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Announcer:
Major funding
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00:00:02,002 --> 00:00:03,045
for "The American Revolution"
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00:00:03,069 --> 00:00:04,480
was provided by
The Better Angels Society
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00:00:04,504 --> 00:00:05,748
and its members
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00:00:05,772 --> 00:00:06,949
Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine
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with the Crimson Lion Foundation
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00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:10,853
and the Blavatnik
Family Foundation.
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00:00:10,877 --> 00:00:14,390
Major funding was also provided
by David M. Rubenstein,
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00:00:14,414 --> 00:00:17,526
the Robert D. and Patricia E.
Kern Family Foundation,
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00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,861
the Lilly Endowment,
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00:00:18,885 --> 00:00:21,030
and by
Better Angels Society members:
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00:00:21,054 --> 00:00:23,366
Eric and Wendy Schmidt,
Stephen A. Schwarzman,
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00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,068
and Kenneth C. Griffin
with Griffin Catalyst.
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00:00:26,092 --> 00:00:27,837
Additional support
was provided by
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00:00:27,861 --> 00:00:29,905
The Arthur
Vining Davis Foundations,
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00:00:29,929 --> 00:00:31,540
the Pew Charitable Trusts,
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00:00:31,564 --> 00:00:33,676
Gilbert S. Omenn
and Martha A. Darling,
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00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,111
the Park Foundation,
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00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:36,846
and by Better Angels Society
members:
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00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016
Gilchrist and Amy Berg,
Perry and Donna Golkin,
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00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,551
The Michelson Foundation,
Jacqueline B. Mars,
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00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:46,022
the Kissick Family Foundation,
Diane and Hal Brierley,
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00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,724
John H.N. Fisher
and Jennifer Caldwell,
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00:00:48,748 --> 00:00:50,259
John and Catherine Debs,
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The Fullerton Family
Charitable Fund,
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and these additional members.
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"The American Revolution"
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was made possible with support
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from the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting,
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00:00:59,292 --> 00:01:02,062
and Viewers Like You.
Thank You.
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Announcer:
The American Revolution caused
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an impact felt around the world.
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The fight would take
ingenuity, determination,
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and hope for a new tomorrow
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to turn the tide of history
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and set the American story
in motion.
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What would you like
the power to do?
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Bank of America.
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[Insects chirping, loon calling]
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[Splashing]
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Narrator: Before dawn
on May 10th, 1775...
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Less than a month after
Lexington and Concord...
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Some 85 New Englanders
rowed across
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the southern end of
Lake Champlain,
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keeping silent, muskets primed.
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Their objective
was a dilapidated,
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star-shaped fortress
called Ticonderoga,
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built by the French
20 years earlier
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and now occupied by
50 British soldiers
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and 24 women and children.
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If they could capture it,
they might be able to stop
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British troops from attacking
from the north;
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to provide American forces
with a staging area
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should they ever choose
to invade Canada;
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and to take possession
of dozens of artillery pieces
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that the rebel forces ringing
Boston desperately needed.
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The men slipped
silently onto the shore.
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The British surrendered
without a shot.
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So did the 9 redcoats
stationed at Crown Point,
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00:02:45,098 --> 00:02:47,200
a smaller outpost nearby.
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The Americans had
two commanders.
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One was Colonel Ethan Allen,
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the hard-drinking leader
of the "Green Mountain Boys,"
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a band of vigilantes who had
spent years defending
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their settlements
in the Vermont region
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of northwestern New England
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against New Yorkers who also
claimed the land.
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The other was a newly promoted
34-year-old
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Connecticut militia colonel.
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He was descended
from a distinguished
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New England family that
had fallen on hard times.
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Able but arrogant,
sensitive to slights,
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he would become one of
the most important commanders
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of the American Revolution.
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His name was Benedict Arnold.
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♪
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William Hogeland:
Once it's a shooting war,
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as with Lexington
and Concord, it's a war.
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There's no doubt about that.
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But independence was not,
in any way, officially
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on the table as a goal
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of the Americans at that point.
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The idea of independence
was still controversial.
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The official position
was that the fight was
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00:04:05,979 --> 00:04:07,957
essentially for redress, for
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"Let's get back to the way
things used to be.
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Back when things were good,
when you left us alone."
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Narrator: The blood shed
at Lexington and Concord
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had deepened the divisions
among Americans
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from Georgia to New Hampshire.
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"Loyalists," those who
remained faithful to the Crown
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00:04:28,001 --> 00:04:31,247
and hoped His Majesty's
troops would soon restore
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law and order, dismissed those
whose sympathies
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00:04:34,207 --> 00:04:38,921
lay with the militiamen
surrounding Boston as "rebels."
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The "rebels"
called themselves "Patriots"...
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Or "Whigs" after
British champions
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of constitutionally guaranteed
rights...
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And vilified their Loyalist
neighbors as "Tories."
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Alan Taylor: The term
"Patriot" is a very old one
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that pre-exists the Revolution.
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It applies to people
who believe that they are
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the defenders of liberty
against power.
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Now, "rebel" is a term that
the British will use,
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00:05:06,939 --> 00:05:09,551
and the Loyalists will use,
to apply to the people
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who call themselves
the "Patriots."
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So, to be a rebel means
that you are rejecting
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the legitimate authority
of your sovereign,
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King George III
of the British Empire.
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Voice: That we are
divorced is to me very clear.
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The only question is
concerning the proper time
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for making an explicit
declaration in words.
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Some people must have time
to look around them,
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before, behind, on the
right hand, and on the left,
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then to think, and after
all this, to resolve.
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Others see at one
intuitive glance
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into the past and the future,
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and judge with precision
at once.
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But remember you can't make
13 clocks
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strike precisely alike
at the same second.
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[Ticking]
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John Adams.
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♪
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Taylor: I think
the greatest misconception
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about the American Revolution
is that it was
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something that unified Americans
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and that it was just a war of
Americans against the British.
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It leaves out the reality
that it was
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a civil war among Americans.
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Voice: I tremble
at the thoughts of war;
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but of all wars, a civil war!
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Our all is at stake.
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Sarah Mifflin.
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Narrator:
In the spring of 1775,
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a Philadelphia woman
named Sarah Mifflin
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wrote to a British officer
who had been her friend
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before the shooting began.
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00:07:01,654 --> 00:07:03,699
He had suggested
that the whole thing
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was just a minor disagreement.
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Voice: It is not
a quibble in politics.
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It is this plain truth, which
the most ignorant peasant knows,
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that no man has a right
to take their money
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without their consent.
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I know this, that as free
I can die but once,
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but as a slave I shall not
be worthy of life.
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Sarah Mifflin.
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♪
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Narrator: Some
20,000 militiamen from towns
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all over Massachusetts... and from
Connecticut, New Hampshire,
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and Rhode Island as well...
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Had poured into the series
of impromptu camps
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that kept the British
caged in Boston.
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They were united in their
anger at the redcoats
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but very little else.
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They were militiamen,
not professional soldiers,
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expected to meet
immediate crises,
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not take part
in prolonged campaigns.
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Few had uniforms.
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Many had never been more than
50 miles from home.
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00:08:07,386 --> 00:08:10,966
Their first loyalty was to
the towns from which they came
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and the neighbors whom they
had elected as their officers.
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Once the shooting stopped
and it became clear
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that the British were not
going to attack them,
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they began drifting home
to plant their crops.
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In overall charge of this
dwindling, disorganized force
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was General Artemas Ward,
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the commander of
the Massachusetts militia.
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From his headquarters in
Cambridge, he understood
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that if there were to be any
hope of holding their own
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against the British, he needed
a paid, recruited army...
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And he needed it fast.
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♪
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Voice: Wherever you go,
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we will be by your sides.
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Our bones shall lie with yours.
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We are determined never to
be at peace with the redcoats
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while they are
at variance with you.
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00:09:02,575 --> 00:09:05,888
If we are conquered,
our lands go with yours.
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00:09:05,912 --> 00:09:09,324
But if we are victorious,
we hope you will help us
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to recover our just rights.
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Captain Solomon Uhhaunauwaunmut.
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Narrator: Among the troops
who arrived in Cambridge
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was a company of
Native Americans
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from Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
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Philip Deloria:
Stockbridge is a community of
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multiple tribes,
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which has a long history of
surviving colonization,
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in part through
adopting Christianity
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and adopting certain kinds
of strategic ways of being
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in relation with colonists.
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They come over
from Western Massachusetts
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and they're part of
the Siege of Boston.
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Ned Blackhawk: Most Indigenous
powers stay relatively
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on the sidelines of the conflict
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during the early years.
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But many Native communities,
particularly those
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who have lived with settlers
for generations,
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come to share loyalties
and sensibilities.
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And so, many decide
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00:10:01,500 --> 00:10:02,878
that it's in their best interest
200
00:10:02,902 --> 00:10:05,847
to join the Revolutionary forces
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and take up arms against
the British Empire.
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00:10:09,942 --> 00:10:11,920
Narrator: The presence of
the Stockbridge men
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among the rebels,
General Thomas Gage,
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00:10:14,313 --> 00:10:16,625
the commander-in-chief
of the British Army
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00:10:16,649 --> 00:10:20,195
in North America, said,
freed him to call upon
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00:10:20,219 --> 00:10:23,699
other Native Americans
to join his forces
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00:10:23,723 --> 00:10:25,291
and fight for the Crown.
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00:10:26,626 --> 00:10:30,872
Enslaved New Englanders were
not recruited by either side.
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00:10:30,896 --> 00:10:33,875
The Massachusetts
Provincial Congress insisted
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00:10:33,899 --> 00:10:36,545
it was engaged
in a struggle for freedom
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00:10:36,569 --> 00:10:38,680
from British "slavery."
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00:10:38,704 --> 00:10:42,341
Enlisting them, it said,
would be "inconsistent."
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00:10:43,709 --> 00:10:46,788
But free African-Americans
were welcome...
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00:10:46,812 --> 00:10:50,926
And at least 35 and perhaps
as many as 50 men of color
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00:10:50,950 --> 00:10:53,729
had fought at
Lexington and Concord
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00:10:53,753 --> 00:10:55,731
and more would soon be engaged
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00:10:55,755 --> 00:10:59,091
in the next, far bigger battle
with the British.
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00:11:00,126 --> 00:11:03,205
Black, White,
and Native American soldiers
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00:11:03,229 --> 00:11:06,141
would serve in regiments
more integrated
220
00:11:06,165 --> 00:11:11,203
than American forces would be
again for almost two centuries.
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Voice: What?!
10,000 peasants keep
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00:11:16,409 --> 00:11:19,254
5,000 King's troops shut up!
223
00:11:19,278 --> 00:11:23,992
Well, let us get in,
and we'll soon find elbow room.
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General John Burgoyne.
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00:11:25,618 --> 00:11:28,130
♪
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00:11:28,154 --> 00:11:33,035
Narrator: On May 25th, 1775,
a Royal Navy frigate
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00:11:33,059 --> 00:11:35,837
threaded its way
into Boston harbor.
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00:11:35,861 --> 00:11:38,640
Aboard were
British reinforcements
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00:11:38,664 --> 00:11:41,710
and 3 major generals.
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00:11:41,734 --> 00:11:43,845
John Burgoyne was the showiest
231
00:11:43,869 --> 00:11:46,181
and the most self-assured
of the three.
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00:11:46,205 --> 00:11:48,417
A playwright as well as
a soldier,
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00:11:48,441 --> 00:11:52,788
eager always for advancement,
he was dismissive of the rebels
234
00:11:52,812 --> 00:11:55,223
besieging Boston, whom he called
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00:11:55,247 --> 00:11:59,085
a "rabble in arms,
flushed with insolence."
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00:12:00,286 --> 00:12:03,899
Henry Clinton had spent
6 boyhood years in New York,
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00:12:03,923 --> 00:12:06,835
where his father had been
the Royal Governor.
238
00:12:06,859 --> 00:12:11,030
He was soft-spoken,
retiring, insecure.
239
00:12:11,997 --> 00:12:14,509
William Howe had once
expressed sympathy
240
00:12:14,533 --> 00:12:16,144
with the American cause,
241
00:12:16,168 --> 00:12:18,013
but he now saw an opportunity
242
00:12:18,037 --> 00:12:21,107
to burnish his reputation
as a soldier.
243
00:12:22,208 --> 00:12:24,953
They had been sent to bolster
General Gage,
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00:12:24,977 --> 00:12:29,014
whom the King's Ministers
now saw as overly timid.
245
00:12:30,116 --> 00:12:33,128
The commanders all agreed
that if they could seize
246
00:12:33,152 --> 00:12:36,164
the heights at
Dorchester and Charlestown,
247
00:12:36,188 --> 00:12:38,457
they could break
the rebel siege.
248
00:12:40,259 --> 00:12:42,304
Rick Atkinson: There are
two pieces of high ground
249
00:12:42,328 --> 00:12:44,573
that the British
have to worry about.
250
00:12:44,597 --> 00:12:46,675
One is Dorchester Heights.
251
00:12:46,699 --> 00:12:48,577
And the other is the high ground
252
00:12:48,601 --> 00:12:51,313
on the Charlestown Peninsula,
253
00:12:51,337 --> 00:12:54,950
including Bunker Hill
and Breed's Hill.
254
00:12:54,974 --> 00:12:58,420
If you put cannon on either
the Charlestown Peninsula
255
00:12:58,444 --> 00:13:00,155
or on Dorchester Heights,
256
00:13:00,179 --> 00:13:02,023
you would be able to bombard
257
00:13:02,047 --> 00:13:04,226
British forces in Boston.
258
00:13:04,250 --> 00:13:06,695
The British decide
that they are going to
259
00:13:06,719 --> 00:13:09,288
seize Charlestown first.
260
00:13:10,856 --> 00:13:13,001
Narrator: The Patriots
got wind of the plan,
261
00:13:13,025 --> 00:13:16,838
and Colonel William Prescott was
ordered to seize and fortify
262
00:13:16,862 --> 00:13:19,474
Bunker's Hill,
the highest prominence
263
00:13:19,498 --> 00:13:21,977
on the Charlestown peninsula.
264
00:13:22,001 --> 00:13:24,513
As Prescott and his men
got there, however,
265
00:13:24,537 --> 00:13:27,516
it was somehow decided
that they should instead
266
00:13:27,540 --> 00:13:31,186
build their fort on the crest
of another, lower hill
267
00:13:31,210 --> 00:13:34,523
that came to be called
Breed's Hill.
268
00:13:34,547 --> 00:13:37,159
But it was within range
of both the warships
269
00:13:37,183 --> 00:13:41,387
in the harbor and a British
battery in Boston's North End.
270
00:13:42,588 --> 00:13:46,101
Prescott's men went to work
with picks and shovels
271
00:13:46,125 --> 00:13:48,904
trying to make as little noise
as possible
272
00:13:48,928 --> 00:13:50,930
so as not to alert the British.
273
00:13:52,097 --> 00:13:56,978
But when dawn broke
on June 17th, 1775,
274
00:13:57,002 --> 00:13:59,481
the redoubt was only
half-finished.
275
00:13:59,505 --> 00:14:02,184
♪
276
00:14:02,208 --> 00:14:07,022
A 20-gun British Navy ship
opened fire on the hilltop.
277
00:14:07,046 --> 00:14:12,127
A cannonball tore the head
off a private named Asa Pollard.
278
00:14:12,151 --> 00:14:14,362
To steady his men,
Prescott leaped onto
279
00:14:14,386 --> 00:14:18,099
the unfinished parapet
and bellowed at the warships,
280
00:14:18,123 --> 00:14:20,226
"Hit me if you can!"
281
00:14:21,627 --> 00:14:23,171
British General Howe was certain
282
00:14:23,195 --> 00:14:25,941
that the hill would
"easily be carried."
283
00:14:25,965 --> 00:14:28,610
As soon as the mid-afternoon
tide came in,
284
00:14:28,634 --> 00:14:31,446
Howe would personally
accompany a large force
285
00:14:31,470 --> 00:14:34,749
to the eastern tip
of the Charlestown Peninsula.
286
00:14:34,773 --> 00:14:36,017
[Explosions]
287
00:14:36,041 --> 00:14:38,286
The British stepped up
their cannonade,
288
00:14:38,310 --> 00:14:41,990
the roar so loud it rattled
windows in Braintree,
289
00:14:42,014 --> 00:14:45,594
10 miles away, where
Abigail Adams wondered
290
00:14:45,618 --> 00:14:49,564
whether "the day... perhaps
the decisive day... is come,"
291
00:14:49,588 --> 00:14:54,093
she wrote, "on which the fate
of America depends."
292
00:14:55,160 --> 00:14:57,939
Prescott rushed to strengthen
his left flank,
293
00:14:57,963 --> 00:15:00,308
ordering some of his men
to dig a ditch
294
00:15:00,332 --> 00:15:04,179
and form a 165-foot breastwork
295
00:15:04,203 --> 00:15:06,248
and assigning others
to strengthen
296
00:15:06,272 --> 00:15:10,352
a rail-and-stone fence that ran
all the way down to the bluff
297
00:15:10,376 --> 00:15:13,045
overlooking
the Mystic River beach.
298
00:15:14,914 --> 00:15:17,092
Looking up at
the American positions,
299
00:15:17,116 --> 00:15:19,828
General Howe believed the hill
could be taken
300
00:15:19,852 --> 00:15:22,664
by what was called
a "turning" movement.
301
00:15:22,688 --> 00:15:25,934
While one column assaulted
the redoubt from the left
302
00:15:25,958 --> 00:15:28,203
and another, led by
Howe himself,
303
00:15:28,227 --> 00:15:30,538
attacked the rail fence head-on,
304
00:15:30,562 --> 00:15:34,676
a third would slip along the
undefended Mystic River beach,
305
00:15:34,700 --> 00:15:39,581
get behind the rebels, turn
their line, and destroy them.
306
00:15:39,605 --> 00:15:41,249
Such attacks had worked well
307
00:15:41,273 --> 00:15:43,642
against disciplined armies
in Europe.
308
00:15:45,010 --> 00:15:47,155
Stacy Schiff: No one expects
that a bunch of
309
00:15:47,179 --> 00:15:50,358
country farmers with muskets
are going to hold off
310
00:15:50,382 --> 00:15:52,327
a trained army who have orders
311
00:15:52,351 --> 00:15:55,297
from an actual general
in Boston.
312
00:15:55,321 --> 00:16:00,535
There is a real disbelief that
a bunch of ragtag colonists
313
00:16:00,559 --> 00:16:02,737
are going to manage
to hold their own
314
00:16:02,761 --> 00:16:05,106
against trained soldiers.
315
00:16:05,130 --> 00:16:06,708
[Explosions]
316
00:16:06,732 --> 00:16:09,377
Narrator: When the column on
the left neared Charlestown
317
00:16:09,401 --> 00:16:11,713
and came under fire
from Americans
318
00:16:11,737 --> 00:16:13,982
hidden in abandoned buildings,
319
00:16:14,006 --> 00:16:16,618
British ships
set the town ablaze
320
00:16:16,642 --> 00:16:19,220
with incendiary shells.
321
00:16:19,244 --> 00:16:21,723
Then, at around half past 3,
322
00:16:21,747 --> 00:16:25,551
Howe's redcoats started up
the right side of the hill.
323
00:16:26,685 --> 00:16:30,298
Tall, fearsome grenadiers
formed the first rank;
324
00:16:30,322 --> 00:16:33,125
behind them came
the Foot Infantry.
325
00:16:34,460 --> 00:16:37,906
But the men had to dismantle
wooden fences and stone walls
326
00:16:37,930 --> 00:16:40,075
that blocked their climb.
327
00:16:40,099 --> 00:16:44,346
Their uniforms were woolen.
The sun was hot.
328
00:16:44,370 --> 00:16:46,715
And, like the anxious
New Englanders waiting for them
329
00:16:46,739 --> 00:16:50,542
on the hilltop, some had
never been in battle.
330
00:16:52,011 --> 00:16:54,255
Atkinson: The notion
that the British Army
331
00:16:54,279 --> 00:16:59,194
is this battle-tested,
experienced force, they're good.
332
00:16:59,218 --> 00:17:01,162
There's no doubt about it.
Their officers are good.
333
00:17:01,186 --> 00:17:04,399
They're very disciplined,
for the most part.
334
00:17:04,423 --> 00:17:08,570
But they are as scared
and as new to this
335
00:17:08,594 --> 00:17:09,904
as the Americans are.
336
00:17:09,928 --> 00:17:12,340
[Indistinct shouting, explosion]
337
00:17:12,364 --> 00:17:15,276
Narrator: As Howe's force
continued their ascent,
338
00:17:15,300 --> 00:17:17,679
British light infantry
on the far right
339
00:17:17,703 --> 00:17:21,549
started their flanking maneuver
along the narrow beach,
340
00:17:21,573 --> 00:17:24,586
bent on getting behind
the American defenses,
341
00:17:24,610 --> 00:17:28,023
sure they could
get there unopposed.
342
00:17:28,047 --> 00:17:30,558
But Colonel John Stark
of New Hampshire
343
00:17:30,582 --> 00:17:33,795
and 60 of his militiamen
were waiting for them.
344
00:17:33,819 --> 00:17:37,465
He had seen that the beach
was open to a flanking attack
345
00:17:37,489 --> 00:17:41,202
and directed his men
to build a barricade.
346
00:17:41,226 --> 00:17:43,705
When the British
got within range,
347
00:17:43,729 --> 00:17:45,707
the Patriots opened fire.
348
00:17:45,731 --> 00:17:48,443
[Gunfire]
349
00:17:48,467 --> 00:17:51,279
The light infantry
disintegrated.
350
00:17:51,303 --> 00:17:53,448
The New Hampshire men
kept firing
351
00:17:53,472 --> 00:17:55,216
until the stunned survivors
352
00:17:55,240 --> 00:17:57,786
began to retreat
toward their boats.
