was near at hand, 970 00:51:47,571 --> 00:51:49,248 and the moon would turn into blood, 971 00:51:49,272 --> 00:51:51,274 and the world would be set on fire. 972 00:51:52,309 --> 00:51:53,743 John Greenwood. 973 00:51:55,445 --> 00:52:00,660 Narrator: Shortly before noon on Saturday, October 1, 1768, 974 00:52:00,684 --> 00:52:03,663 8-year-old John Greenwood left his home 975 00:52:03,687 --> 00:52:05,198 in Boston's North End 976 00:52:05,222 --> 00:52:08,167 and hurried toward the waterfront. 977 00:52:08,191 --> 00:52:11,237 There, riding at anchor in a great arc, 978 00:52:11,261 --> 00:52:13,673 he saw 14 British warships, 979 00:52:13,697 --> 00:52:16,609 their cannon trained upon the city. 980 00:52:16,633 --> 00:52:20,580 Boats swarmed between the ships and the end of Long Wharf, 981 00:52:20,604 --> 00:52:25,284 ferrying hundreds of British red-coated regulars. 982 00:52:25,308 --> 00:52:29,379 General Gage's occupying army had arrived. 983 00:52:30,647 --> 00:52:32,458 The crowds that lined the street 984 00:52:32,482 --> 00:52:35,761 were for the most part silent and sullen. 985 00:52:35,785 --> 00:52:38,564 But it was not the history being made that impressed 986 00:52:38,588 --> 00:52:41,734 young John Greenwood that day. 987 00:52:41,758 --> 00:52:45,638 It was the irresistible music played by Afro-Caribbean 988 00:52:45,662 --> 00:52:49,876 men and boys in colorful uniforms. 989 00:52:49,900 --> 00:52:51,811 Voice: I was so fond of hearing the fife and drum 990 00:52:51,835 --> 00:52:54,714 played by the British that somehow or another, 991 00:52:54,738 --> 00:52:57,150 I got an old split fife, and fixed it 992 00:52:57,174 --> 00:52:59,585 by puttying up the crack to make it sound, 993 00:52:59,609 --> 00:53:02,655 and then learned to play several tunes. 994 00:53:02,679 --> 00:53:04,357 I believe it was the sole cause 995 00:53:04,381 --> 00:53:06,993 of all my travails and disasters. [Greenwood] 996 00:53:07,017 --> 00:53:09,395 [Fife playing upbeat tune] Narrator: Before long, 997 00:53:09,419 --> 00:53:11,063 the boy was playing well enough 998 00:53:11,087 --> 00:53:14,167 to become a fifer for a local militia. 999 00:53:14,191 --> 00:53:16,502 "The flag of our company," he remembered, 1000 00:53:16,526 --> 00:53:18,604 "was an English flag." 1001 00:53:18,628 --> 00:53:20,830 They would not be English forever. 1002 00:53:23,233 --> 00:53:25,111 Half the newly arrived troops 1003 00:53:25,135 --> 00:53:28,214 were housed in barracks on Castle Island, 1004 00:53:28,238 --> 00:53:30,650 but orders from London had been clear. 1005 00:53:30,674 --> 00:53:33,586 It was "His Majesty's pleasure," they said, 1006 00:53:33,610 --> 00:53:38,791 that the rest of the troops "be quartered in that town." 1007 00:53:38,815 --> 00:53:40,293 [Man shouting orders] 1008 00:53:40,317 --> 00:53:44,697 For 17 months, Boston was an occupied city. 1009 00:53:44,721 --> 00:53:48,391 The rattle of drums awakened residents every morning. 1010 00:53:49,559 --> 00:53:53,363 Passersby were routinely stopped and searched. 1011 00:53:54,931 --> 00:53:58,377 Many soldiers had brought their wives and children; 1012 00:53:58,401 --> 00:54:02,815 others courted Boston girls, or were pursued by them. 1013 00:54:02,839 --> 00:54:06,552 40 troops were married during the occupation, 1014 00:54:06,576 --> 00:54:10,547 and more than 100 of their offspring were baptized. 1015 00:54:11,581 --> 00:54:14,660 But some soldiers got drunk, robbed people, 1016 00:54:14,684 --> 00:54:17,997 insulted women, profaned the Sabbath. 1017 00:54:18,021 --> 00:54:22,792 There were brawls, stabbings, suits and countersuits. 1018 00:54:24,327 --> 00:54:28,574 From London, Benjamin Franklin was concerned. 1019 00:54:28,598 --> 00:54:30,276 Voice: Some indiscretion on the part 1020 00:54:30,300 --> 00:54:34,480 of Boston's warmer people, or of the soldiery, 1021 00:54:34,504 --> 00:54:36,749 may occasion a tumult. 1022 00:54:36,773 --> 00:54:40,553 And if blood is once drawn, there is no foreseeing 1023 00:54:40,577 --> 00:54:43,780 how far the mischief may spread. [Franklin] 1024 00:54:46,249 --> 00:54:49,495 Narrator: On the evening of March 5, 1770, 1025 00:54:49,519 --> 00:54:53,065 there were tussles between Bostonians and British soldiers 1026 00:54:53,089 --> 00:54:54,591 all across the city. 1027 00:54:55,725 --> 00:54:58,371 At the Royal Customs House, a crowd of young men 1028 00:54:58,395 --> 00:55:01,540 surrounded a lone sentry and pelted him with 1029 00:55:01,564 --> 00:55:04,744 snowballs and chunks of ice. 1030 00:55:04,768 --> 00:55:08,014 Convinced a city-wide uprising was underway, 1031 00:55:08,038 --> 00:55:09,882 Captain Thomas Preston raced 1032 00:55:09,906 --> 00:55:13,152 several armed grenadiers to the scene. 1033 00:55:13,176 --> 00:55:18,557 More snowballs and rocks and oyster shells greeted them. 1034 00:55:18,581 --> 00:55:21,727 They fixed bayonets. [Bells tolling] 1035 00:55:21,751 --> 00:55:23,629 Zabin: Somebody starts ringing the church bells, 1036 00:55:23,653 --> 00:55:28,100 which in Boston is a sign for fire. 1037 00:55:28,124 --> 00:55:30,136 Some people are bringing buckets 1038 00:55:30,160 --> 00:55:32,305 to be part of a bucket brigade. 1039 00:55:32,329 --> 00:55:35,441 Some people are drawn by the noise. 1040 00:55:35,465 --> 00:55:38,177 It's very hard, in fact impossible, 1041 00:55:38,201 --> 00:55:43,783 to know what happened, which is that somebody yells, "Fire." 1042 00:55:43,807 --> 00:55:45,842 [Gunfire] 1043 00:55:50,046 --> 00:55:53,592 All we know really is that when the smoke cleared, 1044 00:55:53,616 --> 00:55:57,921 there are 5 people dead or dying. 1045 00:55:59,489 --> 00:56:01,934 Narrator: The first was a tall dock-worker... 1046 00:56:01,958 --> 00:56:05,404 Part Native-American, part African-American... 1047 00:56:05,428 --> 00:56:08,074 Named Crispus Attucks. 1048 00:56:08,098 --> 00:56:11,210 The second was a ropemaker named Samuel Gray, 1049 00:56:11,234 --> 00:56:14,246 who was standing next to Attucks. 1050 00:56:14,270 --> 00:56:18,050 The third was James Caldwell, a sailor who was in town, 1051 00:56:18,074 --> 00:56:22,479 it was said, to call upon the girl he hoped to marry. 1052 00:56:24,314 --> 00:56:27,560 The terrified crowd began to scatter. 1053 00:56:27,584 --> 00:56:30,896 John Greenwood's older brother Isaac was there, too, 1054 00:56:30,920 --> 00:56:34,533 and escaped unharmed, but a ricocheting ball 1055 00:56:34,557 --> 00:56:38,504 hit their friend Samuel Maverick in the back. 1056 00:56:38,528 --> 00:56:41,097 He died in agony the following morning. 1057 00:56:42,232 --> 00:56:44,243 Maverick, an apprentice, 1058 00:56:44,267 --> 00:56:46,479 had shared a bed in the Greenwood home 1059 00:56:46,503 --> 00:56:48,981 with the now 9-year-old John, 1060 00:56:49,005 --> 00:56:51,851 who recalled that after his friend's death, 1061 00:56:51,875 --> 00:56:55,488 he deliberately slept in pitch-black darkness, 1062 00:56:55,512 --> 00:56:59,358 hoping "to see his spirit." 1063 00:56:59,382 --> 00:57:01,794 Zabin: People start arguing, already, 1064 00:57:01,818 --> 00:57:03,262 even before they go to bed, 1065 00:57:03,286 --> 00:57:05,555 about what happened. 1066 00:57:06,756 --> 00:57:11,003 Paul Revere creates probably the most famous engraving 1067 00:57:11,027 --> 00:57:16,976 of the 18th century, which he titles the "Bloody Massacre." 1068 00:57:17,000 --> 00:57:21,580 The British Army is very anxious to try to spin this 1069 00:57:21,604 --> 00:57:24,650 as a story of self-defense... 1070 00:57:24,674 --> 00:57:28,745 but the language of massacre is the one that holds. 1071 00:57:30,547 --> 00:57:31,991 Narrator: A fifth man, 1072 00:57:32,015 --> 00:57:34,460 a leathermaker named Patrick Carr, 1073 00:57:34,484 --> 00:57:37,029 would die several days later. 1074 00:57:37,053 --> 00:57:40,833 10,000 mourners accompanied the coffins of the dead 1075 00:57:40,857 --> 00:57:44,437 to the Old Granary Cemetery. 1076 00:57:44,461 --> 00:57:45,771 Voice: The Fatal Fifth of March 1077 00:57:45,795 --> 00:57:47,940 can never be forgotten. 1078 00:57:47,964 --> 00:57:49,875 The horrors of that dreadful night 1079 00:57:49,899 --> 00:57:52,878 are but too deeply impressed on our hearts... 1080 00:57:52,902 --> 00:57:56,449 When our streets were stained with the blood of our brethren; 1081 00:57:56,473 --> 00:57:58,884 and our eyes were tormented with the sight 1082 00:57:58,908 --> 00:58:02,154 of the mangled bodies of the dead. 1083 00:58:02,178 --> 00:58:03,746 Joseph Warren. 1084 00:58:04,814 --> 00:58:06,992 Narrator: Not everyone was grieving. 1085 00:58:07,016 --> 00:58:10,029 An Anglican clergyman, Mather Byles, 1086 00:58:10,053 --> 00:58:13,466 asked a fellow cleric, "Which is better, 1087 00:58:13,490 --> 00:58:17,470 "to be ruled by one tyrant 3,000 miles away 1088 00:58:17,494 --> 00:58:21,807 or by 3,000 tyrants not a mile away." 1089 00:58:21,831 --> 00:58:23,776 [Gavel banging rapidly] 1090 00:58:23,800 --> 00:58:26,545 Captain Preston was found not guilty 1091 00:58:26,569 --> 00:58:29,114 of ordering his men to fire. 1092 00:58:29,138 --> 00:58:33,185 The other 8 soldiers were put on trial separately. 1093 00:58:33,209 --> 00:58:36,689 Samuel Adams' younger cousin, John Adams, 1094 00:58:36,713 --> 00:58:41,494 risking his reputation, served as the soldiers' attorney. 1095 00:58:41,518 --> 00:58:44,964 Most of his clients were acquitted as well. 1096 00:58:44,988 --> 00:58:48,033 Two were found guilty of manslaughter. 1097 00:58:48,057 --> 00:58:50,369 They were branded on their right thumbs 1098 00:58:50,393 --> 00:58:53,973 so that if they were ever charged with another crime, 1099 00:58:53,997 --> 00:58:57,567 they could not make a claim of innocence again. 1100 00:58:58,768 --> 00:59:00,546 The British government was relieved 1101 00:59:00,570 --> 00:59:03,015 by the outcome of the trials. 1102 00:59:03,039 --> 00:59:06,352 Most of the regulars were withdrawn to Castle William... 1103 00:59:06,376 --> 00:59:07,953 Their harbor fortress. 1104 00:59:07,977 --> 00:59:10,689 Once again, American colonists 1105 00:59:10,713 --> 00:59:13,292 had forced the British to back down 1106 00:59:13,316 --> 00:59:16,862 and Parliament had already repealed all but one 1107 00:59:16,886 --> 00:59:18,831 of the Townshend Acts. 1108 00:59:18,855 --> 00:59:22,692 Only the duty on tea remained. 1109 00:59:25,495 --> 00:59:28,741 ♪ 1110 00:59:28,765 --> 00:59:32,845 Voice: Yorktown stood unrivaled in Virginia; 1111 00:59:32,869 --> 00:59:36,615 its commanding view, its vast expanse of water, 1112 00:59:36,639 --> 00:59:38,951 its excellent harbor. 1113 00:59:38,975 --> 00:59:41,921 It was the seat of wealth and elegance, 1114 00:59:41,945 --> 00:59:45,624 one of the most delightful situations in America, 1115 00:59:45,648 --> 00:59:49,152 at least, my infantine imagination painted it so. 1116 00:59:50,486 --> 00:59:52,622 Betsy Ambler. 1117 00:59:53,790 --> 00:59:58,203 Narrator: Betsy Ambler was 6 years old in 1771... 1118 00:59:58,227 --> 01:00:02,641 The oldest child in a prominent Yorktown, Virginia family. 