353
00:17:57,810 --> 00:18:01,856
Behind them lay nearly
100 dead and wounded,
354
00:18:01,880 --> 00:18:06,351
lying, Stark recalled,
"as thick as sheep in a fold."
355
00:18:07,519 --> 00:18:09,798
Meanwhile, at the top of
Breed's Hill,
356
00:18:09,822 --> 00:18:13,068
Prescott and his officers
reassured their men:
357
00:18:13,092 --> 00:18:15,303
the redcoats could never
reach them
358
00:18:15,327 --> 00:18:18,397
if they held their fire
till they came close.
359
00:18:19,565 --> 00:18:24,012
90 yards out, a stone wall
stopped the Grenadiers.
360
00:18:24,036 --> 00:18:25,313
As they laid down their arms
361
00:18:25,337 --> 00:18:27,549
and worked to tear apart
the wall,
362
00:18:27,573 --> 00:18:29,751
the Patriots fired
their muskets.
363
00:18:29,775 --> 00:18:31,920
[Gunfire]
364
00:18:31,944 --> 00:18:35,690
British officers urged
their men to keep advancing.
365
00:18:35,714 --> 00:18:38,660
Instead, the soldiers
stayed where they were
366
00:18:38,684 --> 00:18:40,352
and tried to shoot back.
367
00:18:41,587 --> 00:18:45,700
The Americans had cover.
The British had none.
368
00:18:45,724 --> 00:18:49,604
The redcoats broke
and retreated down the slope.
369
00:18:49,628 --> 00:18:52,107
General Howe
let his lines regroup,
370
00:18:52,131 --> 00:18:54,309
then ordered them
back up the hill,
371
00:18:54,333 --> 00:18:56,544
in hopes of driving through
the gap between
372
00:18:56,568 --> 00:18:59,347
the breastwork
and the rail fence.
373
00:18:59,371 --> 00:19:01,549
He would go with them.
374
00:19:01,573 --> 00:19:04,552
This time, the Patriots
behind the fence
375
00:19:04,576 --> 00:19:08,189
waited till the Grenadiers
got within 50 yards
376
00:19:08,213 --> 00:19:09,924
before opening fire.
377
00:19:09,948 --> 00:19:11,426
[Gunfire]
378
00:19:11,450 --> 00:19:16,397
It was hard to miss.
Scores of British soldiers fell,
379
00:19:16,421 --> 00:19:19,801
dead, dying, screaming in pain.
380
00:19:19,825 --> 00:19:22,036
[Gunfire]
381
00:19:22,060 --> 00:19:23,738
Atkinson:
They deliberately target
382
00:19:23,762 --> 00:19:26,741
the British officers
and they can recognize them
383
00:19:26,765 --> 00:19:30,245
in part because they're all
wearing red coats, right,
384
00:19:30,269 --> 00:19:32,280
but the officers are wearing
coats that are almost
385
00:19:32,304 --> 00:19:34,849
vermillion in hue
because they can afford
386
00:19:34,873 --> 00:19:38,086
the more expensive dyes
that make those coats pop.
387
00:19:38,110 --> 00:19:39,621
[Gunfire]
388
00:19:39,645 --> 00:19:42,991
The British, frankly,
think this is unfair.
389
00:19:43,015 --> 00:19:44,325
Trying to target officers,
390
00:19:44,349 --> 00:19:46,728
there's something unseemly
about it.
391
00:19:46,752 --> 00:19:48,963
But the Americans are not
going to stop
392
00:19:48,987 --> 00:19:50,198
throughout the whole war.
393
00:19:50,222 --> 00:19:51,533
[Indistinct shouting, gunfire]
394
00:19:51,557 --> 00:19:53,368
Narrator: The Americans cheered,
395
00:19:53,392 --> 00:19:55,970
hoping General Howe
had had enough.
396
00:19:55,994 --> 00:19:58,106
[Gunfire]
397
00:19:58,130 --> 00:20:01,242
Atkinson: Every one of
his staff officers
398
00:20:01,266 --> 00:20:02,944
is killed or wounded.
399
00:20:02,968 --> 00:20:08,583
Howe will come back down
the hill, unharmed, remarkably.
400
00:20:08,607 --> 00:20:12,720
But he's got blood
all over his stockings
401
00:20:12,744 --> 00:20:15,614
from the men who've been shot
on either side of him.
402
00:20:17,649 --> 00:20:20,128
Narrator: The teenage fifer
John Greenwood
403
00:20:20,152 --> 00:20:22,463
had been away that day.
404
00:20:22,487 --> 00:20:24,098
When he heard the guns,
405
00:20:24,122 --> 00:20:26,868
he hurried back to rejoin
his regiment.
406
00:20:26,892 --> 00:20:29,037
♪
407
00:20:29,061 --> 00:20:30,371
Voice: Everything seemed to be
408
00:20:30,395 --> 00:20:33,107
in the greatest
terror and confusion.
409
00:20:33,131 --> 00:20:36,411
I felt very much frightened
and would have given the world
410
00:20:36,435 --> 00:20:39,881
if I had not enlisted
for a soldier.
411
00:20:39,905 --> 00:20:42,250
Then, I saw a Negro man,
412
00:20:42,274 --> 00:20:44,919
wounded in the back of his neck.
413
00:20:44,943 --> 00:20:46,754
I saw the wound very plain
414
00:20:46,778 --> 00:20:50,091
and the blood
running down his back.
415
00:20:50,115 --> 00:20:52,460
I asked him if it hurt him much
416
00:20:52,484 --> 00:20:54,696
as he did not seem to mind it.
417
00:20:54,720 --> 00:20:56,898
He said no, and that he was
only a-going to get
418
00:20:56,922 --> 00:20:59,891
a plaster put on it
and meant to return.
419
00:21:01,193 --> 00:21:04,872
Immediately, you cannot conceive
what encouragement it gave me.
420
00:21:04,896 --> 00:21:09,711
I began to feel from that moment
brave and like a soldier.
421
00:21:09,735 --> 00:21:11,112
John Greenwood.
422
00:21:11,136 --> 00:21:13,748
♪
423
00:21:13,772 --> 00:21:16,517
Narrator: From the Boston
waterfront, townspeople,
424
00:21:16,541 --> 00:21:19,320
including John Greenwood's
brother Isaac,
425
00:21:19,344 --> 00:21:21,522
watched as British soldiers
426
00:21:21,546 --> 00:21:24,692
rowed wounded regulars
from Charlestown.
427
00:21:24,716 --> 00:21:26,494
They were "obliged," he said,
428
00:21:26,518 --> 00:21:29,597
"to bail the blood out
like water."
429
00:21:29,621 --> 00:21:32,233
And when they started back
toward Charlestown again
430
00:21:32,257 --> 00:21:33,801
with fresh troops,
431
00:21:33,825 --> 00:21:35,870
"the soldiers,"
Isaac remembered,
432
00:21:35,894 --> 00:21:39,841
"looked as pale as death
when they got into the boats,
433
00:21:39,865 --> 00:21:42,944
"for they could plainly see
their brother redcoats
434
00:21:42,968 --> 00:21:45,470
mowed down like grass."
435
00:21:47,205 --> 00:21:50,418
At the bottom of Breed's Hill,
General Howe was determined
436
00:21:50,442 --> 00:21:53,078
to come at the Americans
one more time.
437
00:21:54,579 --> 00:21:57,725
Up above, Colonel Prescott
knew his men had
438
00:21:57,749 --> 00:22:01,195
little powder left and that
many of their muskets
439
00:22:01,219 --> 00:22:04,432
were fouled from so much firing.
440
00:22:04,456 --> 00:22:08,336
This time, in order to make
each shot count,
441
00:22:08,360 --> 00:22:10,438
he insisted his men wait until
442
00:22:10,462 --> 00:22:13,541
their targets were
within 30 yards.
443
00:22:13,565 --> 00:22:16,210
[Indistinct shouting, gunfire]
444
00:22:16,234 --> 00:22:18,913
"As fast as the front man
was shot down,
445
00:22:18,937 --> 00:22:21,649
the next stepped forward
into his place,"
446
00:22:21,673 --> 00:22:23,818
one militiaman recalled.
447
00:22:23,842 --> 00:22:25,920
"It was surprising how
they would step over
448
00:22:25,944 --> 00:22:29,257
their dead as though
they had been logs of wood."
449
00:22:29,281 --> 00:22:31,492
[Gunfire]
450
00:22:31,516 --> 00:22:34,362
"We fired till our ammunition
began to fail,"
451
00:22:34,386 --> 00:22:36,864
another militiaman remembered,
452
00:22:36,888 --> 00:22:40,401
"then our firing
began to slacken...
453
00:22:40,425 --> 00:22:44,730
And at last it went out
like an old candle."
454
00:22:46,264 --> 00:22:47,842
British marines with bayonets
455
00:22:47,866 --> 00:22:51,079
began climbing
over the parapets.
456
00:22:51,103 --> 00:22:52,780
Some Americans hurled rocks
457
00:22:52,804 --> 00:22:56,017
or swung their muskets
like clubs.
458
00:22:56,041 --> 00:22:59,878
Others clawed their way out
of the redoubt and ran.
459
00:23:01,713 --> 00:23:04,992
It was all over
in a matter of minutes.
460
00:23:05,016 --> 00:23:08,830
The Patriots had been
driven from Breed's Hill.
461
00:23:08,854 --> 00:23:15,303
115 Americans had been killed
and another 305 wounded.
462
00:23:15,327 --> 00:23:19,540
♪
463
00:23:19,564 --> 00:23:22,110
Atkinson: The British succeed
in that they drive
464
00:23:22,134 --> 00:23:25,413
the Americans off of
the Charlestown Peninsula.
465
00:23:25,437 --> 00:23:28,850
They take Breed's Hill.
They take Bunker Hill.
466
00:23:28,874 --> 00:23:32,110
But it has been a, a pyrrhic
victory of the first order.
467
00:23:33,412 --> 00:23:36,691
It's 4 of the most awful
hours of combat
468
00:23:36,715 --> 00:23:39,127
in American military history.
469
00:23:39,151 --> 00:23:43,564
There are 1,000 British
casualties that day.
470
00:23:43,588 --> 00:23:48,560
There are 220-some British dead.
471
00:23:50,395 --> 00:23:52,473
Stephen Conway: 40% of
the attacking force
472
00:23:52,497 --> 00:23:54,275
was killed or injured.
473
00:23:54,299 --> 00:23:56,010
40%.
474
00:23:56,034 --> 00:23:58,870
That's horrendously
high casualty rate.
475
00:24:00,005 --> 00:24:03,418
It is the highest casualty
rate for the British Army
476
00:24:03,442 --> 00:24:07,255
until the first day of
the Somme in 1916.
477
00:24:07,279 --> 00:24:09,557
It is unbelievably bloody.
478
00:24:09,581 --> 00:24:12,017
And that has a really
profound impact.
479
00:24:13,385 --> 00:24:14,996
Narrator: "The loss
we have sustained,"
480
00:24:15,020 --> 00:24:19,024
General Gage admitted,
"is greater than we can bear."
481
00:24:20,425 --> 00:24:21,869
During the final struggle,
482
00:24:21,893 --> 00:24:24,129
two prominent men
had been killed.
483
00:24:25,330 --> 00:24:29,510
As Major John Pitcairn
encouraged his British Marines
484
00:24:29,534 --> 00:24:31,312
to climb over the walls,
485
00:24:31,336 --> 00:24:32,880
he'd been shot through the chest
486
00:24:32,904 --> 00:24:36,717
and fell, dying,
into the arms of his son.
487
00:24:36,741 --> 00:24:38,953
He was so hated
by New Englanders
488
00:24:38,977 --> 00:24:42,290
because he had led the British
troops at Lexington Green
489
00:24:42,314 --> 00:24:46,194
that at least 4 different men
would subsequently claim
490
00:24:46,218 --> 00:24:48,019
to have fired the fatal shot.
491
00:24:49,855 --> 00:24:52,133
Dr. Joseph Warren,
the president
492
00:24:52,157 --> 00:24:54,702
of the Massachusetts
Provincial Congress,
493
00:24:54,726 --> 00:24:57,538
whom the British considered
the most "incendiary"
494
00:24:57,562 --> 00:24:59,173
of all the rebel leaders,
495
00:24:59,197 --> 00:25:03,277
had insisted on joining
the men defending Breed's Hill
496
00:25:03,301 --> 00:25:05,179
and was shot in the head.
497
00:25:05,203 --> 00:25:08,549
The British officer in charge
of the burial detail
498
00:25:08,573 --> 00:25:11,519
boasted that they had
"stuffed the scoundrel
499
00:25:11,543 --> 00:25:14,121
"with another Rebel
into one hole
500
00:25:14,145 --> 00:25:18,216
and there he and his seditious
principles may remain."
501
00:25:19,985 --> 00:25:22,563
Voice: Saturday
gave us a dreadful specimen
502
00:25:22,587 --> 00:25:24,923
of the horrors of civil war.
503
00:25:25,957 --> 00:25:28,603
You may easily judge
what distress we were in
504
00:25:28,627 --> 00:25:32,673
to see and hear Englishmen
destroying one another.
505
00:25:32,697 --> 00:25:35,967
God grant the blood
already spilt may suffice.
506
00:25:37,002 --> 00:25:39,938
But this we cannot
reasonably expect.
507
00:25:41,406 --> 00:25:42,984
Reverend Andrew Eliot.
508
00:25:43,008 --> 00:25:45,820
♪
509
00:25:45,844 --> 00:25:48,256
Narrator: When the news of
the battle... remembered as
510
00:25:48,280 --> 00:25:50,024
the Battle of Bunker Hill...
511
00:25:50,048 --> 00:25:53,995
Eventually made its way
to London, the King proclaimed
512
00:25:54,019 --> 00:25:56,797
"The deluded People" of
America were in a state
513
00:25:56,821 --> 00:25:59,767
of "open and avowed rebellion."
514
00:25:59,791 --> 00:26:04,438
Anyone who now aided
their cause was a traitor.
515
00:26:04,462 --> 00:26:08,409
General Gage had been right...
The rebellion would never be
516
00:26:08,433 --> 00:26:11,412
crushed without
overwhelming force.
517
00:26:11,436 --> 00:26:16,751
But Gage was soon called home,
replaced as commander-in-chief
518
00:26:16,775 --> 00:26:19,153
by General William Howe.
519
00:26:19,177 --> 00:26:22,390
For almost 3 years,
Howe would lead the struggle
520
00:26:22,414 --> 00:26:24,425
to try to put down
the rebellion...
521
00:26:24,449 --> 00:26:28,996
And carefully avoid ordering
any more frontal assaults
522
00:26:29,020 --> 00:26:31,232
against entrenched Americans.
523
00:26:31,256 --> 00:26:33,801
♪
524
00:26:33,825 --> 00:26:35,736
Britain, at the expense of
525
00:26:35,760 --> 00:26:39,941
3 millions, has killed
150 Americans this campaign,
526
00:26:39,965 --> 00:26:42,944
which is 20,000 pounds a head.
527
00:26:42,968 --> 00:26:47,615
And at Bunker's Hill,
she gained a mile of ground.
528
00:26:47,639 --> 00:26:50,284
During the same time,
60,000 children
529
00:26:50,308 --> 00:26:52,219
have been born in America.
530
00:26:52,243 --> 00:26:54,922
From these data, calculate
the time and expense
531
00:26:54,946 --> 00:26:57,692
necessary to kill us all,
532
00:26:57,716 --> 00:27:00,051
and conquer our whole territory.
533
00:27:01,319 --> 00:27:02,797
Benjamin Franklin.
534
00:27:02,821 --> 00:27:09,403
♪
535
00:27:09,427 --> 00:27:12,340
[Thunder]
536
00:27:12,364 --> 00:27:14,275
Voice: Unhappy it is to reflect
537
00:27:14,299 --> 00:27:16,677
that a brother's sword
has been sheathed
538
00:27:16,701 --> 00:27:18,379
in a brother's breast,
539
00:27:18,403 --> 00:27:22,149
and that the once happy
and peaceful plains of America
540
00:27:22,173 --> 00:27:28,122
are either to be drenched with
blood or inhabited by slaves.
541
00:27:28,146 --> 00:27:29,991
Sad alternative!
542
00:27:30,015 --> 00:27:33,084
But can a virtuous man
hesitate in his choice?
543
00:27:34,419 --> 00:27:36,021
George Washington.
544
00:27:38,256 --> 00:27:42,837
Narrator: On July 2nd, 1775,
Private Phineas Ingalls
545
00:27:42,861 --> 00:27:46,440
of Andover, Massachusetts,
noted in his diary
546
00:27:46,464 --> 00:27:48,509
that it "rained" and that
547
00:27:48,533 --> 00:27:50,578
"a new general
from Philadelphia"
548
00:27:50,602 --> 00:27:52,671
had arrived in Cambridge.
549
00:27:54,239 --> 00:27:58,219
That new general was
George Washington of Virginia,
550
00:27:58,243 --> 00:28:00,254
the commander of
the Continental Army
551
00:28:00,278 --> 00:28:04,025
the Congress in Philadelphia
had just created.
552
00:28:04,049 --> 00:28:07,261
His arrival meant that
the New England war in which
553
00:28:07,285 --> 00:28:11,098
Phineas Ingalls and his
fellow militiamen had joined
554
00:28:11,122 --> 00:28:14,259
was about to become
an American war.
555
00:28:15,393 --> 00:28:18,839
Jane Kamensky: Washington is
a figure toward whom
556
00:28:18,863 --> 00:28:21,709
people naturally turn
for leadership.
557
00:28:21,733 --> 00:28:24,745
It is clear, by the time
the Continental Army
558
00:28:24,769 --> 00:28:29,750
is signed into being
in the late spring of 1775,
559
00:28:29,774 --> 00:28:33,087
that its commander-in-chief
can be nobody else.
560
00:28:33,111 --> 00:28:34,955
There's something about
his presence
561
00:28:34,979 --> 00:28:38,083
that makes him
the inescapable choice.
562
00:28:39,384 --> 00:28:41,562
Narrator: The Second
Continental Congress
563
00:28:41,586 --> 00:28:43,964
had been meeting since May,
564
00:28:43,988 --> 00:28:46,067
and it was obvious
from the first
565
00:28:46,091 --> 00:28:48,703
that 43-year-old
George Washington
566
00:28:48,727 --> 00:28:51,038
would command its new army.
567
00:28:51,062 --> 00:28:54,575
He had led troops during
the French and Indian War,
568
00:28:54,599 --> 00:28:56,243
and he was from Virginia,
569
00:28:56,267 --> 00:29:00,014
the wealthiest and most
populated colony.
570
00:29:00,038 --> 00:29:02,616
New England delegates,
eager to ensure
571
00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:04,852
that colony's support
for the war,
572
00:29:04,876 --> 00:29:07,145
favored naming a Virginian.
573
00:29:08,313 --> 00:29:12,059
Washington was also
one of America's richest men,
574
00:29:12,083 --> 00:29:16,063
the beneficiary of the work of
scores of indentured servants
575
00:29:16,087 --> 00:29:20,000
and more than 100 enslaved
people at his plantation
576
00:29:20,024 --> 00:29:22,927
on the Potomac River...
Mount Vernon.
577
00:29:24,129 --> 00:29:28,042
They grew tobacco and wheat,
corn and flax and hemp,
578
00:29:28,066 --> 00:29:30,644
milled flour, distilled whiskey,
579
00:29:30,668 --> 00:29:33,714
caught, salted, and sold fish.
580
00:29:33,738 --> 00:29:35,883
And to the West, he had amassed
581
00:29:35,907 --> 00:29:39,811
tens of thousands of acres
of Indian lands.
582
00:29:40,945 --> 00:29:43,057
Washington has
this vision of the future
583
00:29:43,081 --> 00:29:49,029
in which... America's
future is not to the East,
584
00:29:49,053 --> 00:29:50,664
not towards Europe.
585
00:29:50,688 --> 00:29:52,733
It's to the West.
586
00:29:52,757 --> 00:29:56,237
He does see the future
and the next century
587
00:29:56,261 --> 00:29:59,039
as something in which
we should focus on
588
00:29:59,063 --> 00:30:01,566
the consolidation
of the continent.
589
00:30:02,734 --> 00:30:04,612
Hogeland: What defines
his early career
590
00:30:04,636 --> 00:30:09,550
is an amazing focus,
a ruthless and intense focus,
591
00:30:09,574 --> 00:30:11,952
on his own interests,
which makes him exactly like
592
00:30:11,976 --> 00:30:13,487
every other member of his class.
593
00:30:13,511 --> 00:30:16,490
It's just that
he became George Washington.
594
00:30:16,514 --> 00:30:18,893
Narrator: Washington
considered outward evidence
595
00:30:18,917 --> 00:30:21,061
of ambition unseemly,
596
00:30:21,085 --> 00:30:25,466
but his appearance alone made
him stand out in Philadelphia.
597
00:30:25,490 --> 00:30:28,435
He was about 6'3"
when the average height
598
00:30:28,459 --> 00:30:32,973
of the men he would lead into
battle was around 5'7",
599
00:30:32,997 --> 00:30:34,942
and he alone among the delegates
600
00:30:34,966 --> 00:30:38,069
appeared each day
dressed as a soldier.
601
00:30:39,304 --> 00:30:41,282
Washington will remain,
I think, endlessly fascinating.
602
00:30:41,306 --> 00:30:42,983
Partly because he was
so mysterious,
603
00:30:43,007 --> 00:30:45,152
so reserved in his manner,
frequently,
604
00:30:45,176 --> 00:30:49,356
and didn't give up a lot of
what was going on in his gut.