1119 01:00:02,665 --> 01:00:04,043 A young Thomas Jefferson 1120 01:00:04,067 --> 01:00:07,179 had once hoped to marry her mother, Rebecca, 1121 01:00:07,203 --> 01:00:11,417 but she had married Jacquelin Ambler instead. 1122 01:00:11,441 --> 01:00:13,786 He insisted that all his daughters 1123 01:00:13,810 --> 01:00:16,288 get a proper education. 1124 01:00:16,312 --> 01:00:19,191 He was a planter and merchant in Yorktown, 1125 01:00:19,215 --> 01:00:21,994 the bustling deepwater port near Virginia's 1126 01:00:22,018 --> 01:00:25,331 colonial capital at Williamsburg. 1127 01:00:25,355 --> 01:00:30,169 On Yorktown docks, enslaved Africans entered America, 1128 01:00:30,193 --> 01:00:34,364 and the tobacco they harvested went out to the world. 1129 01:00:35,632 --> 01:00:39,111 Though Betsy's father was the Royal Collector of Customs, 1130 01:00:39,135 --> 01:00:42,815 he and his family had grown more and more sympathetic 1131 01:00:42,839 --> 01:00:46,318 to their neighbors' calls for liberty. 1132 01:00:46,342 --> 01:00:47,853 Voice: Young as I was, 1133 01:00:47,877 --> 01:00:51,824 the word "liberty" so constantly sounding in my ears 1134 01:00:51,848 --> 01:00:54,360 seemed to convey an idea of everything 1135 01:00:54,384 --> 01:00:57,496 that was desirable on Earth. 1136 01:00:57,520 --> 01:00:59,865 True, that in attaining it, 1137 01:00:59,889 --> 01:01:03,159 I was to see every comfort abandoned. [Ambler] 1138 01:01:06,596 --> 01:01:08,007 Voice: Thomas Hutchinson, 1139 01:01:08,031 --> 01:01:10,142 Governor of Massachusetts: 1140 01:01:10,166 --> 01:01:13,412 There is now a disposition in all the colonies 1141 01:01:13,436 --> 01:01:16,915 to let the controversy with the kingdom subside. 1142 01:01:16,939 --> 01:01:19,485 Hancock and most of the party are quiet 1143 01:01:19,509 --> 01:01:25,081 and all of them abate of their virulence, except Samuel Adams. [Hutchinson] 1144 01:01:26,115 --> 01:01:28,627 Narrator: For 2 years, Samuel Adams 1145 01:01:28,651 --> 01:01:31,163 kept up a steady stream of essays, 1146 01:01:31,187 --> 01:01:33,532 in which he warned again and again 1147 01:01:33,556 --> 01:01:35,901 that the lull was only temporary, 1148 01:01:35,925 --> 01:01:40,272 that Parliament remained bent on imposing tyranny. 1149 01:01:40,296 --> 01:01:46,979 ♪ 1150 01:01:47,003 --> 01:01:48,414 Kamensky: Those who have interests 1151 01:01:48,438 --> 01:01:52,117 in keeping the political story alive and growing, 1152 01:01:52,141 --> 01:01:55,721 have to really work to keep it front and center, 1153 01:01:55,745 --> 01:01:57,890 to define the problem as something present 1154 01:01:57,914 --> 01:02:00,426 in the minds of ordinary people. 1155 01:02:00,450 --> 01:02:03,896 Why would I care about this as a... as a woman? 1156 01:02:03,920 --> 01:02:06,598 Why would I care about this as a small farmer? 1157 01:02:06,622 --> 01:02:08,267 [Sawing] 1158 01:02:08,291 --> 01:02:11,570 Narrator: In 1772, events beyond Boston 1159 01:02:11,594 --> 01:02:13,572 gave Adams the ammunition he needed 1160 01:02:13,596 --> 01:02:17,843 to spread his radical message throughout the colonies. 1161 01:02:17,867 --> 01:02:21,046 In April, when a sawmill owner in New Hampshire 1162 01:02:21,070 --> 01:02:24,216 was charged with commandeering pine trees 1163 01:02:24,240 --> 01:02:27,619 earmarked for the masts of royal warships, 1164 01:02:27,643 --> 01:02:29,822 a mob drove the British officials 1165 01:02:29,846 --> 01:02:32,825 who came to arrest him out of town. 1166 01:02:32,849 --> 01:02:33,992 [Fireball] 1167 01:02:34,016 --> 01:02:35,994 In June, when the "Gaspée," 1168 01:02:36,018 --> 01:02:37,896 a British customs schooner, 1169 01:02:37,920 --> 01:02:40,599 ran aground while chasing smugglers, 1170 01:02:40,623 --> 01:02:44,970 angry Rhode Islanders set it afire. 1171 01:02:44,994 --> 01:02:47,439 And that fall, Adams learned that 1172 01:02:47,463 --> 01:02:50,576 beginning the following year, the British Treasury 1173 01:02:50,600 --> 01:02:54,146 would use the revenue from tea to pay the salaries 1174 01:02:54,170 --> 01:02:57,316 of the most important Massachusetts officials, 1175 01:02:57,340 --> 01:03:00,586 including all the colony's judges. 1176 01:03:00,610 --> 01:03:04,323 The judges' first loyalty would now be to the Crown, 1177 01:03:04,347 --> 01:03:06,125 not the colonists. 1178 01:03:06,149 --> 01:03:10,052 There would be no way to ensure impartial justice. 1179 01:03:11,287 --> 01:03:15,734 Adams drafted a fiery response. 1180 01:03:15,758 --> 01:03:17,035 Voice: Among the natural rights 1181 01:03:17,059 --> 01:03:19,071 of the colonists are these: 1182 01:03:19,095 --> 01:03:23,242 First, a right to life; secondly, to liberty; 1183 01:03:23,266 --> 01:03:26,545 thirdly to property; together with the right 1184 01:03:26,569 --> 01:03:30,449 to support and defend them in the best manner they can. [Samuel Adams] 1185 01:03:30,473 --> 01:03:32,684 ♪ 1186 01:03:32,708 --> 01:03:34,386 Narrator: Printed copies of his writings 1187 01:03:34,410 --> 01:03:37,856 were sent to town meetings throughout the colony. 1188 01:03:37,880 --> 01:03:40,859 So-called Committees of Correspondence 1189 01:03:40,883 --> 01:03:43,295 soon linked advocates of resistance 1190 01:03:43,319 --> 01:03:48,066 in more than 100 Massachusetts towns and districts. 1191 01:03:48,090 --> 01:03:53,129 Eventually, their network would spread into other colonies. 1192 01:03:54,263 --> 01:03:55,908 Schiff: "Committees of Correspondence" 1193 01:03:55,932 --> 01:03:58,744 is an effort to try to bring 1194 01:03:58,768 --> 01:04:01,280 all of the colonies onto the same page, 1195 01:04:01,304 --> 01:04:03,949 to make them feel as if they have a common cause, 1196 01:04:03,973 --> 01:04:06,685 words which had really not been used before. 1197 01:04:06,709 --> 01:04:09,855 And it's through those committees that, essentially, 1198 01:04:09,879 --> 01:04:12,157 the Revolutionary spirit diffuses itself 1199 01:04:12,181 --> 01:04:14,426 throughout the colonies. 1200 01:04:14,450 --> 01:04:17,029 Voice: Let not the iron hand of tyranny 1201 01:04:17,053 --> 01:04:20,465 ravish our laws and seize the badge of freedom. 1202 01:04:20,489 --> 01:04:23,402 Is it not high time for the people of this country 1203 01:04:23,426 --> 01:04:29,007 explicitly to declare whether they will be freemen or slaves? 1204 01:04:29,031 --> 01:04:31,033 Samuel Adams. 1205 01:04:34,270 --> 01:04:37,015 Voice: I need not point out the absurdity 1206 01:04:37,039 --> 01:04:39,751 of your exertions for liberty, 1207 01:04:39,775 --> 01:04:42,321 while you have slaves in your houses. 1208 01:04:42,345 --> 01:04:46,191 If you are sensible that slavery is, in itself, 1209 01:04:46,215 --> 01:04:49,294 and in its consequences, a great evil, 1210 01:04:49,318 --> 01:04:51,463 why will you not pity and relieve 1211 01:04:51,487 --> 01:04:55,367 the poor, distressed, enslaved Africans? 1212 01:04:55,391 --> 01:04:57,159 Caesar Sarter. 1213 01:04:58,394 --> 01:05:01,607 Kamensky: Slavery as a metaphor is in the conversation 1214 01:05:01,631 --> 01:05:03,141 from the beginning. 1215 01:05:03,165 --> 01:05:04,543 Everywhere there's slavery, 1216 01:05:04,567 --> 01:05:07,813 there are people thinking about freedom. 1217 01:05:07,837 --> 01:05:11,216 Nothing shows the desire for freedom 1218 01:05:11,240 --> 01:05:14,343 like the struggles of subject peoples. 1219 01:05:16,012 --> 01:05:18,590 Voice: I, young in life, 1220 01:05:18,614 --> 01:05:20,893 by seeming cruel fate 1221 01:05:20,917 --> 01:05:24,496 Was snatch'd from Afric's fancy'd happy seat: 1222 01:05:24,520 --> 01:05:28,533 What pangs excruciating must molest, 1223 01:05:28,557 --> 01:05:33,171 What sorrows labour in my parent's breast? 1224 01:05:33,195 --> 01:05:38,176 Steel'd was that soul and by no misery mov'd 1225 01:05:38,200 --> 01:05:42,247 That from a father seiz'd his babe belov'd: 1226 01:05:42,271 --> 01:05:49,054 Such, such my case. And can I then but pray 1227 01:05:49,078 --> 01:05:53,692 Others may never feel tyrannic sway? 1228 01:05:53,716 --> 01:05:55,451 Phillis Wheatley. 1229 01:05:56,719 --> 01:05:59,932 Narrator: Phillis Wheatley, who was stolen from Senegambia 1230 01:05:59,956 --> 01:06:03,936 in West Africa and taken to Massachusetts as a young girl, 1231 01:06:03,960 --> 01:06:08,840 was renamed for the slave ship the "Phillis" that brought her 1232 01:06:08,864 --> 01:06:12,144 and the Wheatley family that bought her. 1233 01:06:12,168 --> 01:06:15,514 In Boston, the Wheatleys saw to her education, 1234 01:06:15,538 --> 01:06:18,283 and as a teenager, still enslaved, 1235 01:06:18,307 --> 01:06:22,387 her "Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral" 1236 01:06:22,411 --> 01:06:25,824 won favor on both sides of the Atlantic. 1237 01:06:25,848 --> 01:06:28,093 It was the first published book 1238 01:06:28,117 --> 01:06:30,686 by an African-American writer. 1239 01:06:31,988 --> 01:06:34,366 Voice: How well the cry for liberty, 1240 01:06:34,390 --> 01:06:36,368 and the reverse disposition 1241 01:06:36,392 --> 01:06:41,206 for the exercise of oppressive power over others agree, 1242 01:06:41,230 --> 01:06:43,442 I humbly think it does not require 1243 01:06:43,466 --> 01:06:47,436 the penetration of a philosopher to determine. [Wheatley] 1244 01:06:48,871 --> 01:06:50,315 Voice: I wish most sincerely 1245 01:06:50,339 --> 01:06:53,285 there was not a slave in the province. 1246 01:06:53,309 --> 01:06:56,588 It always appeared a most iniquitous scheme to me... 1247 01:06:56,612 --> 01:06:59,858 Fight ourselves for what we are daily robbing and plundering 1248 01:06:59,882 --> 01:07:03,962 from those who have as good a right to freedom as we have. 1249 01:07:03,986 --> 01:07:06,965 You know my mind upon this subject. 1250 01:07:06,989 --> 01:07:09,058 Abigail Adams. 1251 01:07:10,192 --> 01:07:12,871 Voice: Ye men of sense and virtue... 1252 01:07:12,895 --> 01:07:15,607 Ye advocates for American liberty... 1253 01:07:15,631 --> 01:07:20,045 Bear a testimony against a vice which degrades human nature 1254 01:07:20,069 --> 01:07:22,781 and dissolves that universal tie of benevolence 1255 01:07:22,805 --> 01:07:26,018 which should connect all the children of men together 1256 01:07:26,042 --> 01:07:28,253 in one great family. 1257 01:07:28,277 --> 01:07:31,757 The plant of liberty is of so tender a nature 1258 01:07:31,781 --> 01:07:36,661 that it cannot thrive long in the neighborhood of slavery. 1259 01:07:36,685 --> 01:07:38,487 Benjamin Rush. 1260 01:07:39,822 --> 01:07:42,634 Christopher Brown: Part of what happens in the years before 1261 01:07:42,658 --> 01:07:46,972 the American War is that liberties are kind of broken out 1262 01:07:46,996 --> 01:07:49,307 of a national context. 1263 01:07:49,331 --> 01:07:51,376 These are not English liberties. 1264 01:07:51,400 --> 01:07:54,446 These are transcendent liberties. 1265 01:07:54,470 --> 01:07:59,484 These are liberties that all individuals have 1266 01:07:59,508 --> 01:08:02,511 by the nature of being human. 