605
00:30:49,380 --> 00:30:51,592
♪
606
00:30:51,616 --> 00:30:53,828
Ellis: He was naturally a person
607
00:30:53,852 --> 00:30:57,331
who created space
around himself,
608
00:30:57,355 --> 00:31:02,169
and pity anybody that enters
that space that's not invited.
609
00:31:02,193 --> 00:31:04,529
Martha gets into that space.
610
00:31:06,731 --> 00:31:08,843
Lafayette gets into that space.
611
00:31:08,867 --> 00:31:11,436
Maybe Hamilton
gets into that space.
612
00:31:12,537 --> 00:31:14,448
Voice: He has
so much martial dignity
613
00:31:14,472 --> 00:31:17,218
in his deportment that
you would distinguish him
614
00:31:17,242 --> 00:31:21,422
to be a general and a soldier
from among 10,000 people.
615
00:31:21,446 --> 00:31:23,858
There is not a king in Europe
that would not look like
616
00:31:23,882 --> 00:31:27,027
a "valet de chambre"
by his side.
617
00:31:27,051 --> 00:31:28,929
Benjamin Rush.
618
00:31:28,953 --> 00:31:32,333
He's got a brain built
for executive action.
619
00:31:32,357 --> 00:31:34,869
He's willing to
take responsibility.
620
00:31:34,893 --> 00:31:37,738
He's got an adhesive memory.
621
00:31:37,762 --> 00:31:39,440
He is,
according to Thomas Jefferson,
622
00:31:39,464 --> 00:31:42,042
the greatest horseman
of his age.
623
00:31:42,066 --> 00:31:45,446
He's built to lead other men
in the dark of night,
624
00:31:45,470 --> 00:31:50,475
which is a rare and valuable
trait in any commander.
625
00:31:51,843 --> 00:31:53,254
Voice: I am now embarked
626
00:31:53,278 --> 00:31:56,857
on a tempestuous ocean,
from whence, perhaps,
627
00:31:56,881 --> 00:31:59,217
no friendly harbor
is to be found.
628
00:32:00,385 --> 00:32:02,796
Narrator: Washington accepted
that he and his army
629
00:32:02,820 --> 00:32:07,001
would be subordinate to the
civilian control of Congress,
630
00:32:07,025 --> 00:32:10,361
but he did not yet see himself
as a revolutionary.
631
00:32:11,663 --> 00:32:15,676
He still hoped to lead what
he called "a loyal protest,"
632
00:32:15,700 --> 00:32:19,513
as if George III might
somehow overrule Parliament
633
00:32:19,537 --> 00:32:23,484
and restore the rights
of British colonists.
634
00:32:23,508 --> 00:32:26,820
On his way to Cambridge,
he met a dispatch rider
635
00:32:26,844 --> 00:32:30,824
who carried a letter that told
of the terrible bloodletting
636
00:32:30,848 --> 00:32:33,327
that had taken place
on Breed's Hill.
637
00:32:33,351 --> 00:32:35,429
♪
638
00:32:35,453 --> 00:32:37,665
Atkinson: He shows up
in Cambridge
639
00:32:37,689 --> 00:32:40,634
in early July, 1775,
640
00:32:40,658 --> 00:32:42,536
as a Virginian commanding,
641
00:32:42,560 --> 00:32:46,140
almost exclusively,
New England militiamen.
642
00:32:46,164 --> 00:32:47,641
He doesn't
know what to make of them;
643
00:32:47,665 --> 00:32:49,743
they don't know quite
what to make of him.
644
00:32:49,767 --> 00:32:54,214
He has nothing good to say about
New Englanders, privately.
645
00:32:54,238 --> 00:32:56,850
They're almost from
different countries.
646
00:32:56,874 --> 00:33:00,087
But his job is to take
this gaggle,
647
00:33:00,111 --> 00:33:02,556
this cluster of militia forces,
648
00:33:02,580 --> 00:33:05,550
and to form them into
a national army.
649
00:33:08,419 --> 00:33:10,698
Narrator: Washington thought
he'd be commanding
650
00:33:10,722 --> 00:33:12,866
a 20,000-man force;
651
00:33:12,890 --> 00:33:18,205
in fact, he had fewer than
14,000 men fit for service.
652
00:33:18,229 --> 00:33:23,077
He was assured he would have
15 tons of precious gunpowder;
653
00:33:23,101 --> 00:33:24,569
there were just 5.
654
00:33:26,204 --> 00:33:30,451
On August 6th, a company of
96 riflemen from Virginia
655
00:33:30,475 --> 00:33:34,288
arrived, concrete evidence
that Americans
656
00:33:34,312 --> 00:33:38,158
beyond New England
would volunteer to fight.
657
00:33:38,182 --> 00:33:42,186
They had marched nearly
500 miles in 3 weeks.
658
00:33:43,287 --> 00:33:45,766
Their leader was
Captain Daniel Morgan,
659
00:33:45,790 --> 00:33:50,337
a big, brawling one-time wagoner
whose back bore the scars
660
00:33:50,361 --> 00:33:54,241
of a lashing he'd received
during the French and Indian War
661
00:33:54,265 --> 00:33:56,176
after he'd knocked unconscious
662
00:33:56,200 --> 00:33:59,270
a British officer
who had insulted him.
663
00:34:00,538 --> 00:34:04,418
More riflemen soon followed,
from Pennsylvania and Maryland
664
00:34:04,442 --> 00:34:06,687
as well as more Virginians.
665
00:34:06,711 --> 00:34:10,024
Their rifles were far more
accurate than the smooth-bore
666
00:34:10,048 --> 00:34:13,193
muskets most Patriots used;
667
00:34:13,217 --> 00:34:15,562
their grooved barrels
spun a ball,
668
00:34:15,586 --> 00:34:18,656
making it fly
straighter and truer.
669
00:34:19,757 --> 00:34:22,603
A British soldier would
call them "the most fatal
670
00:34:22,627 --> 00:34:25,763
widow-and-orphan makers
in the world."
671
00:34:26,764 --> 00:34:30,010
But the riflemen were
also frontiersmen.
672
00:34:30,034 --> 00:34:32,413
They sounded different
from New Englanders,
673
00:34:32,437 --> 00:34:37,108
dressed differently, disliked
discipline of any kind.
674
00:34:39,310 --> 00:34:42,356
Taylor: So what's going
to come out of this Revolution
675
00:34:42,380 --> 00:34:48,195
is attempts to create
an American national identity.
676
00:34:48,219 --> 00:34:50,330
And somebody like
George Washington becomes
677
00:34:50,354 --> 00:34:53,233
quite eloquent in trying
to persuade people,
678
00:34:53,257 --> 00:34:55,502
"You're not Carolinians,"
"You're not New Yorkers,"
679
00:34:55,526 --> 00:34:58,396
"You're not New Englanders."
"We're all Americans."
680
00:34:59,363 --> 00:35:01,475
Narrator: Always at
Washington's side,
681
00:35:01,499 --> 00:35:05,079
throughout the Revolution,
was William Lee,
682
00:35:05,103 --> 00:35:06,613
the enslaved servant he had
683
00:35:06,637 --> 00:35:08,873
brought with him
from Mount Vernon.
684
00:35:10,208 --> 00:35:14,188
Kamensky: I think we have
to understand Washington
685
00:35:14,212 --> 00:35:17,091
as both the figurehead
without whom
686
00:35:17,115 --> 00:35:20,360
American liberty would not
have survived.
687
00:35:20,384 --> 00:35:22,529
At the same time,
he's an enslaver of
688
00:35:22,553 --> 00:35:25,766
317 men, women, and children.
689
00:35:25,790 --> 00:35:29,470
He acted as an enslaver
in the ways that enslavers did.
690
00:35:29,494 --> 00:35:31,338
He bought and sold people.
691
00:35:31,362 --> 00:35:34,508
He broke up families.
692
00:35:34,532 --> 00:35:38,679
Do not look for gilded
statues of marble men.
693
00:35:38,703 --> 00:35:41,148
They were not that
and neither are we
694
00:35:41,172 --> 00:35:43,383
and neither is anybody at all.
695
00:35:43,407 --> 00:35:46,120
♪
696
00:35:46,144 --> 00:35:47,955
Narrator:
Washington was impatient,
697
00:35:47,979 --> 00:35:49,814
eager to get at the enemy.
698
00:35:50,715 --> 00:35:52,860
In September,
he proposed mounting
699
00:35:52,884 --> 00:35:55,562
a water-borne attack on Boston.
700
00:35:55,586 --> 00:35:57,722
His officers
talked him out of it.
701
00:35:58,890 --> 00:36:01,401
Atkinson: Washington
has got a lot to learn.
702
00:36:01,425 --> 00:36:04,104
Because he's been out of
uniform for 16 years,
703
00:36:04,128 --> 00:36:06,440
there's a lot he does not know.
704
00:36:06,464 --> 00:36:08,542
He knows very little
about artillery.
705
00:36:08,566 --> 00:36:11,411
He knows very little about
fortification.
706
00:36:11,435 --> 00:36:14,414
He knows nothing about
continental logistics.
707
00:36:14,438 --> 00:36:17,575
So, he brings a stack
of books with him.
708
00:36:18,609 --> 00:36:20,020
Nathaniel Philbrick:
Typically, Washington,
709
00:36:20,044 --> 00:36:22,189
before he would
make a big decision,
710
00:36:22,213 --> 00:36:26,026
would canvass his major generals
as to what to do.
711
00:36:26,050 --> 00:36:28,729
And inevitably, he would do
712
00:36:28,753 --> 00:36:32,032
whatever Nathanael Greene
suggested.
713
00:36:32,056 --> 00:36:35,202
Narrator: General Nathanael
Greene of Rhode Island,
714
00:36:35,226 --> 00:36:38,839
a Quaker who came to see
pacifism as impractical
715
00:36:38,863 --> 00:36:43,076
in the face of what he called
"this business of necessity,"
716
00:36:43,100 --> 00:36:46,647
hoped the British might make
a move so that the Americans,
717
00:36:46,671 --> 00:36:49,483
he said, could "sell them
another hill
718
00:36:49,507 --> 00:36:53,453
at the same price" as they had
paid taking Breed's Hill.
719
00:36:53,477 --> 00:36:55,455
♪
720
00:36:55,479 --> 00:36:57,691
But the British didn't
dare mount an attack
721
00:36:57,715 --> 00:37:00,260
on Washington's forces, either.
722
00:37:00,284 --> 00:37:03,697
The memory of the last battle
was too fresh.
723
00:37:03,721 --> 00:37:07,000
The standoff would continue
for another 6 months.
724
00:37:07,024 --> 00:37:08,902
♪
725
00:37:08,926 --> 00:37:13,240
In Boston, soldiers
and civilians alike suffered.
726
00:37:13,264 --> 00:37:15,642
There was too little firewood:
727
00:37:15,666 --> 00:37:18,545
regulars ripped pews
from churches
728
00:37:18,569 --> 00:37:21,772
and demolished whole houses
trying to keep warm.
729
00:37:23,374 --> 00:37:25,886
Of 40 transport vessels
dispatched from
730
00:37:25,910 --> 00:37:29,022
England and Ireland
to provision the town,
731
00:37:29,046 --> 00:37:34,127
32 never made it... blown
off-course by unfavorable winds
732
00:37:34,151 --> 00:37:36,163
all the way to the West Indies
733
00:37:36,187 --> 00:37:38,522
or seized by Patriots.
734
00:37:39,523 --> 00:37:41,168
Voice: What, in God's name,
735
00:37:41,192 --> 00:37:43,804
are ye all about in England?
736
00:37:43,828 --> 00:37:45,263
Have you forgot us?
737
00:37:46,264 --> 00:37:48,342
For we have not had a vessel
for 3 months
738
00:37:48,366 --> 00:37:50,544
with any sort of supplies.
739
00:37:50,568 --> 00:37:54,948
And, therefore, our
miseries are become manifold.
740
00:37:54,972 --> 00:37:56,650
British Officer.
741
00:37:56,674 --> 00:38:01,788
♪
742
00:38:01,812 --> 00:38:05,592
Voice: In 1770,
I built a house, dam,
743
00:38:05,616 --> 00:38:10,063
saw, and grist mills on the west
side of the Connecticut River.
744
00:38:10,087 --> 00:38:12,432
Here I was
in easy circumstances,
745
00:38:12,456 --> 00:38:16,069
and as independent
as my mind ever wished.
746
00:38:16,093 --> 00:38:17,361
John Peters.
747
00:38:18,462 --> 00:38:21,742
Narrator: Before the war,
Yale-educated John Peters
748
00:38:21,766 --> 00:38:24,945
had been the most respected
man in the small settlement
749
00:38:24,969 --> 00:38:27,881
of Moretown in Vermont,
where he lived
750
00:38:27,905 --> 00:38:30,917
with his wife Ann
and their children.
751
00:38:30,941 --> 00:38:35,322
In 1774, his neighbors had
picked him to represent them
752
00:38:35,346 --> 00:38:37,548
in the First
Continental Congress.
753
00:38:38,716 --> 00:38:41,194
But when Peters
got to Philadelphia
754
00:38:41,218 --> 00:38:43,230
and sensed the other delegates
755
00:38:43,254 --> 00:38:45,966
"meant to have
a serious rebellion,"
756
00:38:45,990 --> 00:38:49,493
he refused to take part
and left for home.
757
00:38:50,995 --> 00:38:55,442
On the way back, suspicious
Patriots detained him 4 times...
758
00:38:55,466 --> 00:38:59,579
In Wethersfield,
Hartford, Springfield,
759
00:38:59,603 --> 00:39:02,015
and finally in Moretown itself,
760
00:39:02,039 --> 00:39:04,451
where "another mob
threatened to execute him,"
761
00:39:04,475 --> 00:39:07,778
he remembered,
"as an enemy to Congress."
762
00:39:09,080 --> 00:39:12,793
His own father, a colonel in
Connecticut's rebel militia,
763
00:39:12,817 --> 00:39:17,631
urged his fellow Patriots
to use "severity" on his son
764
00:39:17,655 --> 00:39:20,300
to make him
"a friend to America."
765
00:39:20,324 --> 00:39:21,902
[Indistinct shouting]
766
00:39:21,926 --> 00:39:24,871
Voice: The mob
again and again visited me.
767
00:39:24,895 --> 00:39:27,741
They confined me
to the limits of the town
768
00:39:27,765 --> 00:39:29,443
and threatened me with death
769
00:39:29,467 --> 00:39:32,312
if I transgressed their orders.
[John Peters]
770
00:39:32,336 --> 00:39:35,716
Narrator: Even then,
Peters refused to betray
771
00:39:35,740 --> 00:39:38,251
his "King and Conscience."
772
00:39:38,275 --> 00:39:40,754
Instead, he put his head down
773
00:39:40,778 --> 00:39:43,147
and hoped to stay
out of the fight.
774
00:39:44,815 --> 00:39:46,293
Voice: I little
thought the troubles would be
775
00:39:46,317 --> 00:39:48,495
so great, or if they did,
776
00:39:48,519 --> 00:39:50,697
would last so long.
777
00:39:50,721 --> 00:39:54,901
I endeavored to be quiet,
but it would not do.
778
00:39:54,925 --> 00:39:59,005
The madness of the people
was daily growing.
779
00:39:59,029 --> 00:40:00,173
[John Peters]
780
00:40:00,197 --> 00:40:03,901
♪
781
00:40:05,736 --> 00:40:09,649
Atkinson: Lake Champlain
is this 90-mile-long teardrop
782
00:40:09,673 --> 00:40:12,152
that extends from
the Canadian border
783
00:40:12,176 --> 00:40:15,489
down almost to the Hudson River.
784
00:40:15,513 --> 00:40:17,991
If you controlled
Lake Champlain, you controlled
785
00:40:18,015 --> 00:40:24,398
the most obvious entry point
into New York from the north,
786
00:40:24,422 --> 00:40:27,567
and into Canada from the south.
787
00:40:27,591 --> 00:40:29,936
Everything else is wilderness.
788
00:40:29,960 --> 00:40:32,372
♪
789
00:40:32,396 --> 00:40:35,041
Philbrick: The Americans
saw an opportunity.
790
00:40:35,065 --> 00:40:39,012
If they could take Montreal,
if they could take Quebec,
791
00:40:39,036 --> 00:40:41,915
and have command of
the St. Lawrence,
792
00:40:41,939 --> 00:40:44,842
they would have the British
right where they wanted them.
793
00:40:45,876 --> 00:40:48,855
Narrator: In the late summer
of 1775,
794
00:40:48,879 --> 00:40:52,459
some 1,200 New York
and New England troops
795
00:40:52,483 --> 00:40:54,494
assembled on the Ile aux Noix,
796
00:40:54,518 --> 00:40:57,931
just inside
the Province of Quebec.
797
00:40:57,955 --> 00:41:00,967
Their commander
Richard Montgomery had orders
798
00:41:00,991 --> 00:41:04,571
from the Continental Congress
to "take immediate possession"
799
00:41:04,595 --> 00:41:07,240
of the British garrison
at Montreal
800
00:41:07,264 --> 00:41:09,166
and then keep moving north.
801
00:41:10,601 --> 00:41:13,447
The ultimate goal was to
eliminate the province
802
00:41:13,471 --> 00:41:17,184
as a military threat
and perhaps adopt it
803
00:41:17,208 --> 00:41:20,287
as the 14th American Colony.
804
00:41:20,311 --> 00:41:22,456
They did not expect
much opposition:
805
00:41:22,480 --> 00:41:27,093
there were just 700 British
regulars in the whole province.
806
00:41:27,117 --> 00:41:31,231
Now George Washington called
for a complementary expedition
807
00:41:31,255 --> 00:41:34,935
through the forests of the Maine
province of Massachusetts
808
00:41:34,959 --> 00:41:37,704
to surprise and capture
Quebec City
809
00:41:37,728 --> 00:41:40,040
on the St. Lawrence River.
810
00:41:40,064 --> 00:41:43,934
To lead it, Washington chose
Benedict Arnold.
811
00:41:45,803 --> 00:41:47,681
Atkinson: Benedict Arnold
is the finest
812
00:41:47,705 --> 00:41:49,883
tactical commander
on either side
813
00:41:49,907 --> 00:41:52,252
in the first couple of years
of the war.
814
00:41:52,276 --> 00:41:58,058
He's conspicuously gifted
in being able to motivate men,
815
00:41:58,082 --> 00:42:00,760
tactically, under
difficult circumstances,
816
00:42:00,784 --> 00:42:02,887
to do what he wants them to do.
817
00:42:04,588 --> 00:42:06,700
Narrator: Arnold had emerged
from the capture of
818
00:42:06,724 --> 00:42:09,836
Fort Ticonderoga
with a mixed reputation:
819
00:42:09,860 --> 00:42:12,405
he had quarreled with
rival officers
820
00:42:12,429 --> 00:42:16,610
and become so incensed at having
his expenses questioned
821
00:42:16,634 --> 00:42:20,780
that he simply left the militia
and went home.
822
00:42:20,804 --> 00:42:24,117
But after his wife died,
he left his 3 sons
823
00:42:24,141 --> 00:42:28,955
with his sister and joined
Washington's Continental Army.
824
00:42:28,979 --> 00:42:31,858
"An idle life under my
present circumstances,"
825
00:42:31,882 --> 00:42:35,886
he told a friend, "would be
but a lingering death."
826
00:42:36,921 --> 00:42:40,066
Quebec, Washington believed,
was certain to be
827
00:42:40,090 --> 00:42:41,768
"very easy prey."
828
00:42:41,792 --> 00:42:45,062
But "not a moment's time
is to be lost," he added.
829
00:42:46,096 --> 00:42:48,875
Conway: The Americans
were not hostile
830
00:42:48,899 --> 00:42:50,377
to the concept of empire.
831
00:42:50,401 --> 00:42:54,605
On the contrary, they were
great enthusiasts for it.
832
00:42:55,773 --> 00:42:57,717
They called it
the "Continental Army"
833
00:42:57,741 --> 00:43:01,054
and the "Continental Congress"
for a good reason.
834
00:43:01,078 --> 00:43:05,258
They had ambitions to
incorporate Canada, Florida,
835
00:43:05,282 --> 00:43:08,018
and the whole of
the continent of North America.
836
00:43:09,920 --> 00:43:12,832
Narrator: On September 25th,
from a boatyard
837
00:43:12,856 --> 00:43:15,569
on the Kennebec River in Maine,
838
00:43:15,593 --> 00:43:19,172
Benedict Arnold and his
1,100-man force
839
00:43:19,196 --> 00:43:20,507
set out for Canada.
840
00:43:20,531 --> 00:43:22,742
♪
841
00:43:22,766 --> 00:43:24,477
Voice:
Failure to punish the people
842
00:43:24,501 --> 00:43:26,179
of the 4 New England governments
843
00:43:26,203 --> 00:43:29,215
for their many rebellious
and piratical acts,
844
00:43:29,239 --> 00:43:32,519
only encouraged them to go
to greater lengths.
845
00:43:32,543 --> 00:43:36,590
I determined to destroy some
of their towns and shipping.
846
00:43:36,614 --> 00:43:38,916
Vice Admiral Samuel Graves.
847
00:43:40,084 --> 00:43:43,463
Narrator: In October,
Vice Admiral Samuel Graves,
848
00:43:43,487 --> 00:43:45,665
commander-in-chief of
His Majesty's
849
00:43:45,689 --> 00:43:47,934
North American Station,
850
00:43:47,958 --> 00:43:50,937
announced he planned
to lay waste to the ports
851
00:43:50,961 --> 00:43:55,275
of Marblehead, Salem,
Cape Ann, Ipswich,
852
00:43:55,299 --> 00:44:01,681
Newburyport, Portsmouth,
Saco, Falmouth, Machias.
853
00:44:01,705 --> 00:44:04,618
All of them were bases
from which privateers...
854
00:44:04,642 --> 00:44:08,521
Patriot raiders... menaced
British shipping.
855
00:44:08,545 --> 00:44:12,592
Graves dispatched Lieutenant
Henry Mowat and 4 warships
856
00:44:12,616 --> 00:44:14,961
to carry out his orders.
857
00:44:14,985 --> 00:44:19,165
Mowat began with Falmouth...
Now Portland, Maine.
858
00:44:19,189 --> 00:44:20,667
[Bells tolling]
859
00:44:20,691 --> 00:44:23,503
Mowat gave the nearly
2,000 townspeople
860
00:44:23,527 --> 00:44:28,808
two hours, he said, to "remove
without delay the Human Species"
861
00:44:28,832 --> 00:44:31,277
before the bombardment began,
862
00:44:31,301 --> 00:44:35,181
then agreed to reconsider
provided the townspeople
863
00:44:35,205 --> 00:44:38,451
turned over all their
arms and gunpowder
864
00:44:38,475 --> 00:44:40,887
by the following morning.
865
00:44:40,911 --> 00:44:44,290
When they didn't,
British ships opened fire.
866
00:44:44,314 --> 00:44:47,260
[Cannon fire]
867
00:44:47,284 --> 00:44:50,897
The cannonade went on
for more than 7 hours,
868
00:44:50,921 --> 00:44:54,234
firing more than
3,000 rounds of shot
869
00:44:54,258 --> 00:44:58,171
and hollow balls filled with
combustible material.
870
00:44:58,195 --> 00:45:02,842
In mid-afternoon,
landing parties rowed ashore.
871
00:45:02,866 --> 00:45:05,545
They hurled torches
into the doors and windows
872
00:45:05,569 --> 00:45:07,280
of homes and shops.
873
00:45:07,304 --> 00:45:08,615
[Clatter]
874
00:45:08,639 --> 00:45:12,152
News of Falmouth's
destruction spread fast.
875
00:45:12,176 --> 00:45:16,280
Ports up and down the coast
braced for the next attack.
876
00:45:18,949 --> 00:45:21,895
Washington and Congress
had both already begun
877
00:45:21,919 --> 00:45:26,833
arming ships to seize enemy
cargoes to supply the army.
878
00:45:26,857 --> 00:45:30,570
Now Congress voted
to commission 13 frigates
879
00:45:30,594 --> 00:45:33,030
for a new Continental Navy.
880
00:45:35,099 --> 00:45:37,944
Philbrick: To have a navy
in the late 18th century
881
00:45:37,968 --> 00:45:40,914
was to have a fleet of ships
that were the most
882
00:45:40,938 --> 00:45:44,617
sophisticated machines
in the world at that time.
883
00:45:44,641 --> 00:45:47,987
They were very expensive.
And they required all sorts of
884
00:45:48,011 --> 00:45:52,459
economic power and technology
to create.
885
00:45:52,483 --> 00:45:56,796
Great Britain had that.
The colonies really didn't.
886
00:45:56,820 --> 00:45:59,833
And, so, to go against
this huge naval power
887
00:45:59,857 --> 00:46:03,060
was kind of an insane task
to even contemplate.
888
00:46:04,194 --> 00:46:06,940
Narrator: The most successful
Patriot commander
889
00:46:06,964 --> 00:46:11,211
was John Manley, a sea captain
from Marblehead.
890
00:46:11,235 --> 00:46:13,880
He managed to seize
7 British vessels
891
00:46:13,904 --> 00:46:16,082
before the end of the year,
892
00:46:16,106 --> 00:46:19,719
including an ordnance ship,
its hold filled
893
00:46:19,743 --> 00:46:23,623
with 100,000 flints,
2,000 muskets,
894
00:46:23,647 --> 00:46:25,959
and 30,000 cannonballs...
895
00:46:25,983 --> 00:46:29,295
All of it badly needed
by the Continental Army.
896
00:46:29,319 --> 00:46:32,232
♪
897
00:46:32,256 --> 00:46:35,702
British Admiral Graves
ultimately decided against
898
00:46:35,726 --> 00:46:37,928
attacking any more ports.
899
00:46:38,862 --> 00:46:40,497
But the damage was done.
900
00:46:41,665 --> 00:46:44,110
Voice: The savage and brutal
barbarity of our enemies
901
00:46:44,134 --> 00:46:46,045
is a full demonstration
that there is not
902
00:46:46,069 --> 00:46:48,047
the least remains of virtue,
903
00:46:48,071 --> 00:46:51,341
wisdom, or humanity
in the British.
904
00:46:52,743 --> 00:46:55,121
Therefore, we expect soon
to break off
905
00:46:55,145 --> 00:46:57,590
all kind of connection
with Britain,
906
00:46:57,614 --> 00:47:02,662
and form into a Grand Republic
of the American United colonies.
907
00:47:02,686 --> 00:47:04,063
"The New England Chronicle."
908
00:47:04,087 --> 00:47:07,834
♪
909
00:47:07,858 --> 00:47:09,736
Voice: In every human breast,
910
00:47:09,760 --> 00:47:15,608
God has implanted a principle,
which we call love of freedom.
911
00:47:15,632 --> 00:47:21,648
It is impatient of oppression,
and pants for deliverance.
912
00:47:21,672 --> 00:47:28,621
I will assert, that the
same principle lives in us.
913
00:47:28,645 --> 00:47:29,689
Phillis Wheatley.
914
00:47:29,713 --> 00:47:32,392
♪
915
00:47:32,416 --> 00:47:33,993
Narrator:
George Washington made his
916
00:47:34,017 --> 00:47:36,763
Cambridge headquarters
in the handsome home
917
00:47:36,787 --> 00:47:39,899
of a Loyalist who had
fled to England.
918
00:47:39,923 --> 00:47:42,969
One morning, not long
after he had moved in,
919
00:47:42,993 --> 00:47:45,839
he noticed a 6-year-old
African-American
920
00:47:45,863 --> 00:47:49,175
named Darby Vassall
swinging on the gate.
921
00:47:49,199 --> 00:47:52,345
Vassall remembered saying he had
been born in the house
922
00:47:52,369 --> 00:47:55,081
and his parents
had worked there.
923
00:47:55,105 --> 00:47:57,183
Washington urged him
to come inside
924
00:47:57,207 --> 00:47:58,885
and get something to eat;
925
00:47:58,909 --> 00:48:02,088
he had plenty of chores
for him to do.
926
00:48:02,112 --> 00:48:06,059
When Darby asked what sort
of wages he could expect,
927
00:48:06,083 --> 00:48:08,728
Washington thought
the question impertinent
928
00:48:08,752 --> 00:48:10,287
and "unreasonable."
929
00:48:11,788 --> 00:48:15,034
Darby Vassall lived to be
a very old man
930
00:48:15,058 --> 00:48:19,205
and, when asked, he liked to say
that in his experience,
931
00:48:19,229 --> 00:48:22,141
George Washington
"was no gentleman,"
932
00:48:22,165 --> 00:48:25,936
since he'd expected a boy
to work for free.
933
00:48:27,337 --> 00:48:30,817
Washington was also shocked
to see Black soldiers
934
00:48:30,841 --> 00:48:34,087
encamped alongside
their White neighbors.
935
00:48:34,111 --> 00:48:36,890
Unconvinced they could ever
make good soldiers,
936
00:48:36,914 --> 00:48:40,860
Washington persuaded
the Massachusetts
Provincial Congress
937
00:48:40,884 --> 00:48:43,096
to enlist no more of them,
938
00:48:43,120 --> 00:48:46,089
though dozens had fought
on Breed's Hill.
939
00:48:48,191 --> 00:48:49,969
Christopher Brown: I think
that Washington was concerned
940
00:48:49,993 --> 00:48:51,804
about what it might mean
941
00:48:51,828 --> 00:48:54,207
for slavery and slaveholding.
942
00:48:54,231 --> 00:48:56,609
I think he was alert to the ways
943
00:48:56,633 --> 00:49:00,637
that it could end up
eroding the institution.
944
00:49:02,105 --> 00:49:04,651
Narrator: Enslaved
African-Americans constituted
945
00:49:04,675 --> 00:49:08,221
just 2% percent of
the population of New England,
946
00:49:08,245 --> 00:49:12,558
but 40% of Virginians
were held as slaves,
947
00:49:12,582 --> 00:49:16,062
and planters like Washington
lived in constant fear
948
00:49:16,086 --> 00:49:18,298
that they would rise up
against them...
949
00:49:18,322 --> 00:49:20,700
As enslaved people had risen up
950
00:49:20,724 --> 00:49:22,835
on the British island of Jamaica
951
00:49:22,859 --> 00:49:26,129
3 times in the last 15 years.
952
00:49:27,698 --> 00:49:29,242
Voice: When you make men slaves
953
00:49:29,266 --> 00:49:32,011
you deprive them of
half their virtue,
954
00:49:32,035 --> 00:49:36,716
and compel them to live with you
in a state of war.
955
00:49:36,740 --> 00:49:40,553
Are there no dangers attending
this mode of treatment?
956
00:49:40,577 --> 00:49:44,681
Are you not hourly in dread
of an insurrection?
957
00:49:45,882 --> 00:49:47,417
Olaudah Equiano.
958
00:49:49,019 --> 00:49:50,730
Narrator: The growing talk
of "liberty"
959
00:49:50,754 --> 00:49:53,766
had appealed to those
who had the least of it
960
00:49:53,790 --> 00:49:56,302
and craved it most.
961
00:49:56,326 --> 00:49:59,605
From New England to
South Carolina, enslaved people
962
00:49:59,629 --> 00:50:03,433
offered to help the British
if they were granted freedom.
963
00:50:05,602 --> 00:50:09,916
In November of 1775,
Virginia's Royal Governor
964
00:50:09,940 --> 00:50:12,685
Lord Dunmore, who had been
forced to flee
965
00:50:12,709 --> 00:50:17,023
with some 300 soldiers,
sailors, and Loyalists
966
00:50:17,047 --> 00:50:19,726
to ships anchored
in the Chesapeake Bay,
967
00:50:19,750 --> 00:50:23,062
issued a Proclamation
that seemed to confirm
968
00:50:23,086 --> 00:50:26,733
the slaveholders'
worst nightmares.
969
00:50:26,757 --> 00:50:31,371
It promised freedom to any
enslaved man owned by a rebel
970
00:50:31,395 --> 00:50:33,439
who was willing to take up arms
971
00:50:33,463 --> 00:50:35,732
and help suppress the uprising.
972
00:50:37,401 --> 00:50:39,045
Atkinson: Britain is the biggest
973
00:50:39,069 --> 00:50:41,714
slave-trading nation on earth.
974
00:50:41,738 --> 00:50:45,084
Nevertheless, the British
believe that if they can
975
00:50:45,108 --> 00:50:48,187
convince enough slaves
to abandon their masters
976
00:50:48,211 --> 00:50:52,725
in the South,
to take up arms against
977
00:50:52,749 --> 00:50:57,597
the American rebels,
that this is a manpower pool
978
00:50:57,621 --> 00:51:00,633
that can also
derange the economies
979
00:51:00,657 --> 00:51:02,435
of the Southern states.
980
00:51:02,459 --> 00:51:04,337
It's not that the British
are anti-slavery,
981
00:51:04,361 --> 00:51:07,273
by any means,
in the 1770s, right?
982
00:51:07,297 --> 00:51:09,509
Their colonies in the Caribbean
983
00:51:09,533 --> 00:51:12,445
are their most profitable
colonies in the Americas.
984
00:51:12,469 --> 00:51:14,947
They are firmly
committed to slavery.
985
00:51:14,971 --> 00:51:18,985
But, opportunistically,
when they think that they can
986
00:51:19,009 --> 00:51:23,222
encourage slaves to rise up
against rebelling colonists,
987
00:51:23,246 --> 00:51:25,258
they'll do so.
988
00:51:25,282 --> 00:51:27,093
Annette Gordon-Reed:
For enslaved people,
989
00:51:27,117 --> 00:51:30,296
this was a way of getting
out of a situation
990
00:51:30,320 --> 00:51:32,732
that seemed intractable.
991
00:51:32,756 --> 00:51:36,969
And it gave them an impetus
to get involved in all of this.
992
00:51:36,993 --> 00:51:41,040
In the sort of chaos of war,
they found an opportunity,
993
00:51:41,064 --> 00:51:43,467
a way to escape their situation.
994
00:51:44,935 --> 00:51:47,013
Voice: "The Virginia Gazette."
995
00:51:47,037 --> 00:51:49,816
Be not then, ye Negroes,
996
00:51:49,840 --> 00:51:53,953
tempted by this proclamation
to ruin yourselves.
997
00:51:53,977 --> 00:51:58,458
Whether you will profit
by my advice, I cannot tell.
998
00:51:58,482 --> 00:52:02,495
But this I know, that whether
we suffer or not,
999
00:52:02,519 --> 00:52:06,423
if you desert us,
you most certainly will.
1000
00:52:07,724 --> 00:52:09,969
Narrator: Dunmore's
Proclamation helped drive
1001
00:52:09,993 --> 00:52:14,440
Southern slaveholders to
the side of the revolutionaries.
1002
00:52:14,464 --> 00:52:18,277
Edward Rutledge of
South Carolina spoke for many:
1003
00:52:18,301 --> 00:52:22,148
Lord Dunmore's proclamation
tends "in my judgment,
1004
00:52:22,172 --> 00:52:25,585
"more effectually to work
an eternal separation
1005
00:52:25,609 --> 00:52:28,221
"between Great Britain
and the Colonies
1006
00:52:28,245 --> 00:52:31,257
than any other expedient."
1007
00:52:31,281 --> 00:52:33,359
Dunmore says that he only wants
1008
00:52:33,383 --> 00:52:35,852
the slaves of rebels
to join him.
1009
00:52:38,421 --> 00:52:40,733
Not clear exactly how
you can tell them apart,
1010
00:52:40,757 --> 00:52:43,202
or whether there's
any kind of census going on
1011
00:52:43,226 --> 00:52:44,728
of who do you belong to.
1012
00:52:45,729 --> 00:52:48,574
Narrator: Dunmore was not
an abolitionist;
1013
00:52:48,598 --> 00:52:52,145
he did not free any of
the 57 human beings
1014
00:52:52,169 --> 00:52:55,114
he held in slavery himself;
1015
00:52:55,138 --> 00:52:57,583
the Patriots would
capture them all
1016
00:52:57,607 --> 00:53:00,544
and sell them to fund
their cause.
1017
00:53:01,978 --> 00:53:03,523
Voice: Wednesday.
1018
00:53:03,547 --> 00:53:08,327
Last night after going to bed,
Moses, my son's man,
1019
00:53:08,351 --> 00:53:11,597
Joe, Billy, Postillion, John,
1020
00:53:11,621 --> 00:53:15,234
Mulatto Peter, Tom, Panticore,
1021
00:53:15,258 --> 00:53:18,070
Manuel, and Lancaster Sam
1022
00:53:18,094 --> 00:53:21,674
all ran away to Lord Dunmore.
1023
00:53:21,698 --> 00:53:23,200
Landon Carter.
1024
00:53:24,568 --> 00:53:28,581
Narrator: Now runaways streamed
to the governor's ships,
1025
00:53:28,605 --> 00:53:32,218
silently slipping along
the rivers and tidal creeks
1026
00:53:32,242 --> 00:53:34,344
that opened into
the Chesapeake Bay.
1027
00:53:35,345 --> 00:53:37,823
87 men, women, and children
1028
00:53:37,847 --> 00:53:42,385
from a single Virginia
plantation fled to Dunmore.
1029
00:53:43,253 --> 00:53:44,931
[Dogs barking]
1030
00:53:44,955 --> 00:53:47,500
Voice: Ran off last night
from the subscriber:
1031
00:53:47,524 --> 00:53:49,535
a Negro man named Charles,
1032
00:53:49,559 --> 00:53:52,471
who is a very shrewd,
sensible fellow,
1033
00:53:52,495 --> 00:53:54,431
and can both read and write.
1034
00:53:55,532 --> 00:53:57,543
There is reason to believe
he intends an attempt
1035
00:53:57,567 --> 00:53:59,679
to get to Lord Dunmore.
1036
00:53:59,703 --> 00:54:02,815
His elopement was from
no cause of complaint,
1037
00:54:02,839 --> 00:54:04,617
or dread of whipping
1038
00:54:04,641 --> 00:54:09,355
but from a determined resolution
to get liberty, as he conceived.
1039
00:54:09,379 --> 00:54:11,390
"The Virginia Gazette."
1040
00:54:11,414 --> 00:54:13,392
Narrator: "There is not
a man among them,"
1041
00:54:13,416 --> 00:54:16,262
George Washington's
farm manager warned him,
1042
00:54:16,286 --> 00:54:18,197
"but would leave us
if they believed
1043
00:54:18,221 --> 00:54:20,266
"they could make their escape.
1044
00:54:20,290 --> 00:54:22,868
Liberty is sweet."
1045
00:54:22,892 --> 00:54:24,303
He was right.
1046
00:54:24,327 --> 00:54:26,072
The first enslaved person
1047
00:54:26,096 --> 00:54:27,573
to escape Mount Vernon
1048
00:54:27,597 --> 00:54:30,009
was named Harry Washington.
1049
00:54:30,033 --> 00:54:33,546
Born somewhere near
the Gambia River in West Africa,
1050
00:54:33,570 --> 00:54:36,649
he was captured,
carried across the ocean,
1051
00:54:36,673 --> 00:54:41,378
and, in 1763, purchased by
George Washington.
1052
00:54:42,445 --> 00:54:45,391
Freedom was
never far from his mind.
1053
00:54:45,415 --> 00:54:48,628
In 1771, he had tried to escape
1054
00:54:48,652 --> 00:54:52,098
but was caught and brought back.
1055
00:54:52,122 --> 00:54:54,824
4 years later,
he saw his chance.
1056
00:54:55,992 --> 00:54:59,071
Erica Dunbar: Following
Lord Dunmore's proclamation,
1057
00:54:59,095 --> 00:55:04,010
Harry Washington knew that
this would be an opportunity,
1058
00:55:04,034 --> 00:55:06,579
and he joined the British
1059
00:55:06,603 --> 00:55:09,806
against the people
who had once owned him.
1060
00:55:12,042 --> 00:55:14,754
Narrator: George Washington
called Lord Dunmore
1061
00:55:14,778 --> 00:55:17,490
a "Monster,"
and an "arch-traitor
1062
00:55:17,514 --> 00:55:20,159
to the rights of humanity."
1063
00:55:20,183 --> 00:55:22,194
Voice:
If that man is not crushed
1064
00:55:22,218 --> 00:55:24,363
before spring, he will become
1065
00:55:24,387 --> 00:55:27,600
the most formidable enemy
America has.
1066
00:55:27,624 --> 00:55:30,369
His strength will increase,
as a snowball,
1067
00:55:30,393 --> 00:55:33,139
by rolling, and faster.
1068
00:55:33,163 --> 00:55:37,343
Nothing less than depriving
him of life or liberty
1069
00:55:37,367 --> 00:55:39,545
will secure peace to Virginia.
1070
00:55:39,569 --> 00:55:41,647
George Washington.
1071
00:55:41,671 --> 00:55:44,150
Narrator: Scores of runaways
were caught
1072
00:55:44,174 --> 00:55:45,851
and brutally punished;
1073
00:55:45,875 --> 00:55:48,487
some were killed,
others sold off
1074
00:55:48,511 --> 00:55:51,223
to compensate their enslavers.
1075
00:55:51,247 --> 00:55:55,695
But some 800 men would make it
to Dunmore's growing fleet,
1076
00:55:55,719 --> 00:55:59,389
along with roughly the same
number of women and children.
1077
00:56:00,724 --> 00:56:04,470
Men found fit for duty were
enlisted in a special unit
1078
00:56:04,494 --> 00:56:07,773
called "Dunmore's
Ethiopian Regiment."
1079
00:56:07,797 --> 00:56:11,577
They were commanded by
White officers but paid a wage
1080
00:56:11,601 --> 00:56:13,737
for the first time
in their lives.
1081
00:56:15,205 --> 00:56:18,851
Voice: The proclamation has had
a wonderful effect.
1082
00:56:18,875 --> 00:56:22,521
The Negroes are flocking in
from all quarters.
1083
00:56:22,545 --> 00:56:25,524
And had I but
a few more men here,
1084
00:56:25,548 --> 00:56:28,594
I would march immediately
to Williamsburg,
1085
00:56:28,618 --> 00:56:32,822
by which I should soon compel
the whole colony to submit.
1086
00:56:34,023 --> 00:56:35,392
Lord Dunmore.
1087
00:56:36,659 --> 00:56:38,671
Narrator: Bolstered by
reinforcements,
1088
00:56:38,695 --> 00:56:42,675
Dunmore occupied Norfolk
and ordered a stockade built
1089
00:56:42,699 --> 00:56:45,611
at the Great Bridge
over the Elizabeth River
1090
00:56:45,635 --> 00:56:48,838
to block the only road to town
from the South.
1091
00:56:49,806 --> 00:56:53,352
Some 700 Patriots
dug in across the river,
1092
00:56:53,376 --> 00:56:56,956
and on December 9, 1775,
1093
00:56:56,980 --> 00:57:00,059
when Dunmore's troops
charged across the bridge
1094
00:57:00,083 --> 00:57:01,761
to dislodge them,
1095
00:57:01,785 --> 00:57:06,189
more than 100 of his men,
Black and White, were killed.
1096
00:57:07,791 --> 00:57:11,070
"They fought, bled,
and died like Englishmen,"
1097
00:57:11,094 --> 00:57:12,562
one man remembered.
1098
00:57:13,930 --> 00:57:17,410
Dunmore's makeshift army...
Including what was left
1099
00:57:17,434 --> 00:57:19,345
of the Ethiopian regiment...