1267 01:08:05,915 --> 01:08:07,759 [Waves crashing] Man: Heave away! 1268 01:08:07,783 --> 01:08:09,828 Voice: The Americans have made a discovery, 1269 01:08:09,852 --> 01:08:13,899 or think they have made one, that we mean to oppress them. 1270 01:08:13,923 --> 01:08:17,202 We have made a discovery, or think we have made one, 1271 01:08:17,226 --> 01:08:20,472 that they intend to rise in rebellion. 1272 01:08:20,496 --> 01:08:24,076 Our severity has increased their ill behavior. 1273 01:08:24,100 --> 01:08:29,881 We know not how to advance. They know not how to retreat. 1274 01:08:29,905 --> 01:08:33,985 Some party must give way. 1275 01:08:34,009 --> 01:08:36,112 Edmund Burke. 1276 01:08:37,213 --> 01:08:41,726 Narrator: In October of 1773, 7 ships set out 1277 01:08:41,750 --> 01:08:45,397 from Plymouth, England for North American ports. 1278 01:08:45,421 --> 01:08:49,768 The cargo hold of each was filled with crates of tea. 1279 01:08:49,792 --> 01:08:53,972 It all belonged to the Crown- chartered East India Company, 1280 01:08:53,996 --> 01:08:56,641 which was on the brink of bankruptcy. 1281 01:08:56,665 --> 01:09:00,912 To save the company, Lord North, the Prime Minister, 1282 01:09:00,936 --> 01:09:03,748 had won passage of a new Tea Act, 1283 01:09:03,772 --> 01:09:09,254 designed to undercut smuggling and reduce the cost of tea. 1284 01:09:09,278 --> 01:09:12,257 Kamensky: It seemed to Parliament like a "Win-Win-Win." 1285 01:09:12,281 --> 01:09:16,528 Shore up the East India Company, take it more in-house 1286 01:09:16,552 --> 01:09:18,697 as a governmental organization, 1287 01:09:18,721 --> 01:09:21,666 and give Americans cheaper, non-smuggled tea 1288 01:09:21,690 --> 01:09:23,301 at the same time. 1289 01:09:23,325 --> 01:09:24,803 Narrator: But colonial merchants 1290 01:09:24,827 --> 01:09:27,472 who had profited handsomely from smuggling 1291 01:09:27,496 --> 01:09:30,408 portrayed the new law as yet another assault 1292 01:09:30,432 --> 01:09:32,777 on American rights. 1293 01:09:32,801 --> 01:09:36,648 John Adams wrote that immediate resistance was necessary 1294 01:09:36,672 --> 01:09:40,018 because of its "attack upon a fundamental principle 1295 01:09:40,042 --> 01:09:42,154 of the [British] constitution." 1296 01:09:42,178 --> 01:09:45,457 No American had consented to the tea tax; 1297 01:09:45,481 --> 01:09:49,060 therefore, no American need pay it. 1298 01:09:49,084 --> 01:09:53,698 Government-appointed tea agents were to be persuaded... 1299 01:09:53,722 --> 01:09:59,070 Or coerced... into refusing to receive any tea. 1300 01:09:59,094 --> 01:10:01,106 In Charleston, South Carolina, 1301 01:10:01,130 --> 01:10:04,376 the Sons of Liberty "convinced" an agent 1302 01:10:04,400 --> 01:10:07,445 not to accept the shipment meant for him. 1303 01:10:07,469 --> 01:10:10,348 In Philadelphia, the Governor of Pennsylvania 1304 01:10:10,372 --> 01:10:15,387 talked a ship's captain into sailing back to Britain. 1305 01:10:15,411 --> 01:10:20,425 In Boston, when 3 of the ships loaded with tea arrived, 1306 01:10:20,449 --> 01:10:24,796 thousands of Bostonians and supporters from outlying towns 1307 01:10:24,820 --> 01:10:27,299 gathered at the Old South Meeting House 1308 01:10:27,323 --> 01:10:30,602 and declared that the tea should remain on board 1309 01:10:30,626 --> 01:10:33,229 and be sent back to Britain. 1310 01:10:34,530 --> 01:10:40,412 On December 16, 1773, hundreds looked on from shore 1311 01:10:40,436 --> 01:10:45,250 as between 50 and 60 men... Rich as well as poor... 1312 01:10:45,274 --> 01:10:48,720 All crudely disguised as Native Americans, 1313 01:10:48,744 --> 01:10:53,258 climbed into boats and headed for the ships. 1314 01:10:53,282 --> 01:10:55,927 Deloria: They dress like Indians, kinda. 1315 01:10:55,951 --> 01:10:59,497 It's an expression of what it is to be American. 1316 01:10:59,521 --> 01:11:00,832 When you claim to be Indian, 1317 01:11:00,856 --> 01:11:04,302 you're claiming to be here, aboriginal, 1318 01:11:04,326 --> 01:11:05,804 part of this continent. 1319 01:11:05,828 --> 01:11:07,806 And you're drawing a really bright line 1320 01:11:07,830 --> 01:11:10,275 between yourself and the Mother Country. 1321 01:11:10,299 --> 01:11:11,643 [Crates smashing; people shouting] 1322 01:11:11,667 --> 01:11:15,447 Narrator: The men banged open 342 crates 1323 01:11:15,471 --> 01:11:19,050 and poured more than 46 tons of tea into the harbor. 1324 01:11:19,074 --> 01:11:20,352 [Splashing] 1325 01:11:20,376 --> 01:11:22,420 No other property was disturbed. 1326 01:11:22,444 --> 01:11:24,522 And when one of the boarders was seen 1327 01:11:24,546 --> 01:11:28,093 filling his coat pockets with fistfuls of tea, 1328 01:11:28,117 --> 01:11:31,529 he received a "severe bruising." 1329 01:11:31,553 --> 01:11:34,099 Taylor: This is an assault on the property 1330 01:11:34,123 --> 01:11:35,433 of the East India Company, 1331 01:11:35,457 --> 01:11:38,670 and it's an assault upon the pride 1332 01:11:38,694 --> 01:11:41,072 and the power of Parliament. 1333 01:11:41,096 --> 01:11:43,642 So, it's a very big deal. 1334 01:11:43,666 --> 01:11:45,477 Protesting taxes is one thing. 1335 01:11:45,501 --> 01:11:47,679 Destroying private property 1336 01:11:47,703 --> 01:11:50,949 worth thousands of pounds sterling, 1337 01:11:50,973 --> 01:11:52,708 that's something else. 1338 01:11:55,978 --> 01:11:59,691 Narrator: In Manhattan, the King had grown so unpopular 1339 01:11:59,715 --> 01:12:03,461 in some quarters that royal officials thought it prudent 1340 01:12:03,485 --> 01:12:06,631 to surround his statue with an iron fence. 1341 01:12:06,655 --> 01:12:10,201 A law warning of the dire consequences for anyone 1342 01:12:10,225 --> 01:12:12,203 who dared deface the statue... 1343 01:12:12,227 --> 01:12:14,773 [Gunshot] did not prevent one New Yorker 1344 01:12:14,797 --> 01:12:17,842 from firing a musket ball through its cheek... 1345 01:12:17,866 --> 01:12:19,110 [Gunshot] 1346 01:12:19,134 --> 01:12:22,247 and another one through its neck. 1347 01:12:22,271 --> 01:12:27,385 ♪ 1348 01:12:27,409 --> 01:12:30,055 Voice: The study of the human character 1349 01:12:30,079 --> 01:12:36,127 opens at once a beautiful and a deformed picture of the soul. 1350 01:12:36,151 --> 01:12:42,634 We there find a noble principle implanted in the nature of man. 1351 01:12:42,658 --> 01:12:46,705 But when the checks of conscience are thrown aside, 1352 01:12:46,729 --> 01:12:53,178 or the moral sense weakened, humanity is obscured. 1353 01:12:53,202 --> 01:12:56,314 Mercy Otis Warren. 1354 01:12:56,338 --> 01:12:57,749 Voice: The most shocking cruelty 1355 01:12:57,773 --> 01:12:59,718 was exercised a few nights ago 1356 01:12:59,742 --> 01:13:03,288 upon a poor old man named Malcolm. 1357 01:13:03,312 --> 01:13:05,724 There's no law that knows a punishment 1358 01:13:05,748 --> 01:13:11,162 for the greatest crimes beyond what this is, of cruel torture. 1359 01:13:11,186 --> 01:13:12,955 Ann Hulton. 1360 01:13:14,390 --> 01:13:18,103 Narrator: In Boston, in January of 1774, 1361 01:13:18,127 --> 01:13:21,806 a small boy on a sled accidentally ran into 1362 01:13:21,830 --> 01:13:25,543 a minor customs official named John Malcolm, 1363 01:13:25,567 --> 01:13:28,613 who cursed and threatened to beat him. 1364 01:13:28,637 --> 01:13:31,783 When George Hewes, who had helped dump the tea 1365 01:13:31,807 --> 01:13:34,686 into Boston harbor, tried to intervene, 1366 01:13:34,710 --> 01:13:38,189 Malcolm knocked him unconscious with his cane. 1367 01:13:38,213 --> 01:13:39,891 [People shouting] 1368 01:13:39,915 --> 01:13:42,827 Malcolm was hauled from his house. 1369 01:13:42,851 --> 01:13:45,463 He was stripped nearly naked, 1370 01:13:45,487 --> 01:13:49,334 hot tar was poured over him, scalding his flesh, 1371 01:13:49,358 --> 01:13:52,937 and then he was covered with feathers. 1372 01:13:52,961 --> 01:13:54,606 ♪ 1373 01:13:54,630 --> 01:13:57,041 Jasanoff: Tarring and feathering is something that has 1374 01:13:57,065 --> 01:14:00,779 come down to us as an almost kind of comical thing 1375 01:14:00,803 --> 01:14:04,115 because you see these people with chicken feathers on them, 1376 01:14:04,139 --> 01:14:08,052 but this is hideous stuff. 1377 01:14:08,076 --> 01:14:14,483 Boiling pitch is poured onto somebody's skin. 1378 01:14:15,717 --> 01:14:19,697 The burns are unbelievable. 1379 01:14:19,721 --> 01:14:25,470 And it's all part, also, of a kind of spectacle of violence 1380 01:14:25,494 --> 01:14:27,172 that is a really important part of this. 1381 01:14:27,196 --> 01:14:29,607 And this is why the feathers are put on, in part. 1382 01:14:29,631 --> 01:14:31,676 It's that you are trying to humiliate 1383 01:14:31,700 --> 01:14:34,245 and shame the victim. 1384 01:14:34,269 --> 01:14:35,947 [Shouting continues] 1385 01:14:35,971 --> 01:14:38,650 Narrator: Hundreds jeered as Malcolm was pulled 1386 01:14:38,674 --> 01:14:41,286 through the freezing streets for 5 hours. 1387 01:14:41,310 --> 01:14:45,323 His assailants stopped here and there to whip him. 1388 01:14:45,347 --> 01:14:50,795 It would be 8 weeks before he was able to leave his bed. 1389 01:14:50,819 --> 01:14:53,531 ♪ 1390 01:14:53,555 --> 01:14:55,500 Voice: Boston has been the ringleader 1391 01:14:55,524 --> 01:14:57,669 of all violence and opposition 1392 01:14:57,693 --> 01:15:01,206 to the execution of the laws of this country. 1393 01:15:01,230 --> 01:15:05,477 Boston has not only therefore to answer for its own violence 1394 01:15:05,501 --> 01:15:09,347 but for having incited other places to tumults. 1395 01:15:09,371 --> 01:15:12,517 Lord North, Prime Minister. 1396 01:15:12,541 --> 01:15:14,519 Narrator: Lord North hoped, he said, 1397 01:15:14,543 --> 01:15:18,089 to make America lie "prostrate at his feet." 1398 01:15:18,113 --> 01:15:22,227 They "must fear you," he added, "before they will love you." 1399 01:15:22,251 --> 01:15:24,829 Now that they had destroyed Crown property, 1400 01:15:24,853 --> 01:15:29,091 it was clear that much of America was not afraid. 1401 01:15:30,058 --> 01:15:33,338 North would do his best to change that. 1402 01:15:33,362 --> 01:15:37,909 In the process, he would try to end every vestige of self-rule 1403 01:15:37,933 --> 01:15:42,146 prized by the people of Massachusetts. 1404 01:15:42,170 --> 01:15:46,017 First, the Prime Minister convinced the Parliament 1405 01:15:46,041 --> 01:15:50,054 to repeal that colony's long-standing charter, 1406 01:15:50,078 --> 01:15:52,957 then dissolved the elected assembly again 1407 01:15:52,981 --> 01:15:55,660 and limited each town and village 1408 01:15:55,684 --> 01:15:59,397 to just one town meeting a year. 1409 01:15:59,421 --> 01:16:03,535 The port of Boston would be closed until all its residents 1410 01:16:03,559 --> 01:16:08,973 had paid in full for the tea just 60 of them had destroyed. 1411 01:16:08,997 --> 01:16:13,678 That came to nearly 5 British pounds per taxpayer... 1412 01:16:13,702 --> 01:16:17,615 More than a craftsman made in a month. 