1100
00:57:19,369 --> 00:57:21,414
Fled back to sea.
1101
00:57:21,438 --> 00:57:24,150
With them went scores of
Loyalist families
1102
00:57:24,174 --> 00:57:26,352
from in and around Norfolk,
1103
00:57:26,376 --> 00:57:29,479
most of them
Dunmore's fellow Scots.
1104
00:57:30,814 --> 00:57:34,860
He now commanded a floating
city... including rafts
1105
00:57:34,884 --> 00:57:37,987
on which the poorest
struggled to survive.
1106
00:57:39,756 --> 00:57:41,300
Brown: Dunmore's Proclamation
1107
00:57:41,324 --> 00:57:47,072
turns the conflict, in Virginia,
into a genuine crisis.
1108
00:57:47,096 --> 00:57:50,776
But it does help
clarify differences, right?
1109
00:57:50,800 --> 00:57:54,513
It establishes that there is
one side of this conflict
1110
00:57:54,537 --> 00:57:57,874
that is unevenly
committed to slavery.
1111
00:57:59,142 --> 00:58:01,854
And then there's
another side, our side,
1112
00:58:01,878 --> 00:58:03,889
which is fully committed to it.
1113
00:58:03,913 --> 00:58:07,684
And for some Patriots,
that's all they need to know.
1114
00:58:08,885 --> 00:58:11,831
It creates a sense that this
is an existential conflict
1115
00:58:11,855 --> 00:58:13,790
in a way that it had not before.
1116
00:58:15,024 --> 00:58:17,837
Voice:
These lords of themselves,
1117
00:58:17,861 --> 00:58:23,042
these kings of me, these
demigods of independence.
1118
00:58:23,066 --> 00:58:26,679
It has been proposed that
the slaves should be set free,
1119
00:58:26,703 --> 00:58:29,215
an act which, surely,
the lovers of liberty
1120
00:58:29,239 --> 00:58:31,283
cannot but commend.
1121
00:58:31,307 --> 00:58:35,187
How is it that we hear
the loudest yelps for liberty
1122
00:58:35,211 --> 00:58:37,146
among the drivers of Negroes?
1123
00:58:38,648 --> 00:58:40,159
Dr. Samuel Johnson.
1124
00:58:40,183 --> 00:58:44,430
♪
1125
00:58:44,454 --> 00:58:47,099
[Indistinct shouting]
1126
00:58:47,123 --> 00:58:51,170
Voice: Connecticut wants no
Massachusetts man in her corps;
1127
00:58:51,194 --> 00:58:54,907
Massachusetts thinks there is no
necessity for a Rhode Islander
1128
00:58:54,931 --> 00:58:57,476
to be introduced into hers.
1129
00:58:57,500 --> 00:58:59,478
Could I have foreseen
what I have,
1130
00:58:59,502 --> 00:59:01,780
and am like to experience,
1131
00:59:01,804 --> 00:59:03,749
no consideration upon earth
1132
00:59:03,773 --> 00:59:06,519
should have induced me
to accept this command.
1133
00:59:06,543 --> 00:59:07,853
[George Washington]
1134
00:59:07,877 --> 00:59:09,421
[Indistinct shouting]
1135
00:59:09,445 --> 00:59:11,423
Narrator: Now
George Washington faced
1136
00:59:11,447 --> 00:59:13,092
for the first time the problem
1137
00:59:13,116 --> 00:59:16,295
that would haunt him
again and again:
1138
00:59:16,319 --> 00:59:19,832
when enlistments expired
at the end of the year,
1139
00:59:19,856 --> 00:59:22,801
most of his army was simply
going to melt away.
1140
00:59:22,825 --> 00:59:24,570
♪
1141
00:59:24,594 --> 00:59:27,172
To fill out his ranks,
Washington persuaded
1142
00:59:27,196 --> 00:59:30,476
the governors of
Massachusetts and New Hampshire
1143
00:59:30,500 --> 00:59:34,013
to send him a total
of 5,000 militiamen.
1144
00:59:34,037 --> 00:59:38,384
The newcomers were so sullen,
veteran soldiers called them
1145
00:59:38,408 --> 00:59:40,276
the "Long-Faced People."
1146
00:59:41,778 --> 00:59:44,490
Washington asked Congress
if Indian units
1147
00:59:44,514 --> 00:59:46,458
could serve in his army.
1148
00:59:46,482 --> 00:59:48,227
While they debated the issue,
1149
00:59:48,251 --> 00:59:51,754
many Native people
did join the ranks.
1150
00:59:53,256 --> 00:59:58,103
5 sons of a Mohegan woman
named Rebecca Tanner
1151
00:59:58,127 --> 01:00:00,439
would die fighting
for the Patriots
1152
01:00:00,463 --> 01:00:02,107
over the course of the war.
1153
01:00:02,131 --> 01:00:06,111
♪
1154
01:00:06,135 --> 01:00:09,014
In December,
Washington changed his mind
1155
01:00:09,038 --> 01:00:11,750
about enlisting
African-Americans.
1156
01:00:11,774 --> 01:00:14,587
His desperate need
for men was part of it.
1157
01:00:14,611 --> 01:00:18,524
But there were also appeals
from Black veterans themselves
1158
01:00:18,548 --> 01:00:20,793
or from their officers.
1159
01:00:20,817 --> 01:00:23,329
"It has been represented
to me," Washington wrote
1160
01:00:23,353 --> 01:00:26,765
to the Continental Congress,
"that the free Negroes who have
1161
01:00:26,789 --> 01:00:30,469
"served in this Army
are very much dissatisfied
1162
01:00:30,493 --> 01:00:32,671
at being discarded."
1163
01:00:32,695 --> 01:00:34,864
They could now re-enlist.
1164
01:00:37,066 --> 01:00:38,944
Kamensky:
Washington brings to Cambridge
1165
01:00:38,968 --> 01:00:41,947
the "hard no"
of a Virginia planter.
1166
01:00:41,971 --> 01:00:46,085
But he is also willing
to revise himself.
1167
01:00:46,109 --> 01:00:49,688
To think about the whole of
the potential fighting force
1168
01:00:49,712 --> 01:00:54,793
and whether Black men
can play a role within it.
1169
01:00:54,817 --> 01:00:57,763
I think many people,
most people from his station,
1170
01:00:57,787 --> 01:00:59,431
would have started
where he started
1171
01:00:59,455 --> 01:01:01,858
and have gone no further.
1172
01:01:02,892 --> 01:01:06,572
So, I think he does have
a sort of flexibility
1173
01:01:06,596 --> 01:01:09,008
as a commander,
which is the only thing
1174
01:01:09,032 --> 01:01:12,201
that the commander of an
insurrectionary force can have.
1175
01:01:13,369 --> 01:01:15,814
Narrator: Though the decision
remained unpopular,
1176
01:01:15,838 --> 01:01:20,185
by the end of the war,
some 5,000 African-Americans
1177
01:01:20,209 --> 01:01:23,079
had served in
the Continental Army.
1178
01:01:24,781 --> 01:01:29,228
A lot of these decisions
about who to fight for,
1179
01:01:29,252 --> 01:01:32,398
who to align with,
are deeply, deeply local.
1180
01:01:32,422 --> 01:01:36,335
They're not necessarily about
high ideals at all, right?
1181
01:01:36,359 --> 01:01:38,871
So, when people think
there's an opportunity
1182
01:01:38,895 --> 01:01:41,974
with the British,
they may align with
1183
01:01:41,998 --> 01:01:43,876
and run off to British lines.
1184
01:01:43,900 --> 01:01:47,846
But when the Patriot Army
kind of opens its ranks
1185
01:01:47,870 --> 01:01:51,050
to Black people, there are
lots of Black people
1186
01:01:51,074 --> 01:01:53,686
who think they can gain
advantage, concession,
1187
01:01:53,710 --> 01:01:59,024
and even, one day, some status
from fighting for the Patriots.
1188
01:01:59,048 --> 01:02:01,026
It's not a question of
who the good guys are
1189
01:02:01,050 --> 01:02:03,028
and who the bad guys are.
1190
01:02:03,052 --> 01:02:05,931
It's what can I get from
making this decision,
1191
01:02:05,955 --> 01:02:09,158
right now, in this place, at
this time, among these people.
1192
01:02:10,760 --> 01:02:13,472
Narrator: Washington's
new army... an ill-assorted
1193
01:02:13,496 --> 01:02:18,210
mix of soldiers who'd decided
to stay on, raw recruits,
1194
01:02:18,234 --> 01:02:23,982
and short-term militiamen...
Now numbered around 8,000 men.
1195
01:02:24,006 --> 01:02:27,076
But only 2/3 were fit for duty.
1196
01:02:28,144 --> 01:02:31,390
Those men were still cold,
still poorly armed,
1197
01:02:31,414 --> 01:02:35,394
still poorly paid...
But also still able
1198
01:02:35,418 --> 01:02:38,254
to keep the British
trapped in Boston.
1199
01:02:39,922 --> 01:02:41,767
Voice: It
is not in the pages of history
1200
01:02:41,791 --> 01:02:45,170
perhaps to furnish
a case like ours.
1201
01:02:45,194 --> 01:02:48,307
To maintain a post within
musket shot of the enemy
1202
01:02:48,331 --> 01:02:51,777
for 6 months together,
without powder,
1203
01:02:51,801 --> 01:02:56,215
and at the same time to disband
one Army and recruit another,
1204
01:02:56,239 --> 01:03:00,853
within that distance of
20-odd British regiments,
1205
01:03:00,877 --> 01:03:03,288
is more than probably
ever was attempted.
1206
01:03:03,312 --> 01:03:07,292
♪
1207
01:03:07,316 --> 01:03:09,027
[Thunder]
1208
01:03:09,051 --> 01:03:10,829
Voice: At the most
moderate computation,
1209
01:03:10,853 --> 01:03:12,898
this rebellion will cost
Great Britain
1210
01:03:12,922 --> 01:03:17,193
10 millions of treasure
and 20,000 lives.
1211
01:03:18,895 --> 01:03:21,573
What then,
in the name of wonder,
1212
01:03:21,597 --> 01:03:23,675
is the object of the war?
1213
01:03:23,699 --> 01:03:27,045
Are we to throw away so much
treasure and so many lives
1214
01:03:27,069 --> 01:03:29,948
to gain a point
which, when gained,
1215
01:03:29,972 --> 01:03:32,718
is not worth 1% on our money?
1216
01:03:32,742 --> 01:03:34,987
The "Public Advertiser."
1217
01:03:35,011 --> 01:03:36,455
Maya Jasanoff: In the British
Parliament, there are
1218
01:03:36,479 --> 01:03:37,723
debates taking place.
1219
01:03:37,747 --> 01:03:40,058
There are people
lining up on one side
1220
01:03:40,082 --> 01:03:42,161
who say, "You know,
we ought to actually
1221
01:03:42,185 --> 01:03:44,696
"grant the colonies
more autonomy.
1222
01:03:44,720 --> 01:03:47,533
"We ought to loosen
the strictures
1223
01:03:47,557 --> 01:03:48,700
"that we've placed on them.
1224
01:03:48,724 --> 01:03:50,035
"We ought to think about ways
1225
01:03:50,059 --> 01:03:52,261
that they might be represented."
1226
01:03:53,329 --> 01:03:54,940
Narrator: The war
in North America
1227
01:03:54,964 --> 01:03:58,076
was not universally popular
in England.
1228
01:03:58,100 --> 01:04:01,113
The colonies were
3,000 miles away.
1229
01:04:01,137 --> 01:04:03,415
The theater of war
would be far larger
1230
01:04:03,439 --> 01:04:07,219
than any the British Army
had ever encountered before.
1231
01:04:07,243 --> 01:04:09,955
It was sure to be
costly and bloody
1232
01:04:09,979 --> 01:04:12,081
and likely to be prolonged.
1233
01:04:13,115 --> 01:04:15,127
The Army chief and England's
1234
01:04:15,151 --> 01:04:17,362
most distinguished
naval commander
1235
01:04:17,386 --> 01:04:20,532
would both refuse
to take part in the war.
1236
01:04:20,556 --> 01:04:23,869
The Lord Mayor and aldermen
of the City of London
1237
01:04:23,893 --> 01:04:27,005
appealed to the King
to reconsider.
1238
01:04:27,029 --> 01:04:29,308
It was far better to give
the Americans
1239
01:04:29,332 --> 01:04:31,677
their "rights and liberties,"
they said,
1240
01:04:31,701 --> 01:04:36,038
than impose "the dreadful
operations of your armaments."
1241
01:04:37,340 --> 01:04:40,853
But the new
Secretary of State for America,
1242
01:04:40,877 --> 01:04:42,521
Lord George Germain,
1243
01:04:42,545 --> 01:04:45,257
remained determined
to crush the rebellion...
1244
01:04:45,281 --> 01:04:48,584
And to do it with
a single, all-out campaign.
1245
01:04:49,719 --> 01:04:53,365
If the war dragged on,
King George himself feared
1246
01:04:53,389 --> 01:04:57,903
that Britain's old Catholic
enemies, France and Spain,
1247
01:04:57,927 --> 01:05:01,197
might be persuaded
to support the rebel cause.
1248
01:05:03,032 --> 01:05:05,277
Voice:
The rebellious war now levied
1249
01:05:05,301 --> 01:05:08,447
is become more general,
and is manifestly
1250
01:05:08,471 --> 01:05:10,682
carried on for the purpose
of establishing
1251
01:05:10,706 --> 01:05:13,151
an independent empire.
1252
01:05:13,175 --> 01:05:15,554
The object is too important,
1253
01:05:15,578 --> 01:05:18,390
the spirit of the British nation
too high,
1254
01:05:18,414 --> 01:05:22,027
the resources with which God
hath blessed her too numerous,
1255
01:05:22,051 --> 01:05:24,196
to give up so many colonies
1256
01:05:24,220 --> 01:05:26,832
which she has planted
with great industry,
1257
01:05:26,856 --> 01:05:31,203
nursed with great tenderness,
and protected and defended
1258
01:05:31,227 --> 01:05:34,539
at much expense of
blood and treasure.
1259
01:05:34,563 --> 01:05:36,341
[King George III]
1260
01:05:36,365 --> 01:05:37,910
Atkinson: King George
was not an ogre.
1261
01:05:37,934 --> 01:05:39,845
He was not a tyrant.
1262
01:05:39,869 --> 01:05:44,182
Contrary to the stereotype
that most Americans have of him,
1263
01:05:44,206 --> 01:05:48,244
he's actually a pretty
extraordinary man.
1264
01:05:49,445 --> 01:05:52,958
Conway: He was a very great
constitutional monarch.
1265
01:05:52,982 --> 01:05:56,061
In fact, in 1775, he declares,
1266
01:05:56,085 --> 01:05:59,298
"I'm fighting the war
of the legislature."
1267
01:05:59,322 --> 01:06:02,334
In other words, he's fighting
for Parliament's rights
1268
01:06:02,358 --> 01:06:04,069
over the American colonies.
1269
01:06:04,093 --> 01:06:06,939
Not his own rights,
Parliament's rights.
1270
01:06:06,963 --> 01:06:08,807
But once the war starts,
he sees himself
1271
01:06:08,831 --> 01:06:13,946
as the commander-in-chief with
a responsibility to make sure
1272
01:06:13,970 --> 01:06:17,006
the war is run efficiently
and effectively.
1273
01:06:18,174 --> 01:06:20,652
Narrator: The British Navy
was the largest on earth,
1274
01:06:20,676 --> 01:06:24,356
but the all-volunteer British
Army numbered fewer than
1275
01:06:24,380 --> 01:06:27,859
50,000 officers and men
on paper.
1276
01:06:27,883 --> 01:06:30,362
And it was still smaller
in reality,
1277
01:06:30,386 --> 01:06:33,398
just 1/3 of the size
of the French Army,
1278
01:06:33,422 --> 01:06:37,469
and scattered across the world
from Ireland to India,
1279
01:06:37,493 --> 01:06:40,672
the Mediterranean
to the Caribbean.
1280
01:06:40,696 --> 01:06:44,710
"Unless it rains men in
red coats," one official warned,
1281
01:06:44,734 --> 01:06:48,337
"I know not where we are
to get all we shall want."
1282
01:06:49,438 --> 01:06:51,383
Ellis: The British
should have recognized that
1283
01:06:51,407 --> 01:06:53,285
this was going to be
extremely difficult
1284
01:06:53,309 --> 01:06:55,821
and perhaps unwinnable conflict.
1285
01:06:55,845 --> 01:06:59,057
They were confident
of two things.
1286
01:06:59,081 --> 01:07:01,460
They had invincible
military power.
1287
01:07:01,484 --> 01:07:04,730
And, therefore, there was no
need for them to compromise.
1288
01:07:04,754 --> 01:07:09,835
And secondly, that any
compromise of Sovereignty,
1289
01:07:09,859 --> 01:07:14,172
of Parliament's Sovereignty,
was going to encourage
1290
01:07:14,196 --> 01:07:17,409
independence on
the part of the Americans.
1291
01:07:17,433 --> 01:07:19,444
They had a kind of
"Domino" theory:
1292
01:07:19,468 --> 01:07:22,280
if we lose American colonies,
then we lose Canada,
1293
01:07:22,304 --> 01:07:24,449
then we lose the Caribbean.
1294
01:07:24,473 --> 01:07:29,221
So that George III and his
Ministers really believe
1295
01:07:29,245 --> 01:07:31,790
that nothing less than
the future of the British Empire
1296
01:07:31,814 --> 01:07:33,182
is at stake.
1297
01:07:35,751 --> 01:07:37,820
[Bird cawing]
1298
01:07:38,954 --> 01:07:40,465
Voice: Our commander, Arnold,
1299
01:07:40,489 --> 01:07:42,868
was of a remarkable character.
1300
01:07:42,892 --> 01:07:45,370
Brave and beloved
by the soldiery,
1301
01:07:45,394 --> 01:07:48,297
he possessed great
powers of persuasion.
1302
01:07:49,231 --> 01:07:50,909
Private John Joseph Henry.
1303
01:07:50,933 --> 01:07:53,245
♪
1304
01:07:53,269 --> 01:07:55,514
Narrator: Benedict Arnold
and his men had made
1305
01:07:55,538 --> 01:07:58,583
slow progress on their way
up the Kennebec River
1306
01:07:58,607 --> 01:08:01,953
as part of the American invasion
of Canada.
1307
01:08:01,977 --> 01:08:06,425
Their provisions had been
packed into 220 flat-bottomed
1308
01:08:06,449 --> 01:08:10,619
"bateaux," built for them
at George Washington's orders.
1309
01:08:11,887 --> 01:08:14,032
All Arnold knew
about the forests
1310
01:08:14,056 --> 01:08:16,134
his men were about to penetrate
1311
01:08:16,158 --> 01:08:20,338
came from a crude
15-year-old British map
1312
01:08:20,362 --> 01:08:25,911
that seemed to suggest
Quebec City was 180 miles away
1313
01:08:25,935 --> 01:08:28,880
and could be reached
in just 20 days.
1314
01:08:28,904 --> 01:08:31,283
♪
1315
01:08:31,307 --> 01:08:34,853
The real distance
turned out to be 270 miles.
1316
01:08:34,877 --> 01:08:36,455
[Wind blowing]
1317
01:08:36,479 --> 01:08:39,958
Nothing could have prepared
Arnold for the ordeal
1318
01:08:39,982 --> 01:08:42,060
he and his men
were about to endure.
1319
01:08:42,084 --> 01:08:43,995
[Water spraying]
1320
01:08:44,019 --> 01:08:46,164
The Kennebec turned out
to be punctuated
1321
01:08:46,188 --> 01:08:48,667
by waterfalls and rapids.
1322
01:08:48,691 --> 01:08:52,404
Submerged rocks tore
the bottoms of their boats.
1323
01:08:52,428 --> 01:08:56,241
Within 72 hours,
1/4 of their provisions
1324
01:08:56,265 --> 01:08:58,601
were lost or ruined.
1325
01:08:59,735 --> 01:09:03,014
In the mornings, wet clothes
were glazed with ice,
1326
01:09:03,038 --> 01:09:06,442
one man wrote,
thick as a pane of glass.
1327
01:09:07,810 --> 01:09:12,724
On the 10th day, Arnold began
rationing the remaining food...
1328
01:09:12,748 --> 01:09:15,417
Just salt pork and flour.
1329
01:09:17,019 --> 01:09:19,264
It snowed on the 19th day
1330
01:09:19,288 --> 01:09:22,858
and rained relentlessly
for days afterwards.
1331
01:09:24,260 --> 01:09:26,529
Then, it snowed again.
1332
01:09:28,564 --> 01:09:31,543
Philbrick: America is
this huge continent.
1333
01:09:31,567 --> 01:09:35,113
There's tornadoes,
there's hurricanes,
1334
01:09:35,137 --> 01:09:36,705
there's winter storms.
1335
01:09:37,973 --> 01:09:41,653
Turns of weather that we know
are coming for weeks on end
1336
01:09:41,677 --> 01:09:43,955
hit the people of
the 18th century
1337
01:09:43,979 --> 01:09:45,681
completely by surprise.
1338
01:09:47,416 --> 01:09:50,595
They're not just
fighting each other.
1339
01:09:50,619 --> 01:09:52,597
In a profound way,
they are fighting
1340
01:09:52,621 --> 01:09:57,435
the American climate
and geography and topography.
1341
01:09:57,459 --> 01:10:00,372
This is a difficult place
to conduct a war.
1342
01:10:00,396 --> 01:10:03,775
♪
1343
01:10:03,799 --> 01:10:05,911
Narrator: After a month
of hardship,
1344
01:10:05,935 --> 01:10:08,480
the officer leading
the battalion that had been
1345
01:10:08,504 --> 01:10:12,551
bringing up the rear
declared the mission suicidal,
1346
01:10:12,575 --> 01:10:14,819
turned his 300 men around,
1347
01:10:14,843 --> 01:10:19,457
and started for home with many
of the remaining provisions.