1413 01:16:17,639 --> 01:16:20,985 It means no ships going in, no ships going out, 1414 01:16:21,009 --> 01:16:24,389 no work for sailors, no work for merchants. 1415 01:16:24,413 --> 01:16:27,125 It means hunger in Boston. 1416 01:16:27,149 --> 01:16:29,928 Narrator: British officers were also now empowered 1417 01:16:29,952 --> 01:16:32,630 to commandeer vacant homes and barns 1418 01:16:32,654 --> 01:16:34,999 to quarter their troops. 1419 01:16:35,023 --> 01:16:37,802 Americans would denounce the new laws 1420 01:16:37,826 --> 01:16:40,371 as the "Intolerable Acts." 1421 01:16:40,395 --> 01:16:42,307 ♪ 1422 01:16:42,331 --> 01:16:43,975 In England on leave, 1423 01:16:43,999 --> 01:16:47,845 General Gage was summoned by George III. 1424 01:16:47,869 --> 01:16:50,982 He told the King what he wanted to hear. 1425 01:16:51,006 --> 01:16:52,717 The people of Massachusetts 1426 01:16:52,741 --> 01:16:55,720 pretended to be "lyons," he said. 1427 01:16:55,744 --> 01:16:58,189 But if England sent in enough troops, 1428 01:16:58,213 --> 01:17:02,594 they would undoubtedly "prove very meek." 1429 01:17:02,618 --> 01:17:05,530 General Gage was given a new title... 1430 01:17:05,554 --> 01:17:07,498 Governor of Massachusetts 1431 01:17:07,522 --> 01:17:09,734 in addition to Commander-in-Chief... 1432 01:17:09,758 --> 01:17:13,805 And a new mission: to enforce the new Acts, 1433 01:17:13,829 --> 01:17:16,040 end Boston's resistance, 1434 01:17:16,064 --> 01:17:18,443 and demonstrate to all the colonies 1435 01:17:18,467 --> 01:17:22,714 the folly of defying their King and Parliament. 1436 01:17:22,738 --> 01:17:27,619 Gage and 4 fresh regiments set sail for Boston 1437 01:17:27,643 --> 01:17:31,656 in mid-April, 1774. 1438 01:17:31,680 --> 01:17:33,191 [Sheet flapping] 1439 01:17:33,215 --> 01:17:34,359 Christopher Brown: The British Government sees this 1440 01:17:34,383 --> 01:17:35,860 as a police action, 1441 01:17:35,884 --> 01:17:37,929 that if they can punish Boston 1442 01:17:37,953 --> 01:17:41,933 and shut down Massachusetts, contain the rebellion, 1443 01:17:41,957 --> 01:17:45,269 that the other colonies would get the message 1444 01:17:45,293 --> 01:17:49,273 and that order could be restored with some grumbling. 1445 01:17:49,297 --> 01:17:53,311 I think the British Government is genuinely surprised, um, 1446 01:17:53,335 --> 01:17:56,614 to see the ways that the other 12 colonies 1447 01:17:56,638 --> 01:18:00,952 rally to Massachusetts' cause. 1448 01:18:00,976 --> 01:18:03,921 Taylor: You are not gonna have an American Revolution 1449 01:18:03,945 --> 01:18:06,924 unless you have Virginia onboard. 1450 01:18:06,948 --> 01:18:10,662 And the leaders of Massachusetts understood this. 1451 01:18:10,686 --> 01:18:12,497 It was not going to be easy. 1452 01:18:12,521 --> 01:18:15,833 There were deep prejudices between the two regions 1453 01:18:15,857 --> 01:18:18,770 because of the differences in their ethnic mix 1454 01:18:18,794 --> 01:18:22,407 and in the nature of their cultures. 1455 01:18:22,431 --> 01:18:25,777 And they hadn't previously had any kind of trust 1456 01:18:25,801 --> 01:18:27,469 for one another. 1457 01:18:29,037 --> 01:18:31,549 Narrator: But in Virginia, the House of Burgesses 1458 01:18:31,573 --> 01:18:35,987 declared a day of "fasting, humiliation and prayer" 1459 01:18:36,011 --> 01:18:39,357 in solidarity with the people of Massachusetts. 1460 01:18:39,381 --> 01:18:42,160 And when the royal governor Lord Dunmore 1461 01:18:42,184 --> 01:18:45,697 declared the very idea an insult to the King 1462 01:18:45,721 --> 01:18:47,932 and dissolved the assembly, 1463 01:18:47,956 --> 01:18:53,204 its members reconvened in Williamsburg's Raleigh Tavern. 1464 01:18:53,228 --> 01:18:56,207 The Virginians warned that "an attack made 1465 01:18:56,231 --> 01:18:59,777 "on one of our sister colonies is an attack made 1466 01:18:59,801 --> 01:19:02,180 on all British America" 1467 01:19:02,204 --> 01:19:04,649 and called for a "Continental Congress" 1468 01:19:04,673 --> 01:19:07,085 to meet in Philadelphia in September 1469 01:19:07,109 --> 01:19:11,622 to see how the colonies might resist together. 1470 01:19:11,646 --> 01:19:14,926 All the 13 colonies except Georgia... 1471 01:19:14,950 --> 01:19:17,762 Where people were afraid to lose British protection 1472 01:19:17,786 --> 01:19:19,997 in the event of an Indian war... 1473 01:19:20,021 --> 01:19:22,467 Agreed to take part. 1474 01:19:22,491 --> 01:19:26,571 The Prime Minister's effort to intimidate the other colonies 1475 01:19:26,595 --> 01:19:28,873 by punishing Massachusetts 1476 01:19:28,897 --> 01:19:32,510 had instead begun to unite them. 1477 01:19:32,534 --> 01:19:34,011 [Bell tolling] 1478 01:19:34,035 --> 01:19:35,880 Voice: Lebanon, Connecticut. 1479 01:19:35,904 --> 01:19:37,849 Yesterday, the bells of the town 1480 01:19:37,873 --> 01:19:40,618 early began to toll a solemn peal, 1481 01:19:40,642 --> 01:19:42,353 and continued the whole day. 1482 01:19:42,377 --> 01:19:46,090 The shops in town were all shut and silent. 1483 01:19:46,114 --> 01:19:48,359 Our brethren in Boston are suffering 1484 01:19:48,383 --> 01:19:51,596 for their noble exertions in the cause of liberty... 1485 01:19:51,620 --> 01:19:54,465 The common cause of all America... 1486 01:19:54,489 --> 01:19:57,769 And we are heartily willing to unite our little powers 1487 01:19:57,793 --> 01:20:01,105 for the just rights and privileges of our country. [Lebanon Town Meeting] 1488 01:20:01,129 --> 01:20:02,840 ♪ 1489 01:20:02,864 --> 01:20:04,942 Narrator: Now news of a new offense 1490 01:20:04,966 --> 01:20:08,045 by the King's ministers... The Quebec Act... 1491 01:20:08,069 --> 01:20:12,950 Would bind them still more tightly together. 1492 01:20:12,974 --> 01:20:16,087 Jasanoff: The British decide that it would make sense 1493 01:20:16,111 --> 01:20:19,423 to grant a degree of civil liberties 1494 01:20:19,447 --> 01:20:22,960 to those French-speaking Catholics in Quebec 1495 01:20:22,984 --> 01:20:27,265 in order to integrate them into British governance 1496 01:20:27,289 --> 01:20:29,200 and make sure that they have a population 1497 01:20:29,224 --> 01:20:32,603 that can sort of live with British authority. 1498 01:20:32,627 --> 01:20:33,971 Narrator: Protestants, 1499 01:20:33,995 --> 01:20:36,574 who equated the Papacy with despotism, 1500 01:20:36,598 --> 01:20:38,309 were outraged. 1501 01:20:38,333 --> 01:20:43,080 The Act also extended Quebec's borders west and south, 1502 01:20:43,104 --> 01:20:46,017 adding to the fury of land speculators 1503 01:20:46,041 --> 01:20:48,386 and would-be settlers. 1504 01:20:48,410 --> 01:20:50,788 DuVal: To British colonists, the Quebec Act 1505 01:20:50,812 --> 01:20:53,591 was another slap in the face. 1506 01:20:53,615 --> 01:20:57,395 The British Government is looking more and more, 1507 01:20:57,419 --> 01:21:00,865 with each of these acts, like the problem, 1508 01:21:00,889 --> 01:21:04,769 instead of the protector that it's supposed to be. 1509 01:21:04,793 --> 01:21:06,771 ♪ 1510 01:21:06,795 --> 01:21:08,272 Narrator: That summer, 1511 01:21:08,296 --> 01:21:10,241 beginning in Western Massachusetts, 1512 01:21:10,265 --> 01:21:14,545 in town after town, crowds of angry armed men 1513 01:21:14,569 --> 01:21:18,249 forced the resignations of the councilors, judges, 1514 01:21:18,273 --> 01:21:22,420 and magistrates appointed by General Gage. 1515 01:21:22,444 --> 01:21:27,916 Juries refused to serve. Courts closed down. 1516 01:21:29,284 --> 01:21:32,864 When Gage learned that rebels in the towns surrounding Boston 1517 01:21:32,888 --> 01:21:36,901 had quietly begun to remove some of the precious gunpowder 1518 01:21:36,925 --> 01:21:39,570 every town was allotted for its defense, 1519 01:21:39,594 --> 01:21:43,407 he sent 250 soldiers to the stone powder-house 1520 01:21:43,431 --> 01:21:46,744 in Charles Town to confiscate it. 1521 01:21:46,768 --> 01:21:51,916 Angry colonists saw the raid as yet another provocation. 1522 01:21:51,940 --> 01:21:54,318 [Horse nickers] The Massachusetts Assembly 1523 01:21:54,342 --> 01:21:58,356 defiantly reconstituted itself and soon set about 1524 01:21:58,380 --> 01:22:02,159 creating a clandestine provincial fighting force, 1525 01:22:02,183 --> 01:22:04,996 tens of thousands strong. 1526 01:22:05,020 --> 01:22:06,364 Man: March! 1527 01:22:06,388 --> 01:22:08,165 There had been organized town militias 1528 01:22:08,189 --> 01:22:10,968 in New England since the earliest days 1529 01:22:10,992 --> 01:22:13,471 in case of trouble with Indians. 1530 01:22:13,495 --> 01:22:17,074 Every man between the ages of 16 and 60 1531 01:22:17,098 --> 01:22:20,945 was expected to arm himself and take part. 1532 01:22:20,969 --> 01:22:22,346 [Horse nickers] 1533 01:22:22,370 --> 01:22:24,682 It was also now suggested that each town 1534 01:22:24,706 --> 01:22:29,253 assign a quarter of its militiamen to a special company, 1535 01:22:29,277 --> 01:22:34,392 ready to act, they said, at "a minute's warning." 1536 01:22:34,416 --> 01:22:38,729 Neighboring colonies followed the Massachusetts example. 1537 01:22:38,753 --> 01:22:39,931 [Tapping] 1538 01:22:39,955 --> 01:22:42,600 The Connecticut Assembly urged every town 1539 01:22:42,624 --> 01:22:48,139 to double its supply of gunpowder, ball, and flints. 1540 01:22:48,163 --> 01:22:51,275 Rhode Island ordered all militia officers 1541 01:22:51,299 --> 01:22:54,512 to make their men ready to "march to the assistance 1542 01:22:54,536 --> 01:22:58,740 of any Sister Colony" whenever they were needed. 1543 01:23:00,208 --> 01:23:01,652 Voice: The line of conduct 1544 01:23:01,676 --> 01:23:03,487 seems now chalked out. 1545 01:23:03,511 --> 01:23:07,325 The New England governments are in a state of rebellion. 1546 01:23:07,349 --> 01:23:10,695 Blows must decide whether they are to be subject 1547 01:23:10,719 --> 01:23:14,131 to this country or independent. 1548 01:23:14,155 --> 01:23:16,691 King George III. 1549 01:23:19,661 --> 01:23:21,806 ♪ 1550 01:23:21,830 --> 01:23:23,474 Voice: Philadelphia... 1551 01:23:23,498 --> 01:23:27,878 The regularity and elegance of this city are very striking. 1552 01:23:27,902 --> 01:23:32,149 It is situated upon a neck of land about 2 miles wide 1553 01:23:32,173 --> 01:23:35,443 between the River Delaware and the River Schuylkill. 1554 01:23:36,678 --> 01:23:40,091 And the uniformity of this city is disagreeable to some. 1555 01:23:40,115 --> 01:23:42,093 I like it. 1556 01:23:42,117 --> 01:23:44,228 Front Street is near the river, then 2nd Street, 1557 01:23:44,252 --> 01:23:47,898 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th. 1558 01:23:47,922 --> 01:23:51,268 The cross streets are named for forest and fruit trees... 1559 01:23:51,292 --> 01:23:54,271 Pear Street, Apple Street, Walnut Street, 1560 01:23:54,295 --> 01:23:57,408 Chestnut Street, et cetera. 1561 01:23:57,432 --> 01:23:59,710 John Adams. 