1348
01:10:19,481 --> 01:10:22,360
♪
1349
01:10:22,384 --> 01:10:25,830
Arnold's men were now forced
to subsist on candles,
1350
01:10:25,854 --> 01:10:30,502
tree bark, and soup
made by boiling rawhide.
1351
01:10:30,526 --> 01:10:32,337
One company killed and ate
1352
01:10:32,361 --> 01:10:34,606
their captain's
Newfoundland dog.
1353
01:10:34,630 --> 01:10:36,508
♪
1354
01:10:36,532 --> 01:10:39,511
Of the 1,100 men
who set out from Cambridge,
1355
01:10:39,535 --> 01:10:44,316
more than 1/3 had turned back,
been escorted home as invalids,
1356
01:10:44,340 --> 01:10:46,375
or died along the way.
1357
01:10:47,910 --> 01:10:49,554
[Bell rings]
1358
01:10:49,578 --> 01:10:53,992
Finally, 45 days after
setting off... not 20...
1359
01:10:54,016 --> 01:10:58,363
Arnold's men saw the spires
and walls of Quebec City
1360
01:10:58,387 --> 01:11:00,823
looming across
the St. Lawrence River.
1361
01:11:01,857 --> 01:11:03,635
Philbrick: No one,
particularly the British,
1362
01:11:03,659 --> 01:11:06,671
can believe that suddenly
they are there.
1363
01:11:06,695 --> 01:11:10,308
Arnold, because of this,
would have a reputation now.
1364
01:11:10,332 --> 01:11:12,978
He would be known as
the "American Hannibal"
1365
01:11:13,002 --> 01:11:16,681
for his ability to move men
over mountains,
1366
01:11:16,705 --> 01:11:20,418
to achieve seemingly
impossible things.
1367
01:11:20,442 --> 01:11:22,921
Narrator: Meanwhile,
American forces led by
1368
01:11:22,945 --> 01:11:27,225
General Montgomery
had easily taken Montreal.
1369
01:11:27,249 --> 01:11:29,594
Then, with 300 of his men,
1370
01:11:29,618 --> 01:11:32,264
Montgomery set out
along the St. Lawrence
1371
01:11:32,288 --> 01:11:34,466
to meet up with Arnold.
1372
01:11:34,490 --> 01:11:38,027
Together, they planned their
assault on Quebec City.
1373
01:11:39,194 --> 01:11:42,540
They realize that they've got
a hard decision to make.
1374
01:11:42,564 --> 01:11:47,712
We either attack now, or many
of our men are going to leave.
1375
01:11:47,736 --> 01:11:50,915
Their enlistments are up.
They're cold.
1376
01:11:50,939 --> 01:11:53,485
It's mid-winter in Canada.
1377
01:11:53,509 --> 01:11:55,987
♪
1378
01:11:56,011 --> 01:11:59,324
Narrator: There were only
some 300 British regulars
1379
01:11:59,348 --> 01:12:01,593
stationed in the fortified city.
1380
01:12:01,617 --> 01:12:05,563
So, General Guy Carleton,
the royal governor of Canada,
1381
01:12:05,587 --> 01:12:08,967
ordered every able-bodied man
within its walls
1382
01:12:08,991 --> 01:12:10,769
to prepare for battle.
1383
01:12:10,793 --> 01:12:15,831
Anyone who refused had to leave
or be prosecuted as a spy.
1384
01:12:17,066 --> 01:12:21,503
The city's ramparts were soon
guarded by some 1,800 men.
1385
01:12:22,705 --> 01:12:26,017
The American plan called for
two small, noisy
1386
01:12:26,041 --> 01:12:29,554
diversionary feints
to draw defenders away
1387
01:12:29,578 --> 01:12:31,647
from the attack's real targets.
1388
01:12:32,781 --> 01:12:35,994
Meanwhile, Arnold and his men
would circle around
1389
01:12:36,018 --> 01:12:38,063
Quebec City from the north,
1390
01:12:38,087 --> 01:12:41,933
while General Montgomery
would approach from the south.
1391
01:12:41,957 --> 01:12:45,870
Together, they would storm
the citadel's steep walls.
1392
01:12:45,894 --> 01:12:48,573
♪
1393
01:12:48,597 --> 01:12:51,176
Voice:
Dear Father, if you receive
1394
01:12:51,200 --> 01:12:53,111
this letter, it will be the last
1395
01:12:53,135 --> 01:12:55,480
this hand will ever write you.
1396
01:12:55,504 --> 01:12:58,483
Heaven only knows
what will be my fate.
1397
01:12:58,507 --> 01:13:01,186
But whatever it may be,
I cannot resist
1398
01:13:01,210 --> 01:13:04,556
the inclination I feel to
assure you that in this cause
1399
01:13:04,580 --> 01:13:07,792
I feel no reluctance
to venture a life,
1400
01:13:07,816 --> 01:13:10,495
which I consider
as only lent to be used
1401
01:13:10,519 --> 01:13:11,954
when my country demands it.
1402
01:13:13,689 --> 01:13:17,826
Your very affectionate son,
John Macpherson.
1403
01:13:19,495 --> 01:13:22,407
[Wind blowing]
1404
01:13:22,431 --> 01:13:24,275
Voice: The storm was outrageous.
1405
01:13:24,299 --> 01:13:27,679
Covering the locks of our guns
with the lapels of our coats
1406
01:13:27,703 --> 01:13:30,348
and holding down our heads...
[Gunshot]
1407
01:13:30,372 --> 01:13:32,040
we ran in single file.
1408
01:13:33,108 --> 01:13:34,443
John Joseph Henry.
1409
01:13:35,711 --> 01:13:37,655
Narrator: The Americans
launched their attack
1410
01:13:37,679 --> 01:13:42,694
at 4 in the morning
on December 31st, 1775,
1411
01:13:42,718 --> 01:13:45,830
under the cover
of a howling blizzard.
1412
01:13:45,854 --> 01:13:48,733
Many men had pinned
to their hats slips of paper
1413
01:13:48,757 --> 01:13:51,936
with the words,
"Liberty or Death."
1414
01:13:51,960 --> 01:13:54,472
[Gunfire]
1415
01:13:54,496 --> 01:13:56,341
Everything went wrong.
1416
01:13:56,365 --> 01:13:57,675
[Gunfire]
1417
01:13:57,699 --> 01:14:01,413
The diversionary attacks
fooled no one.
1418
01:14:01,437 --> 01:14:03,782
Arnold's men came under
merciless fire
1419
01:14:03,806 --> 01:14:07,419
from the ramparts above...
And the enemy had placed
1420
01:14:07,443 --> 01:14:09,954
formidable barricades
in their way.
1421
01:14:09,978 --> 01:14:11,656
[Gunfire]
1422
01:14:11,680 --> 01:14:14,058
When a ricocheting
bullet fragment tore through
1423
01:14:14,082 --> 01:14:18,187
Arnold's left leg, he had to be
carried back to camp.
1424
01:14:19,221 --> 01:14:22,634
Captain Daniel Morgan
of Virginia took over.
1425
01:14:22,658 --> 01:14:26,604
He managed to lead his men
past one barricade
1426
01:14:26,628 --> 01:14:29,808
only to be blocked by another.
1427
01:14:29,832 --> 01:14:34,412
He tried 4 times to scale it,
then decided to wait
1428
01:14:34,436 --> 01:14:37,382
for Montgomery and his men
to break through.
1429
01:14:37,406 --> 01:14:39,884
♪
1430
01:14:39,908 --> 01:14:41,877
But Montgomery never made it.
1431
01:14:43,145 --> 01:14:45,123
[Gunshot]
1432
01:14:45,147 --> 01:14:48,193
Within moments of making
his way into the city,
1433
01:14:48,217 --> 01:14:53,264
he, John Macpherson,
and 11 others were killed.
1434
01:14:53,288 --> 01:14:54,866
[Gunfire]
1435
01:14:54,890 --> 01:14:56,835
Voice:
The enemy, having the advantage
1436
01:14:56,859 --> 01:15:00,538
of the ground in front,
a vast superiority of numbers,
1437
01:15:00,562 --> 01:15:02,740
and dry and better arms,
1438
01:15:02,764 --> 01:15:05,643
gave them an irresistible power.
1439
01:15:05,667 --> 01:15:08,546
About 9:00 a.m., it was
apparent to all of us
1440
01:15:08,570 --> 01:15:10,181
that we must surrender.
1441
01:15:10,205 --> 01:15:11,683
John Joseph Henry.
1442
01:15:11,707 --> 01:15:13,852
♪
1443
01:15:13,876 --> 01:15:16,821
Narrator:
30 Americans lay dead.
1444
01:15:16,845 --> 01:15:21,893
389 were taken prisoner,
including Daniel Morgan.
1445
01:15:21,917 --> 01:15:23,828
♪
1446
01:15:23,852 --> 01:15:27,632
Arnold, though badly wounded,
was not captured
1447
01:15:27,656 --> 01:15:30,535
and vowed to try to take
the city again
1448
01:15:30,559 --> 01:15:32,828
before it could be reinforced.
1449
01:15:33,996 --> 01:15:35,540
Voice:
I have no thoughts of leaving
1450
01:15:35,564 --> 01:15:38,176
this proud town, until I first
1451
01:15:38,200 --> 01:15:40,445
enter it in triumph.
1452
01:15:40,469 --> 01:15:44,516
Providence which has carried
me through so many dangers,
1453
01:15:44,540 --> 01:15:46,575
is still my protection.
1454
01:15:47,709 --> 01:15:49,111
Benedict Arnold.
1455
01:15:52,281 --> 01:15:55,426
♪
1456
01:15:55,450 --> 01:15:56,961
Voice:
I am more and more convinced
1457
01:15:56,985 --> 01:15:59,097
that man is
a dangerous creature,
1458
01:15:59,121 --> 01:16:02,433
and that power, whether vested
in many or a few,
1459
01:16:02,457 --> 01:16:07,963
is ever grasping, and like
the grave cries give, give.
1460
01:16:09,298 --> 01:16:11,476
You tell me of degrees of
perfection to which
1461
01:16:11,500 --> 01:16:16,281
humane nature is capable of
arriving, and I believe it,
1462
01:16:16,305 --> 01:16:19,684
but at the same time lament that
our admiration should arise
1463
01:16:19,708 --> 01:16:22,210
from the scarcity
of the instances.
1464
01:16:23,478 --> 01:16:26,357
When I consider these things,
I feel anxious for the fate
1465
01:16:26,381 --> 01:16:31,753
of our monarchy, or democracy,
or whatever is to take place.
1466
01:16:32,754 --> 01:16:34,222
Abigail Adams.
1467
01:16:36,425 --> 01:16:40,772
Narrator: On New Year's Day,
1776, George Washington
1468
01:16:40,796 --> 01:16:44,042
ordered a new
"Continental Union" flag
1469
01:16:44,066 --> 01:16:49,147
raised atop Prospect Hill
overlooking occupied Boston.
1470
01:16:49,171 --> 01:16:51,583
The British Union Jack
still filled
1471
01:16:51,607 --> 01:16:53,885
its upper left-hand corner.
1472
01:16:53,909 --> 01:16:57,055
But its 13 red and white
stripes, he said,
1473
01:16:57,079 --> 01:17:01,183
were intended as a "compliment
to the United Colonies."
1474
01:17:02,851 --> 01:17:05,296
With the exception of
the city of Boston,
1475
01:17:05,320 --> 01:17:09,801
Patriots now controlled
each of the 13 colonies.
1476
01:17:09,825 --> 01:17:13,404
Several other royal governors
had, like Dunmore,
1477
01:17:13,428 --> 01:17:15,130
fled to ships offshore.
1478
01:17:16,365 --> 01:17:20,712
But people within the colonies
remained deeply divided.
1479
01:17:20,736 --> 01:17:25,083
Some of the free population
favored independence.
1480
01:17:25,107 --> 01:17:27,218
Others were appalled
at the thought of
1481
01:17:27,242 --> 01:17:28,953
breaking with the King.
1482
01:17:28,977 --> 01:17:31,556
Abandoning Britain,
one Virginian wrote,
1483
01:17:31,580 --> 01:17:36,227
would "dissolve the bands of
religion, of oaths, of laws,
1484
01:17:36,251 --> 01:17:40,665
"of language, of blood,
which hold us united
1485
01:17:40,689 --> 01:17:43,925
under the influence of
the common parent."
1486
01:17:45,127 --> 01:17:48,339
Still others remained
"disaffected,"
1487
01:17:48,363 --> 01:17:52,243
favoring neither side,
hoping somehow to carry on
1488
01:17:52,267 --> 01:17:55,713
with their lives while
their fellow-Americans...
1489
01:17:55,737 --> 01:17:59,241
Suspicious of their neutrality...
Fought things out.
1490
01:18:00,942 --> 01:18:03,979
But events were changing minds.
1491
01:18:04,980 --> 01:18:06,691
Gordon-Reed:
What happened in the run-up
1492
01:18:06,715 --> 01:18:09,293
to all of this
gave people a sense
1493
01:18:09,317 --> 01:18:12,296
that they might be able
to make it on their own.
1494
01:18:12,320 --> 01:18:14,932
They were different from
the people in Great Britain.
1495
01:18:14,956 --> 01:18:17,392
They realized that
they were moving apart.
1496
01:18:18,727 --> 01:18:20,772
Voice: If we must erect
an independent
1497
01:18:20,796 --> 01:18:22,573
government in America,
1498
01:18:22,597 --> 01:18:26,210
a republic will produce
strength, hardiness, activity,
1499
01:18:26,234 --> 01:18:30,715
courage, fortitude,
and enterprise.
1500
01:18:30,739 --> 01:18:33,818
But there is so much
rascality, so much
1501
01:18:33,842 --> 01:18:38,022
venality and corruption,
so much avarice and ambition,
1502
01:18:38,046 --> 01:18:40,291
such a rage for
profit and commerce
1503
01:18:40,315 --> 01:18:45,363
among all ranks and degrees of
men, even in America,
1504
01:18:45,387 --> 01:18:48,900
that I sometimes doubt whether
there is public virtue enough
1505
01:18:48,924 --> 01:18:51,126
to support a republic.
1506
01:18:52,260 --> 01:18:53,395
John Adams.
1507
01:18:54,830 --> 01:18:56,808
Taylor: The leaders of
the American Revolution
1508
01:18:56,832 --> 01:18:59,143
need popular support.
1509
01:18:59,167 --> 01:19:01,012
The leaders of
the American Revolution
1510
01:19:01,036 --> 01:19:03,047
are going to have to
make promises
1511
01:19:03,071 --> 01:19:05,483
that there's going to be
greater social mobility;
1512
01:19:05,507 --> 01:19:09,020
there's going to be greater
respect for common people;
1513
01:19:09,044 --> 01:19:11,456
there is going to be broader
political participation
1514
01:19:11,480 --> 01:19:15,259
in the future than there has
been in the colonial past
1515
01:19:15,283 --> 01:19:17,929
by loosening up
structures of authority,
1516
01:19:17,953 --> 01:19:21,232
including structures of
religious authority.
1517
01:19:21,256 --> 01:19:24,368
If you're making this
Revolution and you need
1518
01:19:24,392 --> 01:19:28,940
the support of thousands of
common people, men and women,
1519
01:19:28,964 --> 01:19:30,999
what's in it for them?
1520
01:19:32,234 --> 01:19:33,945
Gordon Wood: Up to the 18th
century, people assumed that
1521
01:19:33,969 --> 01:19:36,414
everything will
always remain the same.
1522
01:19:36,438 --> 01:19:38,683
But the idea that
you could take charge
1523
01:19:38,707 --> 01:19:40,384
and change your culture,
1524
01:19:40,408 --> 01:19:42,887
that's what... that's
the fundamental basis
1525
01:19:42,911 --> 01:19:46,290
of the Enlightenment,
that man can be changed.
1526
01:19:46,314 --> 01:19:48,359
♪
1527
01:19:48,383 --> 01:19:52,764
Voice: The sun never shined
on a cause of greater worth.
1528
01:19:52,788 --> 01:19:55,833
'Tis not the affair of
a city, a country,
1529
01:19:55,857 --> 01:19:59,928
a province, or a kingdom,
but of a continent.
1530
01:20:01,429 --> 01:20:06,301
Everything that is right or
natural pleads for separation.
1531
01:20:07,536 --> 01:20:11,716
Every spot of the old world
is overrun with oppression.
1532
01:20:11,740 --> 01:20:14,376
Freedom hath been
hunted round the globe.
1533
01:20:15,844 --> 01:20:19,891
O! receive the fugitive,
and prepare in time
1534
01:20:19,915 --> 01:20:22,260
an asylum for mankind.
1535
01:20:22,284 --> 01:20:24,228
♪
1536
01:20:24,252 --> 01:20:28,466
We have it in our power to
begin the world over again.
1537
01:20:28,490 --> 01:20:31,202
A situation similar to
the present hath not happened
1538
01:20:31,226 --> 01:20:34,405
since the days of Noah
until now.
1539
01:20:34,429 --> 01:20:37,842
The birthday of
a new world is at hand.
1540
01:20:37,866 --> 01:20:39,343
Thomas Paine.
1541
01:20:39,367 --> 01:20:41,012
♪
1542
01:20:41,036 --> 01:20:46,884
Narrator: On January 9th,
1776, a slender pamphlet titled
1543
01:20:46,908 --> 01:20:50,254
"Common Sense" was published
in Philadelphia...
1544
01:20:50,278 --> 01:20:53,991
The most important pamphlet
in American history.
1545
01:20:54,015 --> 01:20:57,285
It was signed simply
"an Englishman."
1546
01:20:58,320 --> 01:21:01,265
Its author, a recent newcomer
to America,
1547
01:21:01,289 --> 01:21:04,402
was 38-year-old Thomas Paine.
1548
01:21:04,426 --> 01:21:08,372
The son of a Quaker corset-maker
and his Anglican wife,
1549
01:21:08,396 --> 01:21:11,409
Paine had failed at his
father's profession,
1550
01:21:11,433 --> 01:21:15,513
lost his first wife and their
child in childbirth,
1551
01:21:15,537 --> 01:21:18,583
been fired from his post
as tax collector,
1552
01:21:18,607 --> 01:21:22,453
endured the collapse of
a second childless marriage,
1553
01:21:22,477 --> 01:21:27,191
and had seen his possessions
auctioned off to pay his debts.
1554
01:21:27,215 --> 01:21:29,594
During his 8-week voyage
from Britain,
1555
01:21:29,618 --> 01:21:34,298
he'd contracted typhus, and when
his ship reached Philadelphia,
1556
01:21:34,322 --> 01:21:37,058
he had to be carried off,
half-dead.
1557
01:21:38,727 --> 01:21:41,606
But Paine was
a master with words,
1558
01:21:41,630 --> 01:21:45,443
skillfully weaving the latest
Enlightenment philosophy
1559
01:21:45,467 --> 01:21:49,170
with biblical references
that everyone knew.
1560
01:21:50,338 --> 01:21:54,576
And he was a violent foe of
aristocracy and monarchy.
1561
01:21:56,211 --> 01:21:57,955
Schiff: It's a much more
radical document
1562
01:21:57,979 --> 01:22:00,591
than anything
that had preceded it.
1563
01:22:00,615 --> 01:22:01,959
"Common Sense" takes off
1564
01:22:01,983 --> 01:22:04,352
like an accelerant
through the colonies.
1565
01:22:05,487 --> 01:22:07,465
Everyone reads it.
1566
01:22:07,489 --> 01:22:09,367
Narrator: Excerpts from
"Common Sense" appeared
1567
01:22:09,391 --> 01:22:12,436
in newspapers throughout
the colonies.
1568
01:22:12,460 --> 01:22:16,564
The pamphlet would sell
tens of thousands of copies.
1569
01:22:17,599 --> 01:22:21,379
Taylor: It is
an unprecedented bestseller.
1570
01:22:21,403 --> 01:22:24,148
With the exception of
the Bible in the colonies,
1571
01:22:24,172 --> 01:22:28,986
no book has been read
as widely as "Common Sense" is.
1572
01:22:29,010 --> 01:22:31,622
Bernard Bailyn:
It was a wholesale attack
1573
01:22:31,646 --> 01:22:36,928
on the entire world of Britain,
political, cultural.
1574
01:22:36,952 --> 01:22:40,097
And it's in slam-bang prose.
1575
01:22:40,121 --> 01:22:43,968
No American pamphleteer
wrote that kind of
1576
01:22:43,992 --> 01:22:47,838
really tough extreme language.
1577
01:22:47,862 --> 01:22:49,373
Hogeland: It just
made people listen
1578
01:22:49,397 --> 01:22:52,209
and made people think
at a time when the Congress
1579
01:22:52,233 --> 01:22:55,513
would never have thought of
attacking the King, personally,
1580
01:22:55,537 --> 01:22:58,749
King George III,
the "Crown of England."
1581
01:22:58,773 --> 01:23:01,252
They were always like, "Oh,
he's not really getting it.
1582
01:23:01,276 --> 01:23:02,753
"It's Parliament
that's our problem.
1583
01:23:02,777 --> 01:23:05,289
The King needs to help us."
1584
01:23:05,313 --> 01:23:08,993
He just called the King
a "beast," in print.
1585
01:23:09,017 --> 01:23:10,795
He was
the working-class intellectual.
1586
01:23:10,819 --> 01:23:14,432
His politics were radically
democratic, in many ways.
1587
01:23:14,456 --> 01:23:17,659
And that made him different
from the other famous Founders.
1588
01:23:19,127 --> 01:23:20,571
Voice: Hereditary succession
1589
01:23:20,595 --> 01:23:24,442
is an insult
and an imposition on posterity.
1590
01:23:24,466 --> 01:23:28,112
For all men being originally
equals, no one by birth
1591
01:23:28,136 --> 01:23:30,214
could have a right
to set up his own family
1592
01:23:30,238 --> 01:23:34,285
in perpetual preference
to all others forever.
1593
01:23:34,309 --> 01:23:36,253
One of the strongest
natural proofs
1594
01:23:36,277 --> 01:23:39,090
of the folly of
hereditary right in kings
1595
01:23:39,114 --> 01:23:41,325
is that nature disapproves it,
1596
01:23:41,349 --> 01:23:45,162
otherwise she would not so
frequently turn it into ridicule
1597
01:23:45,186 --> 01:23:47,631
by giving mankind an ass
for a lion.
1598
01:23:47,655 --> 01:23:49,700
Thomas Paine.
1599
01:23:49,724 --> 01:23:54,071
Bailyn: That pamphlet
did stir people's minds
1600
01:23:54,095 --> 01:23:58,066
about the possibility of
a different kind of world.
1601
01:23:59,567 --> 01:24:01,278
Voice:
"Common Sense" struck a string
1602
01:24:01,302 --> 01:24:04,215
which required a touch
to make it vibrate.
1603
01:24:04,239 --> 01:24:07,251
The country was ripe for
independence, and only needed
1604
01:24:07,275 --> 01:24:09,444
somebody to tell the people so.
1605
01:24:10,745 --> 01:24:12,347
Private Ashbel Green.
1606
01:24:14,182 --> 01:24:16,627
Hogeland: Some of
the Founders, and others,
1607
01:24:16,651 --> 01:24:18,696
thought this is the moment
we can start over again.
1608
01:24:18,720 --> 01:24:21,565
We can actually
begin the world anew.
1609
01:24:21,589 --> 01:24:24,301
And it must have been, you know,
wildly exciting at the time.
1610
01:24:24,325 --> 01:24:25,970
And I think it still
excites us, that we are
1611
01:24:25,994 --> 01:24:28,906
the product
of a revolutionary moment
1612
01:24:28,930 --> 01:24:30,765
where the world
turned upside down.
1613
01:24:31,900 --> 01:24:33,210
Voice:
My countrymen will come
1614
01:24:33,234 --> 01:24:35,770
reluctantly into the idea
of independency.
1615
01:24:36,905 --> 01:24:39,917
I find "Common Sense" is
working a wonderful change
1616
01:24:39,941 --> 01:24:41,509
in the minds of many men.
1617
01:24:42,911 --> 01:24:43,988
George Washington.
1618
01:24:44,012 --> 01:24:46,524
♪
1619
01:24:46,548 --> 01:24:49,326
Narrator:
Not all minds were changed.
1620
01:24:49,350 --> 01:24:52,229
Hannah Griffitts,
the Philadelphia poet
1621
01:24:52,253 --> 01:24:55,633
who in 1768
had urged American women
1622
01:24:55,657 --> 01:24:58,860
to boycott British goods,
was horrified.
1623
01:25:00,328 --> 01:25:03,207
Kamensky: The idea
that to reform the Empire
1624
01:25:03,231 --> 01:25:06,544
by not buying tea
or imported cloth
1625
01:25:06,568 --> 01:25:10,147
would lead to this crazy
question of independence
1626
01:25:10,171 --> 01:25:14,685
was an impossible thing
for her to countenance.
1627
01:25:14,709 --> 01:25:18,022
Paine is where a lot of people
get on the revolutionary road.
1628
01:25:18,046 --> 01:25:20,248
It's where she gets off.
1629
01:25:21,449 --> 01:25:24,662
Narrator: For some Americans,
"Common Sense" confirmed
1630
01:25:24,686 --> 01:25:26,564
their worst fears.
1631
01:25:26,588 --> 01:25:30,367
Vermont Loyalist John Peters,
who continued to receive
1632
01:25:30,391 --> 01:25:33,137
death threats from
his Patriot neighbors,
1633
01:25:33,161 --> 01:25:35,163
had reached a breaking point.
1634
01:25:36,397 --> 01:25:38,275
Voice: Often mobbed
and once imprisoned
1635
01:25:38,299 --> 01:25:40,344
by the malcontents, I quitted
1636
01:25:40,368 --> 01:25:42,680
my family, property,
and offices,
1637
01:25:42,704 --> 01:25:46,283
and fled to Canada,
to avoid personal danger
1638
01:25:46,307 --> 01:25:49,887
and to support the British cause
against its enemies.
1639
01:25:49,911 --> 01:25:51,312
[John Peters]
1640
01:25:53,047 --> 01:25:55,459
Voice:
The want of guns is so great
1641
01:25:55,483 --> 01:25:59,130
that no trouble or expense
must be spared to obtain them.
1642
01:25:59,154 --> 01:26:00,831
[George Washington]
1643
01:26:00,855 --> 01:26:04,034
Atkinson: Washington
has got Boston surrounded.
1644
01:26:04,058 --> 01:26:07,638
The problem is, he doesn't
have the big guns necessary
1645
01:26:07,662 --> 01:26:11,275
to make the British in Boston
really feel threatened.
1646
01:26:11,299 --> 01:26:13,344
He's got some artillery,
but not enough.
1647
01:26:13,368 --> 01:26:15,980
They tend to be
smaller field guns.
1648
01:26:16,004 --> 01:26:18,449
He knows that at Ticonderoga,
1649
01:26:18,473 --> 01:26:21,018
which is several hundred
miles away,
1650
01:26:21,042 --> 01:26:25,923
there are more than 80 British
guns that have been captured by
1651
01:26:25,947 --> 01:26:27,458
Benedict Arnold and Ethan Allen.
1652
01:26:27,482 --> 01:26:30,194
And he tells Henry Knox,
"Go to Ticonderoga,
1653
01:26:30,218 --> 01:26:31,695
bring back whatever you can."
1654
01:26:31,719 --> 01:26:33,797
♪
1655
01:26:33,821 --> 01:26:37,501
Narrator: Henry Knox was
a big, amiable, 25-year-old
1656
01:26:37,525 --> 01:26:40,604
Boston bookseller
who had learned all he knew
1657
01:26:40,628 --> 01:26:43,574
about artillery
and military engineering
1658
01:26:43,598 --> 01:26:46,277
from volumes he'd stocked
in his shop
1659
01:26:46,301 --> 01:26:49,204
and from his service
in the Boston militia.
1660
01:26:50,305 --> 01:26:53,217
He'd earned Washington's
admiration for overseeing
1661
01:26:53,241 --> 01:26:56,611
the construction of
fortifications at Roxbury.
1662
01:26:57,712 --> 01:26:59,757
Atkinson: Washington,
who's got a very good eye
1663
01:26:59,781 --> 01:27:03,460
for subordinate talent,
recognizes that this guy,
1664
01:27:03,484 --> 01:27:05,529
he doesn't even have
a uniform at the time,
1665
01:27:05,553 --> 01:27:09,333
has something about him that
Washington finds appealing,
1666
01:27:09,357 --> 01:27:13,337
and the potential that
Henry Knox evinces
1667
01:27:13,361 --> 01:27:16,440
is something that Washington
recognizes immediately.
1668
01:27:16,464 --> 01:27:18,842
Narrator: Before setting out,
Knox wrote a letter
1669
01:27:18,866 --> 01:27:22,813
to his pregnant wife Lucy,
who had fled Boston,
1670
01:27:22,837 --> 01:27:26,874
leaving her Loyalist parents
and siblings behind.
1671
01:27:28,343 --> 01:27:30,621
Voice: Keep up
your spirits, my dear girl,
1672
01:27:30,645 --> 01:27:34,158
and don't be alarmed when I
tell you that the General
1673
01:27:34,182 --> 01:27:36,427
has ordered me to go
to the westward
1674
01:27:36,451 --> 01:27:38,286
as far as Ticonderoga.
1675
01:27:39,621 --> 01:27:43,267
Don't be afraid, there is
no fighting in the case.
1676
01:27:43,291 --> 01:27:45,302
I am going upon business only.
1677
01:27:45,326 --> 01:27:46,828
Henry Knox.
1678
01:27:48,429 --> 01:27:51,108
Narrator: Knox made his way
to the captured forts
1679
01:27:51,132 --> 01:27:54,678
and found 55 guns
worth transporting...
1680
01:27:54,702 --> 01:28:00,117
39 field pieces, 14 mortars,
and two howitzers...
1681
01:28:00,141 --> 01:28:03,520
All weighing more than 64 tons.
1682
01:28:03,544 --> 01:28:05,656
♪
1683
01:28:05,680 --> 01:28:08,692
Knox's task was
somehow to move them
1684
01:28:08,716 --> 01:28:12,596
300 miles down into
the Hudson Valley,
1685
01:28:12,620 --> 01:28:16,324
across the Berkshires,
and all the way to Boston.
1686
01:28:17,725 --> 01:28:21,839
He had horses and ox teams
haul the guns overland
1687
01:28:21,863 --> 01:28:24,432
to the northern end
of Lake George.
1688
01:28:25,533 --> 01:28:29,179
From there, a small fleet of
barges and boats
1689
01:28:29,203 --> 01:28:33,584
ferried them more than 30 miles
against howling winds
1690
01:28:33,608 --> 01:28:36,086
to Fort George
at the southern end.
1691
01:28:36,110 --> 01:28:38,355
♪
1692
01:28:38,379 --> 01:28:41,525
Voice: I have
made 42 exceeding strong sleds
1693
01:28:41,549 --> 01:28:43,594
and have provided
80 yoke of oxen
1694
01:28:43,618 --> 01:28:46,030
to drag them
as far as Springfield,
1695
01:28:46,054 --> 01:28:50,401
where I shall get fresh cattle
to carry them to camp.
1696
01:28:50,425 --> 01:28:52,603
We shall have a fine fall
of snow,
1697
01:28:52,627 --> 01:28:54,471
which will make
the carriage easy.
1698
01:28:54,495 --> 01:28:56,106
Henry Knox.
1699
01:28:56,130 --> 01:28:58,208
♪
1700
01:28:58,232 --> 01:29:00,010
Narrator: The snow
for which Knox hoped
1701
01:29:00,034 --> 01:29:04,315
proved unpredictable,
sometimes too light
1702
01:29:04,339 --> 01:29:06,350
for his sleds to glide over,
1703
01:29:06,374 --> 01:29:09,186
sometimes too heavy
for them to move at all.
1704
01:29:09,210 --> 01:29:11,722
♪
1705
01:29:11,746 --> 01:29:14,925
Crossing the Berkshires,
oxen hauled the cannon
1706
01:29:14,949 --> 01:29:19,463
up and over mountains so tall
that from their summits,
1707
01:29:19,487 --> 01:29:23,067
Knox remembered,
"We might almost have seen
1708
01:29:23,091 --> 01:29:25,002
all the kingdoms of the earth."
1709
01:29:25,026 --> 01:29:27,671
♪
1710
01:29:27,695 --> 01:29:31,008
Wherever they went,
farmers and townspeople
1711
01:29:31,032 --> 01:29:32,533
turned out to see them.
1712
01:29:33,901 --> 01:29:36,680
Voice: We reached
Westfield, Massachusetts,
1713
01:29:36,704 --> 01:29:40,351
and found that very few, even
among the oldest inhabitants,
1714
01:29:40,375 --> 01:29:42,043
had ever seen a cannon.
1715
01:29:43,378 --> 01:29:46,757
We were great gainers
by this curiosity.
1716
01:29:46,781 --> 01:29:50,527
For while they were employed
in remarking upon our guns,
1717
01:29:50,551 --> 01:29:53,630
we were with equal pleasure
discussing the qualities
1718
01:29:53,654 --> 01:29:56,967
of their cider and whiskey.
1719
01:29:56,991 --> 01:29:58,426
John P. Becker.
1720
01:29:59,660 --> 01:30:02,239
Narrator: As the ox train
lumbered on,
1721
01:30:02,263 --> 01:30:05,142
Knox hurried ahead alone
to Cambridge.
1722
01:30:05,166 --> 01:30:08,879
He reported to Washington
that over the next few weeks,
1723
01:30:08,903 --> 01:30:11,448
all the artillery
he'd been promised
1724
01:30:11,472 --> 01:30:13,250
would be at his disposal.
1725
01:30:13,274 --> 01:30:21,274
♪
1726
01:30:23,885 --> 01:30:27,865
When the last of Knox's cannon
reached Washington's army,
1727
01:30:27,889 --> 01:30:32,169
England's hold
on Boston was doomed.
1728
01:30:32,193 --> 01:30:34,505
Atkinson: It's one of the
most extraordinary expeditions
1729
01:30:34,529 --> 01:30:36,740
in American military history.
1730
01:30:36,764 --> 01:30:42,346
He appears back in Cambridge,
says, "Boss, I'm here.
1731
01:30:42,370 --> 01:30:43,981
"I've brought back 50 guns.
1732
01:30:44,005 --> 01:30:45,983
"They're parked
right outside of town.
1733
01:30:46,007 --> 01:30:48,519
They're available
whenever you need them."
1734
01:30:48,543 --> 01:30:50,921
Washington says,
"You're my man."
1735
01:30:50,945 --> 01:30:54,458
And he puts Knox in charge
of Continental Artillery.
1736
01:30:54,482 --> 01:30:56,994
[Drumbeat]
1737
01:30:57,018 --> 01:31:00,697
Narrator: On the night of
March 4th, 1776,
1738
01:31:00,721 --> 01:31:04,301
some 3,000 men and 300 teams
1739
01:31:04,325 --> 01:31:06,837
worked to put
20 or more heavy guns
1740
01:31:06,861 --> 01:31:09,406
in place on Dorchester Heights.
1741
01:31:09,430 --> 01:31:11,375
[Drumbeat]
1742
01:31:11,399 --> 01:31:13,010
Voice: March 5th.
1743
01:31:13,034 --> 01:31:16,814
This morning at daybreak,
we discovered two redoubts
1744
01:31:16,838 --> 01:31:19,049
on the hills
on Dorchester Point,
1745
01:31:19,073 --> 01:31:22,386
and two smaller works
on their flanks.
1746
01:31:22,410 --> 01:31:24,521
They were all raised
during the night,
1747
01:31:24,545 --> 01:31:27,758
with an expedition equal to
that of the genie
1748
01:31:27,782 --> 01:31:31,028
belonging to Aladdin's
wonderful lamp.
1749
01:31:31,052 --> 01:31:34,598
From these hills they
commanded the whole town,
1750
01:31:34,622 --> 01:31:37,734
so that we must drive them
from their post,
1751
01:31:37,758 --> 01:31:39,336
or desert the place.
1752
01:31:39,360 --> 01:31:41,505
[British Officer]
1753
01:31:41,529 --> 01:31:44,408
Narrator: Unwilling to
sacrifice any more men,
1754
01:31:44,432 --> 01:31:47,110
General Howe decided
to leave Boston
1755
01:31:47,134 --> 01:31:51,014
for Halifax in Nova Scotia,
where he hoped to regroup.
1756
01:31:51,038 --> 01:31:52,983
♪
1757
01:31:53,007 --> 01:31:57,120
With him went 10,000 soldiers
and their dependents
1758
01:31:57,144 --> 01:32:01,558
as well as 1,100 Loyalist
men, women, and children
1759
01:32:01,582 --> 01:32:05,529
who would have to build
new lives in a new place.
1760
01:32:05,553 --> 01:32:09,533
Among them were
Henry Knox's in-laws.
1761
01:32:09,557 --> 01:32:12,035
"I have lost,"
his wife Lucy wrote,
1762
01:32:12,059 --> 01:32:16,039
"my father, mother,
brother, and sisters."
1763
01:32:16,063 --> 01:32:18,275
♪
1764
01:32:18,299 --> 01:32:20,143
Voice: How horrid is this war?
1765
01:32:20,167 --> 01:32:24,081
Brother against brother and
the parent against the child.
1766
01:32:24,105 --> 01:32:27,417
Who were the first
promoters of it, I know not.
1767
01:32:27,441 --> 01:32:29,086
But God knows.
1768
01:32:29,110 --> 01:32:32,155
And I fear they will feel
the weight of His vengeance.
1769
01:32:32,179 --> 01:32:34,057
♪
1770
01:32:34,081 --> 01:32:38,562
Tis pity, the little time we
have to spend in this world,
1771
01:32:38,586 --> 01:32:41,598
we cannot enjoy ourselves
and our friends,
1772
01:32:41,622 --> 01:32:44,692
but must be devising means
to destroy each other.
1773
01:32:45,626 --> 01:32:46,937
Lucy Knox.
1774
01:32:46,961 --> 01:32:49,806
♪
1775
01:32:49,830 --> 01:32:53,777
Narrator: With the evacuation
of Boston, no British garrison
1776
01:32:53,801 --> 01:32:57,305
now remained anywhere
in the rebellious colonies.
1777
01:32:58,339 --> 01:33:00,150
Serena Zabin: I think
it surprises everybody
1778
01:33:00,174 --> 01:33:04,221
that the Patriots are
having some successes.
1779
01:33:04,245 --> 01:33:08,292
So much so that everyone's
convinced that it's either
1780
01:33:08,316 --> 01:33:11,628
the support of God
or the virtue of the cause
1781
01:33:11,652 --> 01:33:14,231
that is helping them win.
1782
01:33:14,255 --> 01:33:18,626
One of their favorite metaphors
is the Battle of Jericho.
1783
01:33:19,694 --> 01:33:21,238
They're sure that all it takes
1784
01:33:21,262 --> 01:33:24,541
is for this army that has
right on its side
1785
01:33:24,565 --> 01:33:26,276
to show up and blow a trumpet,
1786
01:33:26,300 --> 01:33:28,302
and the walls are just
going to fall down.
1787
01:33:29,437 --> 01:33:32,482
Narrator: Some Americans
believed the war was over.
1788
01:33:32,506 --> 01:33:36,086
The Massachusetts legislature
thanked George Washington
1789
01:33:36,110 --> 01:33:38,755
for his service and wished him
1790
01:33:38,779 --> 01:33:42,859
"Peace and Satisfaction of Mind"
in his retirement.
1791
01:33:42,883 --> 01:33:45,696
But Washington knew better.
1792
01:33:45,720 --> 01:33:47,464
He informed Congress
that he would
1793
01:33:47,488 --> 01:33:52,803
"immediately repair to New York,
with the remainder of the Army."
1794
01:33:52,827 --> 01:33:56,440
He was sure that Howe's
next move would be to attack
1795
01:33:56,464 --> 01:33:58,799
that strategically
important port.
1796
01:34:01,235 --> 01:34:05,816
By mid-April, 1776,
he and his wife Martha,
1797
01:34:05,840 --> 01:34:08,285
and several members
of their household,
1798
01:34:08,309 --> 01:34:09,910
were in residence there.
1799
01:34:11,946 --> 01:34:15,392
Meanwhile, Congress sent
a Connecticut businessman
1800
01:34:15,416 --> 01:34:17,794
named Silas Deane to Paris
1801
01:34:17,818 --> 01:34:21,398
to secretly buy
munitions and supplies...
1802
01:34:21,422 --> 01:34:23,200
And to look into the possibility
1803
01:34:23,224 --> 01:34:26,327
of forging an alliance
with France.
1804
01:34:27,828 --> 01:34:31,475
Schiff: Two questions, really,
conjoin at this point.
1805
01:34:31,499 --> 01:34:33,043
One question is,
if we're going to
1806
01:34:33,067 --> 01:34:34,645
make ourselves independent,
1807
01:34:34,669 --> 01:34:37,981
if we're going to
somehow create a nation,
1808
01:34:38,005 --> 01:34:43,020
which is a truly novel
and destabilizing concept,
1809
01:34:43,044 --> 01:34:45,422
how are we going to do that?
We have absolutely
1810
01:34:45,446 --> 01:34:47,224
no means with which to do so.
1811
01:34:47,248 --> 01:34:50,927
So, we will have to enlist
the aid of a foreign power.
1812
01:34:50,951 --> 01:34:54,131
And then comes the question
of a Declaration.
1813
01:34:54,155 --> 01:34:56,933
And the question is,
which needs to happen first.
1814
01:34:56,957 --> 01:34:59,269
♪
1815
01:34:59,293 --> 01:35:01,638
Voice:
Independence is the only bond
1816
01:35:01,662 --> 01:35:04,074
that can
tie and keep us together.
1817
01:35:04,098 --> 01:35:07,268
Every day convinces us
of its necessity.
1818
01:35:08,669 --> 01:35:10,013
Instead of gazing at each other
1819
01:35:10,037 --> 01:35:13,216
with suspicious or
doubtful curiosity,
1820
01:35:13,240 --> 01:35:15,052
let each of us hold out
to his neighbor
1821
01:35:15,076 --> 01:35:18,021
the hearty hand of friendship.
1822
01:35:18,045 --> 01:35:21,224
And let no other name be
heard among us, than those of
1823
01:35:21,248 --> 01:35:25,062
a good citizen;
an open and resolute friend;
1824
01:35:25,086 --> 01:35:29,199
and a virtuous supporter
of the Rights of Mankind,
1825
01:35:29,223 --> 01:35:33,737
and of the Free and
Independent States of America.
1826
01:35:33,761 --> 01:35:34,971
Thomas Paine.
1827
01:35:34,995 --> 01:35:39,509
♪
1828
01:35:39,533 --> 01:35:42,012
[Thunder]
1829
01:35:42,036 --> 01:35:43,947
Voice: Language cannot describe,
1830
01:35:43,971 --> 01:35:47,317
nor imagination paint,
the scenes of misery
1831
01:35:47,341 --> 01:35:49,119
the soldiery endure,
1832
01:35:49,143 --> 01:35:54,991
continually groaning and calling
for relief, but in vain.