1562 01:23:59,734 --> 01:24:00,911 [Bell tolling] 1563 01:24:00,935 --> 01:24:03,280 Narrator: In the autumn of 1774, 1564 01:24:03,304 --> 01:24:05,750 when 12 colonies sent delegates 1565 01:24:05,774 --> 01:24:07,651 to the Continental Congress, 1566 01:24:07,675 --> 01:24:11,055 Philadelphia was the logical place to assemble. 1567 01:24:11,079 --> 01:24:13,657 It was home to some 40,000 people 1568 01:24:13,681 --> 01:24:16,827 and was the most populous city in British America... 1569 01:24:16,851 --> 01:24:21,766 Larger than New York, more than twice the size of Boston. 1570 01:24:21,790 --> 01:24:26,103 The delegates met in the newly constructed Carpenters' Hall, 1571 01:24:26,127 --> 01:24:29,106 hoping to develop a common means of resistance 1572 01:24:29,130 --> 01:24:33,611 while still somehow remaining within the Empire. 1573 01:24:33,635 --> 01:24:35,079 It would not be easy. 1574 01:24:35,103 --> 01:24:38,616 Adjacent colonies quarreled over borders. 1575 01:24:38,640 --> 01:24:41,919 Small ones feared domination by large ones. 1576 01:24:41,943 --> 01:24:47,992 And half the delegates were lawyers, fond of arguing. 1577 01:24:48,016 --> 01:24:49,460 Voice: This assembly is like 1578 01:24:49,484 --> 01:24:51,429 no other that ever existed. 1579 01:24:51,453 --> 01:24:54,131 Every man in it is a "great man"... 1580 01:24:54,155 --> 01:24:57,334 An orator, a critic, a statesman... and therefore 1581 01:24:57,358 --> 01:25:00,538 every man upon every question must show his oratory, 1582 01:25:00,562 --> 01:25:04,241 his criticism, and his political abilities. [John Adams] 1583 01:25:04,265 --> 01:25:05,943 [Men arguing] 1584 01:25:05,967 --> 01:25:09,613 Schiff: You have a group of men who have hailed from 1585 01:25:09,637 --> 01:25:11,515 essentially different countries, 1586 01:25:11,539 --> 01:25:13,317 who observe different religions, 1587 01:25:13,341 --> 01:25:14,919 who conform to different habits, 1588 01:25:14,943 --> 01:25:17,822 who are really meeting each other for the first time. 1589 01:25:17,846 --> 01:25:21,659 No one is really sure what to do, at first. 1590 01:25:21,683 --> 01:25:23,360 Is this meant to be a negotiation? 1591 01:25:23,384 --> 01:25:25,463 Is this meant to be another boycott effort? 1592 01:25:25,487 --> 01:25:27,898 Is this meant to be some kind of serious rupture 1593 01:25:27,922 --> 01:25:29,567 with the Mother Country? 1594 01:25:29,591 --> 01:25:32,837 Voice: Their plan is to frighten and intimidate. 1595 01:25:32,861 --> 01:25:35,406 But supposing the worst, you have nothing to fear 1596 01:25:35,430 --> 01:25:38,843 from anyone but the New England provinces. 1597 01:25:38,867 --> 01:25:41,278 As for the Southern people, they talk very high, 1598 01:25:41,302 --> 01:25:43,314 but it's nothing more than words. 1599 01:25:43,338 --> 01:25:46,350 Their numerous slaves in the bowels of their country 1600 01:25:46,374 --> 01:25:50,154 and the Indians at their backs will always keep them quiet. 1601 01:25:50,178 --> 01:25:51,846 Thomas Gage. 1602 01:25:53,081 --> 01:25:55,259 Narrator: General Gage assured London 1603 01:25:55,283 --> 01:25:57,962 the Congress was a "motley crew," 1604 01:25:57,986 --> 01:26:01,298 unlikely to achieve anything. 1605 01:26:01,322 --> 01:26:04,268 The "motley crew" included some of the colonies' 1606 01:26:04,292 --> 01:26:06,303 leading political figures... 1607 01:26:06,327 --> 01:26:09,807 Samuel and John Adams from Massachusetts; 1608 01:26:09,831 --> 01:26:13,144 John Jay, a young attorney from New York, 1609 01:26:13,168 --> 01:26:17,248 convinced some solution short of war with the Mother Country 1610 01:26:17,272 --> 01:26:18,849 must still be found; 1611 01:26:18,873 --> 01:26:22,953 and Patrick Henry, who argued that ties with Britain 1612 01:26:22,977 --> 01:26:24,889 had already been severed. 1613 01:26:24,913 --> 01:26:28,559 "The distinctions between Virginians, Pennsylvanians, 1614 01:26:28,583 --> 01:26:33,197 New Yorkers and New Englanders, are no more," Henry said. 1615 01:26:33,221 --> 01:26:37,468 "I am not a Virginian, but an American." 1616 01:26:37,492 --> 01:26:42,406 But a fellow delegate from Virginia spoke for many. 1617 01:26:42,430 --> 01:26:45,142 "Independency" was not the wish 1618 01:26:45,166 --> 01:26:49,370 of any "thinking man in all North America." 1619 01:26:50,505 --> 01:26:52,650 Voice: I shall not undertake to say 1620 01:26:52,674 --> 01:26:55,019 where the line between Great Britain 1621 01:26:55,043 --> 01:26:57,188 and the colonies should be drawn, 1622 01:26:57,212 --> 01:26:58,923 but I am clearly of opinion 1623 01:26:58,947 --> 01:27:00,858 that one ought to be drawn. 1624 01:27:00,882 --> 01:27:04,428 The crisis is arrived when we must assert our rights 1625 01:27:04,452 --> 01:27:08,966 or submit to every imposition that can be heaped upon us; 1626 01:27:08,990 --> 01:27:13,571 till custom and use will make us as tame and abject slaves 1627 01:27:13,595 --> 01:27:18,442 as the Blacks we rule over with such arbitrary sway. 1628 01:27:18,466 --> 01:27:20,635 George Washington. 1629 01:27:21,970 --> 01:27:26,250 Ellis: Most people in 1774 would say they're British. 1630 01:27:26,274 --> 01:27:29,220 They wouldn't say they're Americans. 1631 01:27:29,244 --> 01:27:35,226 The change happens in '75, '76, and the major source of it 1632 01:27:35,250 --> 01:27:40,064 is a thing that's created called the "Continental Association." 1633 01:27:40,088 --> 01:27:44,468 The Association is an engine for creating revolution. 1634 01:27:44,492 --> 01:27:48,539 Narrator: The Continental Association was not a committee, 1635 01:27:48,563 --> 01:27:51,709 but a phased program that forbade Americans 1636 01:27:51,733 --> 01:27:57,448 from importing British goods as of December 1, 1774, 1637 01:27:57,472 --> 01:28:03,153 from consuming British goods as of March 1, 1775, 1638 01:28:03,177 --> 01:28:07,157 and barred them from exporting American goods to Britain 1639 01:28:07,181 --> 01:28:09,560 beginning on September 10th... 1640 01:28:09,584 --> 01:28:13,855 If London still had not given in to their demands. 1641 01:28:14,889 --> 01:28:17,635 Among the so-called "British goods" 1642 01:28:17,659 --> 01:28:20,137 the delegates intended to boycott 1643 01:28:20,161 --> 01:28:22,106 were enslaved Africans... 1644 01:28:22,130 --> 01:28:24,341 Whom they agreed not to import 1645 01:28:24,365 --> 01:28:28,436 after December 1, 1775. 1646 01:28:29,637 --> 01:28:31,882 The delegates made plans to hold a second 1647 01:28:31,906 --> 01:28:36,487 Continental Congress in Philadelphia in 6 months. 1648 01:28:36,511 --> 01:28:40,190 "We must change our Habits," John Adams wrote, 1649 01:28:40,214 --> 01:28:42,660 "our Prejudices, our Palates, 1650 01:28:42,684 --> 01:28:45,696 "our Taste in Dress, Furniture, 1651 01:28:45,720 --> 01:28:49,733 Equipage, Architecture, et cetera." 1652 01:28:49,757 --> 01:28:52,603 To make sure Americans did so, 1653 01:28:52,627 --> 01:28:55,506 every community was expected to establish its 1654 01:28:55,530 --> 01:28:58,909 own Committee of Safety in order to 1655 01:28:58,933 --> 01:29:03,514 "attentively observe the conduct of all persons." 1656 01:29:03,538 --> 01:29:06,183 By the spring of 1775, 1657 01:29:06,207 --> 01:29:11,255 some 7,000 men had been elected to serve on such committees 1658 01:29:11,279 --> 01:29:12,956 throughout the colonies, 1659 01:29:12,980 --> 01:29:17,494 tasked with spying on their neighbors, opening their mail, 1660 01:29:17,518 --> 01:29:19,863 poring over merchants' records 1661 01:29:19,887 --> 01:29:23,867 in search of suspicious transactions. 1662 01:29:23,891 --> 01:29:27,671 Most of those suspected of failing to observe the boycott 1663 01:29:27,695 --> 01:29:30,908 or who were overheard criticizing resistance 1664 01:29:30,932 --> 01:29:35,479 were ostracized, their names and supposed crimes 1665 01:29:35,503 --> 01:29:37,781 printed in the local newspaper, 1666 01:29:37,805 --> 01:29:41,885 their neighbors forbidden even to speak with them. 1667 01:29:41,909 --> 01:29:43,120 [Men shouting] 1668 01:29:43,144 --> 01:29:47,024 Ellis: Every town, every hamlet, every village 1669 01:29:47,048 --> 01:29:50,761 has a Committee of Safety and Inspection. 1670 01:29:50,785 --> 01:29:52,796 And they go house to house. 1671 01:29:52,820 --> 01:29:54,865 You have to take a "Loyalty Oath." 1672 01:29:54,889 --> 01:29:57,568 There's millions of conversations. 1673 01:29:57,592 --> 01:30:00,962 And that's when the change happens. 1674 01:30:02,163 --> 01:30:04,208 Voice: If we must be enslaved, 1675 01:30:04,232 --> 01:30:05,743 let it be by a King at least, 1676 01:30:05,767 --> 01:30:10,047 not by a parcel of upstart, lawless committeemen. 1677 01:30:10,071 --> 01:30:12,082 If I must be devoured, let me be devoured 1678 01:30:12,106 --> 01:30:15,652 by the jaws of a lion, and not gnawed to death 1679 01:30:15,676 --> 01:30:17,721 by rats and vermin. 1680 01:30:17,745 --> 01:30:19,981 Reverend Samuel Seabury. 1681 01:30:21,115 --> 01:30:24,728 Narrator: Harassed, shamed, shunned, censored, 1682 01:30:24,752 --> 01:30:28,599 sometimes attacked, opponents of resistance... 1683 01:30:28,623 --> 01:30:32,002 Called "Loyalists"... Saw the Committees of Safety 1684 01:30:32,026 --> 01:30:35,797 as more tyrannical than Parliament could ever be. 1685 01:30:37,131 --> 01:30:39,810 Nathaniel Philbrick: There was a sense of brutality 1686 01:30:39,834 --> 01:30:42,679 that went with the Patriot cause that said, 1687 01:30:42,703 --> 01:30:45,916 "No, you are wrong, and we are right." 1688 01:30:45,940 --> 01:30:48,585 To be a Loyalist didn't mean that you were evil. 1689 01:30:48,609 --> 01:30:53,690 It just meant that you felt a great sense of loyalty 1690 01:30:53,714 --> 01:30:56,059 to the country that had made the prosperity 1691 01:30:56,083 --> 01:30:59,196 that was the American colonies at this point possible. 1692 01:30:59,220 --> 01:31:02,800 Taylor: The Loyalists are essentially the conservatives. 1693 01:31:02,824 --> 01:31:05,169 They're the people who believe in law and order. 1694 01:31:05,193 --> 01:31:08,238 They don't like mobs. They don't like committees 1695 01:31:08,262 --> 01:31:09,306 telling them what to do. 1696 01:31:09,330 --> 01:31:10,707 [Thunder] 1697 01:31:10,731 --> 01:31:14,278 They don't see King George III as a tyrant. 1698 01:31:14,302 --> 01:31:16,513 Voice: We are preparing for war. 1699 01:31:16,537 --> 01:31:18,816 To fight with whom? 1700 01:31:18,840 --> 01:31:20,951 Not with France and Spain, 1701 01:31:20,975 --> 01:31:23,720 whom we have been used to think our natural enemies... 1702 01:31:23,744 --> 01:31:27,825 But with Great Britain, our parent country. 1703 01:31:27,849 --> 01:31:30,961 My heart recoils at the thought. 1704 01:31:30,985 --> 01:31:32,987 Andrew Eliot. 1705 01:31:34,188 --> 01:31:36,600 [Sea gulls crying] 1706 01:31:36,624 --> 01:31:38,001 Voice: If a civil war commences 1707 01:31:38,025 --> 01:31:40,537 between Great Britain and her colonies, 1708 01:31:40,561 --> 01:31:43,774 either the Mother Country, by one great exertion, 1709 01:31:43,798 --> 01:31:46,743 may ruin both herself and America, 1710 01:31:46,767 --> 01:31:49,580 or the Americans, by a lingering contest, 1711 01:31:49,604 --> 01:31:52,049 will gain an independency. 1712 01:31:52,073 --> 01:31:55,686 And in this case and whilst a new, a flourishing, 1713 01:31:55,710 --> 01:31:58,789 and an extensive empire of freemen is established 1714 01:31:58,813 --> 01:32:00,757 on the other side of the Atlantic, 1715 01:32:00,781 --> 01:32:03,427 you will be left to the bare possession 1716 01:32:03,451 --> 01:32:05,762 of your foggy islands. 1717 01:32:05,786 --> 01:32:08,022 Catharine Macaulay. 1718 01:32:09,123 --> 01:32:12,102 Narrator: General Gage now warned London: 1719 01:32:12,126 --> 01:32:14,838 "The whole Continent has embraced the cause 1720 01:32:14,862 --> 01:32:17,174 of the town of Boston." 1721 01:32:17,198 --> 01:32:20,344 Voice: If you think 10,000 men sufficient, 1722 01:32:20,368 --> 01:32:21,778 send 20,000. 1723 01:32:21,802 --> 01:32:24,815 You will save both blood and treasure in the end. 1724 01:32:24,839 --> 01:32:28,785 A large force will terrify and engage many to join you. 1725 01:32:28,809 --> 01:32:31,388 A middling one will encourage resistance 1726 01:32:31,412 --> 01:32:33,991 and gain no friends. [Gage] 1727 01:32:34,015 --> 01:32:37,127 Narrator: But General Gage was sent far fewer men 1728 01:32:37,151 --> 01:32:38,729 than he'd hoped for. 1729 01:32:38,753 --> 01:32:40,964 And he was ordered to move decisively 1730 01:32:40,988 --> 01:32:44,635 against the rebels and arrest their leaders. 1731 01:32:44,659 --> 01:32:49,172 Samuel Adams and John Hancock had fled Boston 1732 01:32:49,196 --> 01:32:53,844 and found refuge with friends in Lexington, a small town... 1733 01:32:53,868 --> 01:32:57,714 Just 750 people and 400 cows... 1734 01:32:57,738 --> 01:33:00,717 On the road to the larger town of Concord, 1735 01:33:00,741 --> 01:33:04,221 some 18 miles northwest of Boston. 1736 01:33:04,245 --> 01:33:05,689 [Drums beating rhythmically] 1737 01:33:05,713 --> 01:33:07,791 Gage planned to send troops 1738 01:33:07,815 --> 01:33:10,093 through Lexington to Concord, 1739 01:33:10,117 --> 01:33:12,963 where he had been told arms and provisions 1740 01:33:12,987 --> 01:33:17,200 meant for a sizeable rebel army were hidden. 1741 01:33:17,224 --> 01:33:21,738 Success would depend on the strictest secrecy. 1742 01:33:21,762 --> 01:33:23,140 [Dog barking] 1743 01:33:23,164 --> 01:33:27,477 Late on the evening of April 18, 1775, 1744 01:33:27,501 --> 01:33:30,581 700 British regulars were awakened, 1745 01:33:30,605 --> 01:33:32,583 not told where they were going, 1746 01:33:32,607 --> 01:33:37,421 and silently marched through the dark empty streets of Boston. 1747 01:33:37,445 --> 01:33:40,257 A fleet of boats was waiting to row them across 1748 01:33:40,281 --> 01:33:44,127 the Charles River to the Cambridge marshes. 1749 01:33:44,151 --> 01:33:46,229 For all the care the British had taken 1750 01:33:46,253 --> 01:33:49,800 to keep their plans secret, Dr. Joseph Warren, 1751 01:33:49,824 --> 01:33:54,204 one of Boston's leading rebels, got wind of it. 1752 01:33:54,228 --> 01:33:56,506 You don't move 1,000 men out of Boston 1753 01:33:56,530 --> 01:34:01,878 in the middle of the night without arousing a response. 1754 01:34:01,902 --> 01:34:06,249 American rebel leaders send warning. 1755 01:34:06,273 --> 01:34:11,622 Two men, William Dawes and a silversmith named Paul Revere, 1756 01:34:11,646 --> 01:34:16,627 are sent in different routes to alert Samuel Adams and others 1757 01:34:16,651 --> 01:34:18,595 in Lexington that 1758 01:34:18,619 --> 01:34:20,921 the British, in fact, are coming. 1759 01:34:22,823 --> 01:34:24,801 Narrator: Before the two men left, 1760 01:34:24,825 --> 01:34:27,471 Revere saw to it that 2 lanterns appeared 1761 01:34:27,495 --> 01:34:31,508 in the belfry of the Old North Church just long enough 1762 01:34:31,532 --> 01:34:35,045 to alert sympathizers on the mainland that the regulars 1763 01:34:35,069 --> 01:34:37,714 were crossing by water to Cambridge, 1764 01:34:37,738 --> 01:34:40,450 not marching overland through Roxbury. 1765 01:34:40,474 --> 01:34:42,386 [Racing hoofbeats] 1766 01:34:42,410 --> 01:34:43,720 Voice: Time will never erase 1767 01:34:43,744 --> 01:34:45,889 the horrors of that midnight cry, 1768 01:34:45,913 --> 01:34:49,259 when we were roused from the benign slumbers of the season 1769 01:34:49,283 --> 01:34:50,894 with the dire alarm, 1770 01:34:50,918 --> 01:34:54,965 that 1,000 of the troops of George III were gone forth 1771 01:34:54,989 --> 01:34:56,733 to murder the peaceful inhabitants 1772 01:34:56,757 --> 01:34:59,436 of the surrounding villages. 1773 01:34:59,460 --> 01:35:01,004 Hannah Winthrop. 1774 01:35:01,028 --> 01:35:03,974 ♪ 1775 01:35:03,998 --> 01:35:05,542 Narrator: Just after midnight 1776 01:35:05,566 --> 01:35:10,013 on the morning of April 19, 1775, 1777 01:35:10,037 --> 01:35:12,549 Revere reached Lexington and the house 1778 01:35:12,573 --> 01:35:15,252 where Adams and Hancock were hiding. 1779 01:35:15,276 --> 01:35:18,855 "The Regulars are coming out!" he shouted. 1780 01:35:18,879 --> 01:35:22,592 The two rebel leaders fled into the night. 1781 01:35:22,616 --> 01:35:24,127 [Bell tolling] 1782 01:35:24,151 --> 01:35:27,431 Lexington's militiamen, summoned from their beds, 1783 01:35:27,455 --> 01:35:31,134 dressed, gathered up whatever weapons they happened to own, 1784 01:35:31,158 --> 01:35:34,271 and hurried to the town green. 1785 01:35:34,295 --> 01:35:38,108 Their commander was Captain John Parker, a farmer, 1786 01:35:38,132 --> 01:35:42,479 who, like many of his 70 men, had fought alongside the British 1787 01:35:42,503 --> 01:35:45,048 in the French and Indian War. 1788 01:35:45,072 --> 01:35:47,084 ♪ 1789 01:35:47,108 --> 01:35:49,219 Then, shortly before dawn, 1790 01:35:49,243 --> 01:35:52,389 someone spotted 6 companies of redcoats... 1791 01:35:52,413 --> 01:35:57,461 About 250 men... approaching at a rapid clip. 1792 01:35:57,485 --> 01:36:01,498 On horseback in the lead was Major John Pitcairn, 1793 01:36:01,522 --> 01:36:07,370 a Scottish veteran with nothing but scorn for colonists. 1794 01:36:07,394 --> 01:36:10,574 Captain Parker knew he could not stop the British, 1795 01:36:10,598 --> 01:36:14,911 but he wanted to impress them with his men's resolve. 1796 01:36:14,935 --> 01:36:18,081 Parker told them not to fire first. 1797 01:36:18,105 --> 01:36:21,651 A British officer shouted, "Throw down your arms, 1798 01:36:21,675 --> 01:36:25,479 ye villians, ye rebels, and disperse." 1799 01:36:27,047 --> 01:36:29,126 Atkinson: They begin to disperse. 1800 01:36:29,150 --> 01:36:32,820 Many of them turn their backs and start to walk away. 1801 01:36:34,555 --> 01:36:36,266 [Click, gunshot] 1802 01:36:36,290 --> 01:36:38,702 A shot rings out. 1803 01:36:38,726 --> 01:36:41,638 No one knows where the shot came from. 1804 01:36:41,662 --> 01:36:43,240 Man: Fire! [Gunshots] 1805 01:36:43,264 --> 01:36:46,843 That leads to promiscuous shooting... 1806 01:36:46,867 --> 01:36:49,579 mostly by the British. 1807 01:36:49,603 --> 01:36:52,082 [Heavy gunfire] 1808 01:36:52,106 --> 01:36:54,618 It's not a battle. It's not a skirmish. 1809 01:36:54,642 --> 01:36:57,120 It's a massacre. 1810 01:36:57,144 --> 01:36:59,689 Now blood has been shed. 1811 01:36:59,713 --> 01:37:04,094 Now the man on your left has been shot through the head. 1812 01:37:04,118 --> 01:37:08,098 Your neighbor on the right has been badly wounded. 1813 01:37:08,122 --> 01:37:11,192 You can't put that genie back in the bottle. 1814 01:37:12,560 --> 01:37:16,706 Narrator: 8 militiamen died on the Lexington Green. 1815 01:37:16,730 --> 01:37:21,244 9 more were wounded. The rest fled. 1816 01:37:21,268 --> 01:37:23,547 Atkinson: The fact that the British have fired on 1817 01:37:23,571 --> 01:37:27,184 their own people, which is how it's viewed by the Americans, 1818 01:37:27,208 --> 01:37:30,320 causes an outrage that takes it to a new level 1819 01:37:30,344 --> 01:37:34,257 in terms of resistance, a feeling that, um... 1820 01:37:34,281 --> 01:37:37,494 "They're killing us, and the only thing 1821 01:37:37,518 --> 01:37:40,330 "that we can do in response is to kill them 1822 01:37:40,354 --> 01:37:45,635 as quickly as we can in numbers as profound as we can." 1823 01:37:45,659 --> 01:37:47,604 [Gunfire] Man: Charge! 1824 01:37:47,628 --> 01:37:50,807 Narrator: The British resumed their march toward Concord, 1825 01:37:50,831 --> 01:37:54,477 now just 6 1/2 miles away. 1826 01:37:54,501 --> 01:37:56,112 [Bell tolling] 1827 01:37:56,136 --> 01:37:59,416 Meanwhile, other riders fanned out across the countryside 1828 01:37:59,440 --> 01:38:01,952 to spread word of what had happened. 1829 01:38:01,976 --> 01:38:05,755 Militiamen from nearby towns rushed toward Concord. 1830 01:38:05,779 --> 01:38:10,994 "It seemed as if men came down from the clouds," one man said. 1831 01:38:11,018 --> 01:38:13,897 It was not memories of the Stamp Act 1832 01:38:13,921 --> 01:38:17,067 or the tax on tea that rallied them. 1833 01:38:17,091 --> 01:38:21,538 "We always had governed ourselves," one man remembered, 1834 01:38:21,562 --> 01:38:23,597 "and we always meant to." 1835 01:38:25,199 --> 01:38:28,578 In Acton, 6 miles to the west of Concord, 1836 01:38:28,602 --> 01:38:32,015 40 Minutemen gathered at the home of their commander, 1837 01:38:32,039 --> 01:38:36,677 Captain Isaac Davis, a 30-year-old gunsmith. 1838 01:38:38,145 --> 01:38:39,656 Voice: My husband said but little 1839 01:38:39,680 --> 01:38:40,957 that morning. 1840 01:38:40,981 --> 01:38:43,793 He seemed serious and thoughtful. 1841 01:38:43,817 --> 01:38:46,162 As he led the company from the house, 1842 01:38:46,186 --> 01:38:48,031 he turned himself round 1843 01:38:48,055 --> 01:38:51,101 and seemed to have something to communicate. 1844 01:38:51,125 --> 01:38:55,605 He only said, "Take good care of the children," 1845 01:38:55,629 --> 01:38:58,675 and was soon out of sight. 1846 01:38:58,699 --> 01:39:00,777 Hannah Davis. 1847 01:39:00,801 --> 01:39:02,846 [Gunfire] 1848 01:39:02,870 --> 01:39:04,881 Narrator: The British seized 2 bridges 1849 01:39:04,905 --> 01:39:06,283 spanning the Concord River 1850 01:39:06,307 --> 01:39:08,551 and spread throughout the town. 1851 01:39:08,575 --> 01:39:09,786 [Glass breaks] 1852 01:39:09,810 --> 01:39:11,288 They entered houses, 1853 01:39:11,312 --> 01:39:13,523 broke into barns and outbuildings. 1854 01:39:13,547 --> 01:39:16,793 Most of the arms and provisions they'd hoped to find 1855 01:39:16,817 --> 01:39:18,795 had either been shifted elsewhere 1856 01:39:18,819 --> 01:39:20,597 or successfully hidden. 1857 01:39:20,621 --> 01:39:24,467 But they did smash open 60 barrels of flour 1858 01:39:24,491 --> 01:39:27,804 and destroyed several wooden gun carriages 1859 01:39:27,828 --> 01:39:30,664 before setting it all ablaze. 1860 01:39:32,166 --> 01:39:35,512 Atkinson: The decision is made by the American commanders 1861 01:39:35,536 --> 01:39:38,348 on the scene that we're not gonna fight in Concord. 1862 01:39:38,372 --> 01:39:40,884 We will retreat across the Concord River, 1863 01:39:40,908 --> 01:39:42,252 across the North Bridge, 1864 01:39:42,276 --> 01:39:45,855 and we will wait for them on the other side. 1865 01:39:45,879 --> 01:39:49,559 Narrator: By then, some 450 militiamen 1866 01:39:49,583 --> 01:39:52,128 were clustered together on a hillside 1867 01:39:52,152 --> 01:39:54,497 overlooking the North Bridge, 1868 01:39:54,521 --> 01:39:58,535 still under strict orders not to fire upon the King's troops 1869 01:39:58,559 --> 01:40:01,371 unless fired upon. 1870 01:40:01,395 --> 01:40:04,441 But when they saw smoke rising from town, 1871 01:40:04,465 --> 01:40:08,445 they concluded that Concord itself was burning. 1872 01:40:08,469 --> 01:40:11,281 At North Bridge, the American soldiers, 1873 01:40:11,305 --> 01:40:14,818 the militiamen, see this and they say to each other, 1874 01:40:14,842 --> 01:40:16,353 "They're burning down our town. 1875 01:40:16,377 --> 01:40:18,588 Are we gonna let them burn down our town?" 1876 01:40:18,612 --> 01:40:23,259 And that's when they march to the bridge. 1877 01:40:23,283 --> 01:40:25,929 Narrator: 3 companies of British regulars 1878 01:40:25,953 --> 01:40:27,897 now guarded the bridge. 1879 01:40:27,921 --> 01:40:30,567 Isaac Davis, the gunsmith from Acton, 1880 01:40:30,591 --> 01:40:34,028 was picked to head the column sent towards it. 1881 01:40:35,295 --> 01:40:39,943 Suddenly, without orders, a redcoat fired his musket. 1882 01:40:39,967 --> 01:40:44,581 The front line of British troops followed with a ragged volley. 1883 01:40:44,605 --> 01:40:48,351 A musket ball tore through Isaac Davis' chest, 1884 01:40:48,375 --> 01:40:50,987 severing an artery and spraying blood 1885 01:40:51,011 --> 01:40:54,224 on two men coming up behind him. 1886 01:40:54,248 --> 01:40:57,394 Abner Hosmer, another member of his company, 1887 01:40:57,418 --> 01:40:59,562 was shot through the head. 1888 01:40:59,586 --> 01:41:02,532 "God damn them," a militia captain shouted. 1889 01:41:02,556 --> 01:41:04,567 "Fire men, fire!" 1890 01:41:04,591 --> 01:41:06,369 [Rapid gunfire] 1891 01:41:06,393 --> 01:41:11,074 At least 8 redcoats were hit, including 4 officers. 1892 01:41:11,098 --> 01:41:14,778 The British began to back away, then to run. 1893 01:41:14,802 --> 01:41:17,781 When one wounded soldier struggled to his feet 1894 01:41:17,805 --> 01:41:19,249 and tried to follow, 1895 01:41:19,273 --> 01:41:23,210 a militiaman split his skull with a hatchet. 1896 01:41:24,545 --> 01:41:28,124 The British regulars regrouped and began the long march 1897 01:41:28,148 --> 01:41:30,093 back to Boston. 1898 01:41:30,117 --> 01:41:32,529 Voice: Before the whole had quitted the town, 1899 01:41:32,553 --> 01:41:36,232 we were fired on from houses and behind trees. 1900 01:41:36,256 --> 01:41:38,301 And before we had gone half a mile, 1901 01:41:38,325 --> 01:41:41,738 we were fired on from all sides, but mostly from the rear, 1902 01:41:41,762 --> 01:41:43,673 where people had hid themselves in houses 1903 01:41:43,697 --> 01:41:46,342 till we had passed and then fired. [John Barker] 1904 01:41:46,366 --> 01:41:48,244 [Gunfire continues] 1905 01:41:48,268 --> 01:41:50,647 Atkinson: Every step of the way becomes more intense. 1906 01:41:50,671 --> 01:41:52,148 [Click, gunshot] 1907 01:41:52,172 --> 01:41:55,418 The sound of bullets winging around them. 1908 01:41:55,442 --> 01:41:59,456 The sound of bullets hitting soldiers, 1909 01:41:59,480 --> 01:42:03,226 this deep thud, as if you're beating a rug... 1910 01:42:03,250 --> 01:42:04,527 [Gunfire continues] 1911 01:42:04,551 --> 01:42:06,663 screams of men who've been wounded 1912 01:42:06,687 --> 01:42:07,831 in the British column. 1913 01:42:07,855 --> 01:42:09,132 [Horse nickers] 1914 01:42:09,156 --> 01:42:10,934 And it's beginning to look as though 1915 01:42:10,958 --> 01:42:13,603 the column could be destroyed. 1916 01:42:13,627 --> 01:42:16,039 Narrator: The British were in complete disarray 1917 01:42:16,063 --> 01:42:18,675 as they staggered into Lexington. 1918 01:42:18,699 --> 01:42:21,177 But now filling the road ahead of them 1919 01:42:21,201 --> 01:42:25,615 were more than 1,000 much-needed reinforcements. 1920 01:42:25,639 --> 01:42:26,749 [Cannonfire] 1921 01:42:26,773 --> 01:42:29,119 Two British cannon swept the Lexington Green, 1922 01:42:29,143 --> 01:42:33,156 and one ball smashed through the wall of the meetinghouse. 1923 01:42:33,180 --> 01:42:36,726 Several houses were set on fire, 1924 01:42:36,750 --> 01:42:40,263 but the redcoats were still outnumbered 1925 01:42:40,287 --> 01:42:43,199 and under relentless attack. 1926 01:42:43,223 --> 01:42:46,326 They resumed their retreat to Boston. 1927 01:42:47,094 --> 01:42:48,505 [Gunshot] 1928 01:42:48,529 --> 01:42:50,807 Voice: We retired for 15 miles 1929 01:42:50,831 --> 01:42:52,675 under an incessant fire, 1930 01:42:52,699 --> 01:42:55,945 which like a moving circle surrounded us 1931 01:42:55,969 --> 01:42:58,281 and followed us wherever we went. 1932 01:42:58,305 --> 01:43:01,851 It was impossible not to lose a good many men. 1933 01:43:01,875 --> 01:43:04,211 General Hugh Percy. 1934 01:43:05,312 --> 01:43:07,056 Conway: The retreat from Concord 1935 01:43:07,080 --> 01:43:11,995 was a truly horrifying event for many British soldiers. 1936 01:43:12,019 --> 01:43:14,497 It would have been a fairly traumatic experience, 1937 01:43:14,521 --> 01:43:18,101 to put it mildly, to be shot at from all sides 1938 01:43:18,125 --> 01:43:21,471 by people you didn't believe were going to shoot at you. 1939 01:43:21,495 --> 01:43:24,474 Narrator: In the village of Monatomy, 1940 01:43:24,498 --> 01:43:27,076 the fighting was house-to-house. 1941 01:43:27,100 --> 01:43:29,479 A militiaman named Amos Farnsworth 1942 01:43:29,503 --> 01:43:32,949 remembered entering a home to find a pool of blood 1943 01:43:32,973 --> 01:43:36,486 that half-covered his shoes. 1944 01:43:36,510 --> 01:43:38,688 Voice: The bloody field at Monatomy 1945 01:43:38,712 --> 01:43:42,225 was strewed with mangled bodies. 1946 01:43:42,249 --> 01:43:45,461 We met one affectionate father with a cart, 1947 01:43:45,485 --> 01:43:47,730 looking for his murderd son, 1948 01:43:47,754 --> 01:43:51,968 and picking up his neighbors who had fallen in battle. 1949 01:43:51,992 --> 01:43:54,261 Hannah Winthrop. 1950 01:43:56,129 --> 01:43:58,474 Narrator: In Boston, crowds watched 1951 01:43:58,498 --> 01:44:01,110 as the redcoats straggled back. 1952 01:44:01,134 --> 01:44:08,618 The British had suffered 273 casualties, including 73 dead. 1953 01:44:08,642 --> 01:44:11,120 ♪ 1954 01:44:11,144 --> 01:44:15,491 95 Americans had been hit over the course of the day, 1955 01:44:15,515 --> 01:44:17,961 49 of them fatally. 1956 01:44:17,985 --> 01:44:22,966 Family members moved along the road looking for missing sons 1957 01:44:22,990 --> 01:44:26,069 and brothers and fathers. 1958 01:44:26,093 --> 01:44:30,039 In Acton that evening, Hannah Davis and her 4 children 1959 01:44:30,063 --> 01:44:34,544 looked on as men of her husband Isaac's militia company 1960 01:44:34,568 --> 01:44:37,571 carried his corpse through her door. 1961 01:44:39,706 --> 01:44:41,884 Voice: He was placed in my bedroom 1962 01:44:41,908 --> 01:44:43,686 till the funeral. 1963 01:44:43,710 --> 01:44:46,756 The bodies of Abner Hosmer, one of the company, 1964 01:44:46,780 --> 01:44:49,259 and of James Hayward, who was killed in Lexington 1965 01:44:49,283 --> 01:44:53,997 in the afternoon, were brought by their friends to the house, 1966 01:44:54,021 --> 01:44:57,734 where the funeral of the three was attended together. [Davis] 1967 01:44:57,758 --> 01:45:00,870 ♪ 1968 01:45:00,894 --> 01:45:05,942 Narrator: As April 19th drew to a close, some 14,000 armed men 1969 01:45:05,966 --> 01:45:09,512 from 58 Massachusetts towns and villages 1970 01:45:09,536 --> 01:45:12,448 were converging on Boston. 1971 01:45:12,472 --> 01:45:15,551 And as the news of the bloodshed spread, 1972 01:45:15,575 --> 01:45:18,388 they would soon be joined by more men 1973 01:45:18,412 --> 01:45:21,758 from Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Connecticut, 1974 01:45:21,782 --> 01:45:26,029 until a 10-mile semicircle of hundreds of campfires 1975 01:45:26,053 --> 01:45:31,091 stretched from Roxbury to Chelsea, cutting off Boston. 1976 01:45:32,926 --> 01:45:39,366 General Gage ordered his men to dig in and prepare for a siege. 1977 01:45:40,634 --> 01:45:42,578 Atkinson: The British are pretty secure in Boston 1978 01:45:42,602 --> 01:45:44,080 because they have enough firepower, 1979 01:45:44,104 --> 01:45:47,550 they have enough manpower to prevent the Americans 1980 01:45:47,574 --> 01:45:49,619 from pushing them out of Boston. 1981 01:45:49,643 --> 01:45:52,188 And they have the Royal Navy. 1982 01:45:52,212 --> 01:45:56,092 But they are, essentially, surrounded. 1983 01:45:56,116 --> 01:45:59,462 It's not a true siege because they've got passage 1984 01:45:59,486 --> 01:46:01,064 in and out of Boston Harbor. 1985 01:46:01,088 --> 01:46:02,665 They can bring in supplies. 1986 01:46:02,689 --> 01:46:05,668 They can bring in reinforcements, as need be. 1987 01:46:05,692 --> 01:46:08,738 But they can't get outside of Boston proper. 1988 01:46:08,762 --> 01:46:10,840 So, the British Empire, in New England, 1989 01:46:10,864 --> 01:46:13,543 at this point, consists of about 1 square mile 1990 01:46:13,567 --> 01:46:15,611 of Boston itself. 1991 01:46:15,635 --> 01:46:19,649 ♪ 1992 01:46:19,673 --> 01:46:21,517 Voice: When I reflect and consider 1993 01:46:21,541 --> 01:46:23,653 that the fight was between those whose parents 1994 01:46:23,677 --> 01:46:27,490 but a few generations ago were brothers, 1995 01:46:27,514 --> 01:46:29,459 I shudder at the thought. 1996 01:46:29,483 --> 01:46:32,886 And there's no knowing where our calamities will end. 1997 01:46:34,287 --> 01:46:35,555 John Andrews. 1998 01:46:36,556 --> 01:46:39,001 Atkinson: War never follows the script 1999 01:46:39,025 --> 01:46:43,039 that you have written for it when you set out to make war. 2000 01:46:43,063 --> 01:46:45,575 The British objective is, first and foremost, 2001 01:46:45,599 --> 01:46:46,909 to suppress the rebellion. 2002 01:46:46,933 --> 01:46:49,445 It's to teach the rascals a lesson. 2003 01:46:49,469 --> 01:46:52,014 It's to force them to acknowledge 2004 01:46:52,038 --> 01:46:55,985 the primacy of Parliament and the authority of the King. 2005 01:46:56,009 --> 01:46:58,321 And so, now the decision has been made 2006 01:46:58,345 --> 01:47:00,123 that we will use force. 2007 01:47:00,147 --> 01:47:04,694 And there's a presumption that it won't take much... 2008 01:47:04,718 --> 01:47:07,597 but it's gonna go on for 8 years... 2009 01:47:07,621 --> 01:47:11,734 8 years, blood, treasure, catastrophe, really, 2010 01:47:11,758 --> 01:47:14,737 for the British Empire. 2011 01:47:14,761 --> 01:47:19,909 So, uh, those initial shots on Lexington Green, 2012 01:47:19,933 --> 01:47:22,545 on the morning of April 19, 1775, 2013 01:47:22,569 --> 01:47:25,448 are going to have profound repercussions. 2014 01:47:25,472 --> 01:47:27,417 [Birds chirping] 2015 01:47:27,441 --> 01:47:29,819 Voice: The whole country was in a commotion, 2016 01:47:29,843 --> 01:47:34,524 and nothing was talked of but war, liberty, or death. [Greenwood] 2017 01:47:34,548 --> 01:47:36,559 [Scraping] 2018 01:47:36,583 --> 01:47:39,462 Narrator: John Greenwood was 14 that April. 2019 01:47:39,486 --> 01:47:41,063 His father had sent him away 2020 01:47:41,087 --> 01:47:44,734 2 years earlier to Falmouth... Now Portland... Maine 2021 01:47:44,758 --> 01:47:48,871 to learn cabinet-making as an apprentice to an uncle. 2022 01:47:48,895 --> 01:47:52,008 But when news of Lexington and Concord reached him, 2023 01:47:52,032 --> 01:47:54,544 he asked to be allowed to return to Boston 2024 01:47:54,568 --> 01:47:58,815 to make sure his parents and siblings were safe. 2025 01:47:58,839 --> 01:48:03,043 He was worried that they "would all be killed by the British." 2026 01:48:05,479 --> 01:48:11,828 It would take him 4 1/2 days to walk the 100 miles to Boston. 2027 01:48:11,852 --> 01:48:13,629 [Men talking and laughing] 2028 01:48:13,653 --> 01:48:15,131 Voice: As I stopped at the taverns, 2029 01:48:15,155 --> 01:48:16,432 out came my fife, 2030 01:48:16,456 --> 01:48:18,634 and I played them a tune or two. 2031 01:48:18,658 --> 01:48:20,336 They used to ask me where I came from 2032 01:48:20,360 --> 01:48:22,171 and where I was a-going to. 2033 01:48:22,195 --> 01:48:25,174 I told them I was a-going to fight for my country. 2034 01:48:25,198 --> 01:48:28,411 They were astonished such a little boy and alone 2035 01:48:28,435 --> 01:48:30,537 should have such courage. [Greenwood] 2036 01:48:31,738 --> 01:48:33,282 Narrator: When John reached Charles Town, 2037 01:48:33,306 --> 01:48:35,685 he hoped to take a ferry to Boston, 2038 01:48:35,709 --> 01:48:37,887 but a sentry stopped him. 2039 01:48:37,911 --> 01:48:42,725 No one was allowed into the besieged city. 2040 01:48:42,749 --> 01:48:46,162 Zabin: It's terrifying to be a civilian in Boston, 2041 01:48:46,186 --> 01:48:48,965 regardless of your political affiliation. 2042 01:48:48,989 --> 01:48:52,335 Especially women and children are just looking 2043 01:48:52,359 --> 01:48:55,071 for any way out. 2044 01:48:55,095 --> 01:48:59,675 Something like 12,000 people of a town of about 16,000 2045 01:48:59,699 --> 01:49:01,911 manage to leave. 2046 01:49:01,935 --> 01:49:05,848 Narrator: Unable to find his parents among the refugees, 2047 01:49:05,872 --> 01:49:08,618 Greenwood was invited by 2 young militiamen 2048 01:49:08,642 --> 01:49:12,488 to share their quarters in Cambridge... the empty, 2049 01:49:12,512 --> 01:49:15,324 looted home of a Loyalist clergyman 2050 01:49:15,348 --> 01:49:17,460 who'd fled to the British. 2051 01:49:17,484 --> 01:49:22,231 His friends urged him to enlist in their company as a fifer, 2052 01:49:22,255 --> 01:49:24,534 and he agreed. 2053 01:49:24,558 --> 01:49:26,068 Voice: They told me it was only 2054 01:49:26,092 --> 01:49:27,537 for eight months, 2055 01:49:27,561 --> 01:49:29,772 and that I would have eight dollars a month, 2056 01:49:29,796 --> 01:49:33,075 and that they would quick drive the British from Boston, 2057 01:49:33,099 --> 01:49:35,378 and then I could have an opportunity 2058 01:49:35,402 --> 01:49:37,003 of seeing my parents. [Greenwood] 2059 01:49:40,473 --> 01:49:45,454 [Waves crashing] 2060 01:49:45,478 --> 01:49:47,056 Voice: Britain has found means 2061 01:49:47,080 --> 01:49:48,391 to unite us. 2062 01:49:48,415 --> 01:49:53,062 General Gage drew the sword; and a war is commenced, 2063 01:49:53,086 --> 01:49:57,157 which the youngest of us may not see the end of. [Franklin] 2064 01:49:58,725 --> 01:50:01,671 Narrator: Benjamin Franklin returned home from London 2065 01:50:01,695 --> 01:50:05,207 in time to attend the Second Continental Congress 2066 01:50:05,231 --> 01:50:08,244 that began meeting at the Pennsylvania State House 2067 01:50:08,268 --> 01:50:14,016 in Philadelphia just 3 weeks after Lexington and Concord. 2068 01:50:14,040 --> 01:50:18,220 Delegates from all 13 colonies now attended, 2069 01:50:18,244 --> 01:50:21,657 but they remained split between those still hoping 2070 01:50:21,681 --> 01:50:25,895 for reconciliation and those, like John Adams, 2071 01:50:25,919 --> 01:50:30,633 convinced a revolution was now inevitable. 2072 01:50:30,657 --> 01:50:33,002 Voice: The cancer is too deeply rooted, 2073 01:50:33,026 --> 01:50:36,072 and too far spread to be cured by anything 2074 01:50:36,096 --> 01:50:39,442 short of cutting it out entire. [John Adams] 2075 01:50:39,466 --> 01:50:40,943 [Flames crackling] 2076 01:50:40,967 --> 01:50:43,713 Narrator: From Boston, British General Hugh Percy 2077 01:50:43,737 --> 01:50:48,150 sent a warning to his superiors in London. 2078 01:50:48,174 --> 01:50:50,052 Voice: Whoever looks upon the Americans 2079 01:50:50,076 --> 01:50:55,691 as an irregular mob will find himself much mistaken. 2080 01:50:55,715 --> 01:50:57,927 They have men amongst them who know 2081 01:50:57,951 --> 01:51:00,296 very well what they are about. 2082 01:51:00,320 --> 01:51:02,098 You may depend upon it, 2083 01:51:02,122 --> 01:51:05,401 that as the rebels have now had time to prepare, 2084 01:51:05,425 --> 01:51:08,304 they are determined to go through with it. [Percy] 2085 01:51:08,328 --> 01:51:10,430 [Hammer striking metal] 2086 01:51:11,731 --> 01:51:14,644 Voice: What a scene has opened upon us. 2087 01:51:14,668 --> 01:51:18,848 If we look back, we are amazed at what is past. 2088 01:51:18,872 --> 01:51:23,285 If we look forward, we must shudder at the view. 2089 01:51:23,309 --> 01:51:27,923 Our only comfort lies in the justice of our cause. 2090 01:51:27,947 --> 01:51:32,194 All our worldly comforts are now at stake... 2091 01:51:32,218 --> 01:51:34,797 Our nearest and dearest connections 2092 01:51:34,821 --> 01:51:38,034 are hazarding their lives and properties. 2093 01:51:38,058 --> 01:51:41,003 God give them wisdom and integrity sufficient 2094 01:51:41,027 --> 01:51:45,307 to the great cause in which they are engaged. 2095 01:51:45,331 --> 01:51:47,209 Abigail Adams. 2096 01:51:47,233 --> 01:51:52,181 ♪ 2097 01:51:52,205 --> 01:51:53,885 [Theme music playing] [Theme music playing] 2098 01:51:55,241 --> 01:52:03,241 ♪ 2099 01:52:55,001 --> 01:52:56,045 Announcer: Next time on 2100 01:52:56,069 --> 01:52:56,847 "The American Revolution"... 2101 01:52:56,871 --> 01:52:58,848 [Gunfire] 2102 01:52:58,872 --> 01:53:00,549 Bunker Hill... 2103 01:53:00,573 --> 01:53:03,953 Stephen Conway: 40%. That's horrendously high casualty rate 2104 01:53:03,977 --> 01:53:05,254 for the British Army. 2105 01:53:05,278 --> 01:53:06,288 Announcer: a rare opportunity... 2106 01:53:06,312 --> 01:53:08,357 Annette Gordon-Reed: In the chaos of war, 2107 01:53:08,381 --> 01:53:11,327 they found a way to escape their situation. 2108 01:53:11,351 --> 01:53:13,028 Announcer: and the most important words 2109 01:53:13,052 --> 01:53:14,196 in American history. 2110 01:53:14,220 --> 01:53:17,533 Voice: We hold these truths to be self-evident 2111 01:53:17,557 --> 01:53:20,436 that all men are created equal. [Thomas Jefferson] 2112 01:53:20,460 --> 01:53:26,375 Announcer: when "The American Revolution" continues next time. 2113 01:53:26,399 --> 01:53:27,977 ♪ 2114 01:53:28,001 --> 01:53:30,646 Announcer: Scan this QR code with your smart device 2115 01:53:30,670 --> 01:53:33,182 to dive deeper into the story of "The American Revolution" 2116 01:53:33,206 --> 01:53:38,087 with interactives, games, classroom materials, and more. 2117 01:53:38,111 --> 01:53:42,849 ♪ 2118 01:53:45,685 --> 01:53:48,164 Announcer: "The American Revolution" DVD and Blu-ray, 2119 01:53:48,188 --> 01:53:50,132 as well as the companion book and soundtrack, 2120 01:53:50,156 --> 01:53:53,969 are available online and in stores. 2121 01:53:53,993 --> 01:53:56,071 The series is also available with PBS Passport 2122 01:53:56,095 --> 01:53:59,165 and on Amazon Prime Video. 2123 01:54:34,300 --> 01:54:37,003 ♪ 2124 01:54:38,071 --> 01:54:40,216 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 2125 01:54:40,240 --> 01:54:42,484 an impact felt around the world. 2126 01:54:42,508 --> 01:54:47,790 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 2127 01:54:47,814 --> 01:54:49,925 and hope for a new tomorrow 2128 01:54:49,949 --> 01:54:52,127 to turn the tide of history 2129 01:54:52,151 --> 01:54:55,388 and set the American story in motion. 2130 01:54:59,959 --> 01:55:02,805 What would you like the power to do? 2131 01:55:02,829 --> 01:55:04,397 Bank of America. 2132 01:55:07,700 --> 01:55:09,011 Announcer: Major funding 2133 01:55:09,035 --> 01:55:10,079 for "The American Revolution" 2134 01:55:10,103 --> 01:55:11,513 was provided by The Better Angels Society 2135 01:55:11,537 --> 01:55:12,781 and its members 2136 01:55:12,805 --> 01:55:13,983 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 2137 01:55:14,007 --> 01:55:15,985 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 2138 01:55:16,009 --> 01:55:18,087 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 2139 01:55:18,111 --> 01:55:21,423 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 2140 01:55:21,447 --> 01:55:24,560 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 2141 01:55:24,584 --> 01:55:25,895 the Lilly Endowment, 2142 01:55:25,919 --> 01:55:28,063 and by Better Angels Society members: 2143 01:55:28,087 --> 01:55:30,399 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 2144 01:55:30,423 --> 01:55:33,102 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 2145 01:55:33,126 --> 01:55:34,870 Additional support was provided by 2146 01:55:34,894 --> 01:55:36,939 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 2147 01:55:36,963 --> 01:55:38,774 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 2148 01:55:38,798 --> 01:55:40,709 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 2149 01:55:40,733 --> 01:55:42,144 the Park Foundation, 2150 01:55:42,168 --> 01:55:44,079 and by Better Angels Society members: 2151 01:55:44,103 --> 01:55:47,049 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 2152 01:55:47,073 --> 01:55:49,585 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 2153 01:55:49,609 --> 01:55:53,055 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 2154 01:55:53,079 --> 01:55:55,758 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 2155 01:55:55,782 --> 01:55:57,293 John and Catherine Debs, 2156 01:55:57,317 --> 01:55:59,161 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 2157 01:55:59,185 --> 01:56:00,996 and these additional members. 2158 01:56:01,020 --> 01:56:02,631 "The American Revolution" 2159 01:56:02,655 --> 01:56:04,066 was made possible with support 2160 01:56:04,090 --> 01:56:06,302 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 2161 01:56:06,326 --> 01:56:07,566 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 172457

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