1833
01:35:55,015 --> 01:35:57,394
The most shocking
of all spectacles
1834
01:35:57,418 --> 01:36:02,065
was to see a large barn crowded
full of men with this disorder,
1835
01:36:02,089 --> 01:36:05,526
many of which could not
see, speak, or walk.
1836
01:36:06,727 --> 01:36:08,329
Dr. Lewis Beebe.
1837
01:36:10,397 --> 01:36:13,176
Narrator: That spring,
colonists on both sides
1838
01:36:13,200 --> 01:36:16,847
of the fighting were ravaged
by a common enemy:
1839
01:36:16,871 --> 01:36:20,307
"Variola major"... smallpox.
1840
01:36:21,909 --> 01:36:25,122
Highly infectious,
the virus had scarred,
1841
01:36:25,146 --> 01:36:29,526
blinded, or killed hundreds of
thousands in North America
1842
01:36:29,550 --> 01:36:31,695
over the past 2 1/2 centuries.
1843
01:36:31,719 --> 01:36:34,164
♪
1844
01:36:34,188 --> 01:36:36,666
The American Revolution
coincided
1845
01:36:36,690 --> 01:36:41,404
with a continent-wide epidemic
that would last for 7 years
1846
01:36:41,428 --> 01:36:46,777
and take some 100,000
more lives... Black, White,
1847
01:36:46,801 --> 01:36:48,903
as well as Native American.
1848
01:36:50,137 --> 01:36:52,916
Colin Calloway: When armies
are marching back and forth,
1849
01:36:52,940 --> 01:36:56,720
this is prime environment
for the spread of diseases.
1850
01:36:56,744 --> 01:36:59,256
And one of the largest,
1851
01:36:59,280 --> 01:37:03,026
or at least best documented,
smallpox epidemics,
1852
01:37:03,050 --> 01:37:05,228
and it may be epidemics, plural,
1853
01:37:05,252 --> 01:37:08,088
happens at the time
of the American Revolution.
1854
01:37:09,123 --> 01:37:14,862
Smallpox was the dread
disease of humanity.
1855
01:37:16,197 --> 01:37:19,676
Narrator: There were just
two weapons against smallpox:
1856
01:37:19,700 --> 01:37:24,281
isolating its victims to keep
them from infecting others
1857
01:37:24,305 --> 01:37:28,018
or inoculating the still
unaffected by deliberately
1858
01:37:28,042 --> 01:37:31,288
implanting live virus
into an incision
1859
01:37:31,312 --> 01:37:34,057
in hopes that the infection
they contracted
1860
01:37:34,081 --> 01:37:37,594
would neither prove fatal
nor infect anyone else
1861
01:37:37,618 --> 01:37:39,553
before it conferred immunity.
1862
01:37:40,921 --> 01:37:44,301
George Washington knew
the disease firsthand;
1863
01:37:44,325 --> 01:37:47,671
he'd been permanently scarred
by it as a young man.
1864
01:37:47,695 --> 01:37:52,576
But he initially rejected
inoculation for his soldiers:
1865
01:37:52,600 --> 01:37:55,879
if he imposed it universally,
his whole army
1866
01:37:55,903 --> 01:37:59,182
would have been
incapacitated for weeks;
1867
01:37:59,206 --> 01:38:01,318
if he employed it piecemeal
1868
01:38:01,342 --> 01:38:05,055
and just one still-infectious
inoculated soldier
1869
01:38:05,079 --> 01:38:06,957
was released too early,
1870
01:38:06,981 --> 01:38:09,383
he might infect
his whole company.
1871
01:38:10,885 --> 01:38:14,364
Instead, anyone showing
smallpox symptoms
1872
01:38:14,388 --> 01:38:17,133
was isolated
in a special hospital
1873
01:38:17,157 --> 01:38:20,461
with guards posted
to keep visitors out.
1874
01:38:21,562 --> 01:38:23,173
[Seagulls crying]
1875
01:38:23,197 --> 01:38:25,408
Meanwhile, aboard Lord Dunmore's
1876
01:38:25,432 --> 01:38:27,978
floating city
in the Chesapeake Bay,
1877
01:38:28,002 --> 01:38:31,948
the men of his Ethiopian
Regiment and their families,
1878
01:38:31,972 --> 01:38:35,085
packed together on
small, segregated vessels,
1879
01:38:35,109 --> 01:38:38,321
were without immunity
and not inoculated
1880
01:38:38,345 --> 01:38:42,659
until the disease was already
raging among them.
1881
01:38:42,683 --> 01:38:44,551
So was typhus.
1882
01:38:46,086 --> 01:38:49,299
Voice: The fever
has proved a very malignant one
1883
01:38:49,323 --> 01:38:51,434
and has carried off
an incredible number
1884
01:38:51,458 --> 01:38:54,929
of our people,
especially the Blacks.
1885
01:38:56,330 --> 01:38:58,642
Had it not been for
this horrid disorder,
1886
01:38:58,666 --> 01:39:01,511
I am satisfied
I should have had 2,000 Blacks
1887
01:39:01,535 --> 01:39:03,613
with whom I should have
had no doubt
1888
01:39:03,637 --> 01:39:06,473
of penetrating into the heart
of this colony.
1889
01:39:07,708 --> 01:39:08,718
Lord Dunmore.
1890
01:39:08,742 --> 01:39:10,787
♪
1891
01:39:10,811 --> 01:39:14,291
Narrator: In late May, Dunmore
moved his ramshackle fleet
1892
01:39:14,315 --> 01:39:17,761
north to Gwynn's Island,
lured there by the presence
1893
01:39:17,785 --> 01:39:20,664
of some 400 cows
with which he hoped
1894
01:39:20,688 --> 01:39:22,966
to help feed his followers.
1895
01:39:22,990 --> 01:39:26,093
But smallpox and typhus
came with him.
1896
01:39:27,328 --> 01:39:30,473
Runaways continued to find
their way to Dunmore,
1897
01:39:30,497 --> 01:39:36,613
6 or 8 a day... and died
almost as fast.
1898
01:39:36,637 --> 01:39:37,948
[Gunshot]
1899
01:39:37,972 --> 01:39:39,816
Eventually, under fire from
1900
01:39:39,840 --> 01:39:42,118
Virginia militiamen onshore,
1901
01:39:42,142 --> 01:39:44,120
Dunmore and his fleet
would be forced
1902
01:39:44,144 --> 01:39:45,889
to sail away from the island.
1903
01:39:45,913 --> 01:39:46,890
[Gunshot]
1904
01:39:46,914 --> 01:39:48,591
They left behind hundreds
1905
01:39:48,615 --> 01:39:53,730
of sick African-American
men, women, and children.
1906
01:39:53,754 --> 01:39:57,767
A Virginian who reached
the island a day or two later
1907
01:39:57,791 --> 01:39:59,560
never forgot what he saw.
1908
01:40:01,695 --> 01:40:02,872
Voice: On our arrival,
1909
01:40:02,896 --> 01:40:04,140
we were struck with horror
1910
01:40:04,164 --> 01:40:05,976
at the number of dead bodies,
1911
01:40:06,000 --> 01:40:07,644
in a state of putrefaction,
1912
01:40:07,668 --> 01:40:10,647
without a shovelful of earth
upon them;
1913
01:40:10,671 --> 01:40:12,515
others gasping for life;
1914
01:40:12,539 --> 01:40:14,718
and some had crawled
to the water's edge,
1915
01:40:14,742 --> 01:40:19,356
who could only make known their
distress by beckoning to us.
1916
01:40:19,380 --> 01:40:22,826
Such a scene of cruelty
my eyes never beheld;
1917
01:40:22,850 --> 01:40:25,929
for which the authors never can
make atonement in this world.
1918
01:40:25,953 --> 01:40:28,264
[Virginia Militiaman]
1919
01:40:28,288 --> 01:40:30,166
♪
1920
01:40:30,190 --> 01:40:33,069
Narrator: Dunmore's experiment
in emancipation
1921
01:40:33,093 --> 01:40:34,728
had ended in disaster.
1922
01:40:35,829 --> 01:40:38,842
But over the 7 years of
fighting that followed,
1923
01:40:38,866 --> 01:40:41,378
tens of thousands
of enslaved people
1924
01:40:41,402 --> 01:40:43,346
would flee to the British,
1925
01:40:43,370 --> 01:40:46,049
believing that
the King's representatives
1926
01:40:46,073 --> 01:40:48,585
were more likely than
the Revolutionaries
1927
01:40:48,609 --> 01:40:51,354
to fulfill their hopes
for liberty.
1928
01:40:51,378 --> 01:40:53,289
♪
1929
01:40:53,313 --> 01:40:55,282
Gordon-Reed: Opting
for freedom is a gamble.
1930
01:40:56,316 --> 01:40:59,753
And it makes people
take all kinds of risks.
1931
01:41:01,455 --> 01:41:04,134
The notion that you would
be in a situation
1932
01:41:04,158 --> 01:41:06,403
where your children,
and your children's children,
1933
01:41:06,427 --> 01:41:10,874
and your children's children's
children would be enslaved,
1934
01:41:10,898 --> 01:41:16,713
I can understand wanting
to risk death to prevent that.
1935
01:41:16,737 --> 01:41:20,817
♪
1936
01:41:20,841 --> 01:41:24,254
Narrator: That same spring,
smallpox would end
1937
01:41:24,278 --> 01:41:28,115
the American dream of
capturing Canada, as well.
1938
01:41:29,349 --> 01:41:30,994
For more than 4 months,
1939
01:41:31,018 --> 01:41:34,064
Benedict Arnold,
now promoted to general,
1940
01:41:34,088 --> 01:41:36,766
had continued to blockade
Quebec City,
1941
01:41:36,790 --> 01:41:40,270
hoping he could mount
a successful second assault
1942
01:41:40,294 --> 01:41:42,839
before spring temperatures
thawed the ice
1943
01:41:42,863 --> 01:41:44,374
blocking the St. Lawrence,
1944
01:41:44,398 --> 01:41:47,744
and the British
could land reinforcements.
1945
01:41:47,768 --> 01:41:50,880
But by May, nearly
half of those Americans
1946
01:41:50,904 --> 01:41:52,673
who remained were sick.
1947
01:41:54,174 --> 01:41:58,088
Then, Royal Navy warships
and transports arrived,
1948
01:41:58,112 --> 01:42:01,091
filled with
thousands of fresh troops...
1949
01:42:01,115 --> 01:42:04,461
And thousands more
were on the way.
1950
01:42:04,485 --> 01:42:06,653
The Americans took flight.
1951
01:42:07,688 --> 01:42:10,633
British forces, led by
General Guy Carleton
1952
01:42:10,657 --> 01:42:13,770
and General John Burgoyne,
pursued them...
1953
01:42:13,794 --> 01:42:17,564
Soon supported by
Native American allies.
1954
01:42:19,133 --> 01:42:20,910
Darren Bonaparte:
For us, my people
1955
01:42:20,934 --> 01:42:22,245
living on the St. Lawrence,
1956
01:42:22,269 --> 01:42:25,215
the British rallied us and said,
1957
01:42:25,239 --> 01:42:26,549
"We've got Americans invading.
1958
01:42:26,573 --> 01:42:28,308
They're going to
kill all of you."
1959
01:42:29,409 --> 01:42:33,656
We sent 100 of our warriors
to help the British
1960
01:42:33,680 --> 01:42:36,283
drive the Americans out of
the Montreal area.
1961
01:42:37,417 --> 01:42:39,462
Narrator: One by one,
the Americans
1962
01:42:39,486 --> 01:42:42,298
abandoned their outposts.
1963
01:42:42,322 --> 01:42:44,901
Reinforcements added to
their numbers,
1964
01:42:44,925 --> 01:42:49,530
but 3/4 of the newcomers
had no immunity to smallpox.
1965
01:42:50,597 --> 01:42:52,208
Voice: The road ran alongside
1966
01:42:52,232 --> 01:42:55,078
of the river opposite
the city of Montreal,
1967
01:42:55,102 --> 01:42:56,579
and we could plainly see
the red-coated
1968
01:42:56,603 --> 01:42:59,048
British soldiers
on the other shore.
1969
01:42:59,072 --> 01:43:01,818
So close were they upon us
that if we had not retreated
1970
01:43:01,842 --> 01:43:04,754
as we did, all would have
been prisoners,
1971
01:43:04,778 --> 01:43:07,991
for they were in numbers
as 6-to-our-one,
1972
01:43:08,015 --> 01:43:10,593
and we, moreover,
nearly half-dead
1973
01:43:10,617 --> 01:43:13,754
with sickness and fatigue
and lack of clothing.
1974
01:43:14,855 --> 01:43:16,733
John Greenwood.
1975
01:43:16,757 --> 01:43:18,935
Narrator: The young fifer
John Greenwood
1976
01:43:18,959 --> 01:43:20,737
was among those reinforcements
1977
01:43:20,761 --> 01:43:24,231
when Arnold ordered his men
to abandon Montreal.
1978
01:43:25,999 --> 01:43:28,611
Nearly 2,000 fell ill.
1979
01:43:28,635 --> 01:43:31,814
Eventually they crowded onto
Ile aux Noix,
1980
01:43:31,838 --> 01:43:35,685
waiting their turn to be ferried
south on Lake Champlain
1981
01:43:35,709 --> 01:43:38,688
to Crown Point and Ticonderoga.
1982
01:43:38,712 --> 01:43:40,924
♪
1983
01:43:40,948 --> 01:43:47,997
20 to 60 men fell ill
every day, and 15 to 20 died.
1984
01:43:48,021 --> 01:43:49,532
Two great pits were dug
1985
01:43:49,556 --> 01:43:51,868
in which the dead were heaped
each evening,
1986
01:43:51,892 --> 01:43:53,570
one man recalled,
1987
01:43:53,594 --> 01:43:57,631
"with no other covering but
the rags in which they died."
1988
01:43:59,099 --> 01:44:01,311
By the end of June, 10 months
1989
01:44:01,335 --> 01:44:04,747
after the American invasion
of Canada began,
1990
01:44:04,771 --> 01:44:05,872
it was over.
1991
01:44:07,140 --> 01:44:10,220
12,000 Americans had taken part.
1992
01:44:10,244 --> 01:44:13,423
Some 5,000 of them
had been killed,
1993
01:44:13,447 --> 01:44:15,391
wounded, taken prisoner,
1994
01:44:15,415 --> 01:44:19,062
died of disease, or deserted.
1995
01:44:19,086 --> 01:44:20,797
The survivors were now encamped
1996
01:44:20,821 --> 01:44:23,366
back on the shores
of Lake Champlain
1997
01:44:23,390 --> 01:44:25,835
where the campaign had started.
1998
01:44:25,859 --> 01:44:28,137
♪
1999
01:44:28,161 --> 01:44:29,973
Voice: Our army at Crown Point
2000
01:44:29,997 --> 01:44:32,108
is an object of wretchedness
2001
01:44:32,132 --> 01:44:34,801
to fill a human mind
with horror.
2002
01:44:35,669 --> 01:44:37,447
Our misfortunes in Canada
are enough
2003
01:44:37,471 --> 01:44:39,716
to melt a heart of stone.
2004
01:44:39,740 --> 01:44:42,318
The smallpox is 10 times
more terrible
2005
01:44:42,342 --> 01:44:45,312
than Britons, Canadians,
and Indians together.
2006
01:44:46,680 --> 01:44:47,657
John Adams.
2007
01:44:47,681 --> 01:44:49,492
♪
2008
01:44:49,516 --> 01:44:52,128
Narrator: "Our affairs
are hastening to a crisis,"
2009
01:44:52,152 --> 01:44:55,565
John Hancock, the president
of the Continental Congress.
2010
01:44:55,589 --> 01:44:58,468
Warned, "and the
approaching campaign
2011
01:44:58,492 --> 01:45:00,169
"will in all probability
2012
01:45:00,193 --> 01:45:03,463
determine forever
the fate of America."
2013
01:45:04,831 --> 01:45:07,243
France had by now
quietly pledged
2014
01:45:07,267 --> 01:45:09,679
to provide some arms and money...
2015
01:45:09,703 --> 01:45:12,548
But open support
would require the Congress
2016
01:45:12,572 --> 01:45:14,984
to cut all ties to Britain.
2017
01:45:15,008 --> 01:45:17,887
"Every day," John Adams
wrote to a friend,
2018
01:45:17,911 --> 01:45:21,615
independence "rolls in
upon us like a torrent."
2019
01:45:22,883 --> 01:45:27,530
On May 15th, Congress
called upon all 13 colonies
2020
01:45:27,554 --> 01:45:29,766
to form their own governments.
2021
01:45:29,790 --> 01:45:33,303
By adopting new constitutions,
the colonies would
2022
01:45:33,327 --> 01:45:36,172
turn themselves into
sovereign States.
2023
01:45:36,196 --> 01:45:38,374
♪
2024
01:45:38,398 --> 01:45:41,644
The next day, delegates
learned that the British,
2025
01:45:41,668 --> 01:45:44,314
desperate and without
European allies,
2026
01:45:44,338 --> 01:45:46,716
had hired thousands of
foreign troops
2027
01:45:46,740 --> 01:45:49,585
to help crush the rebellion.
2028
01:45:49,609 --> 01:45:54,348
Some German princes had agreed
to provide them... for a price.
2029
01:45:55,415 --> 01:45:58,961
Most came from Hessen-Kassel
and Hessen-Hanau,
2030
01:45:58,985 --> 01:46:02,589
so the Americans would
call them all "Hessians."
2031
01:46:03,623 --> 01:46:06,869
"O Britons," one
Rhode Islander lamented,
2032
01:46:06,893 --> 01:46:10,206
"how art you fallen
that you hire foreigners
2033
01:46:10,230 --> 01:46:12,499
to cut your children's throats."
2034
01:46:13,900 --> 01:46:16,012
Voice: The British nation
have proceeded
2035
01:46:16,036 --> 01:46:17,814
to the last extremity.
2036
01:46:17,838 --> 01:46:21,017
And we should expect
a severe trial this summer,
2037
01:46:21,041 --> 01:46:24,620
with Britons, Hessians,
Indians, Negroes,
2038
01:46:24,644 --> 01:46:28,024
and every other butcher
the gracious King of Britain
2039
01:46:28,048 --> 01:46:30,360
can hire against us.
2040
01:46:30,384 --> 01:46:33,053
Josiah Bartlett, New Hampshire.
2041
01:46:34,388 --> 01:46:36,799
Friederike Baer:
The Americans are using
2042
01:46:36,823 --> 01:46:39,035
the British Government's
decision
2043
01:46:39,059 --> 01:46:40,670
to hire foreign soldiers
2044
01:46:40,694 --> 01:46:42,839
in the war
against British subjects,
2045
01:46:42,863 --> 01:46:45,775
if they look at this as
a civil war to some extent.
2046
01:46:45,799 --> 01:46:47,910
They're using this as a tool
2047
01:46:47,934 --> 01:46:51,247
to rile up
resistance against Britain,
2048
01:46:51,271 --> 01:46:53,516
to mobilize men to, basically,
2049
01:46:53,540 --> 01:46:56,519
take up arms
against these invaders,
2050
01:46:56,543 --> 01:47:00,056
and ultimately
to support independence.
2051
01:47:00,080 --> 01:47:01,657
[Gavel banging]
2052
01:47:01,681 --> 01:47:05,595
Narrator: On June 7th,
Richard Henry Lee of Virginia
2053
01:47:05,619 --> 01:47:09,332
introduced resolutions
in Congress declaring that
2054
01:47:09,356 --> 01:47:12,802
"these United Colonies
are & of right
2055
01:47:12,826 --> 01:47:15,905
"ought to be
free & independent States
2056
01:47:15,929 --> 01:47:20,076
absolved from all allegiance
to the British Crown."
2057
01:47:20,100 --> 01:47:22,745
♪
2058
01:47:22,769 --> 01:47:26,082
Meanwhile, a letter to
a Pennsylvania newspaper
2059
01:47:26,106 --> 01:47:28,718
signed only "Republicus"
2060
01:47:28,742 --> 01:47:31,988
declared that it was time
for independent Americans
2061
01:47:32,012 --> 01:47:35,091
"to call themselves
by some name"...
2062
01:47:35,115 --> 01:47:38,361
And proposed
the "United States of America."
2063
01:47:38,385 --> 01:47:40,530
♪
2064
01:47:40,554 --> 01:47:43,766
A 5-man committee was named
to produce a document
2065
01:47:43,790 --> 01:47:46,335
setting forth
the reasons for making
2066
01:47:46,359 --> 01:47:49,439
such a momentous decision.
2067
01:47:49,463 --> 01:47:52,775
33-year-old Thomas Jefferson
of Virginia
2068
01:47:52,799 --> 01:47:55,711
was assigned to write
the first draft.
2069
01:47:55,735 --> 01:47:57,880
♪
2070
01:47:57,904 --> 01:48:02,852
He would draw from Aristotle,
Cicero, John Locke,
2071
01:48:02,876 --> 01:48:05,588
and the Virginia
Declaration of Rights,
2072
01:48:05,612 --> 01:48:08,181
written by his friend
George Mason.
2073
01:48:09,583 --> 01:48:13,596
But his goal, he said, was
to distill what he called
2074
01:48:13,620 --> 01:48:16,132
"an expression
of the American mind."
2075
01:48:16,156 --> 01:48:18,634
♪
2076
01:48:18,658 --> 01:48:21,737
He worked in a rented room
on Market Street,
2077
01:48:21,761 --> 01:48:24,140
fueled by cups of tea
brought to him
2078
01:48:24,164 --> 01:48:28,044
by his 14-year-old valet,
Robert Hemings...
2079
01:48:28,068 --> 01:48:31,714
The son of an enslaved servant,
Elizabeth Hemings,
2080
01:48:31,738 --> 01:48:33,807
and Jefferson's father-in-law.
2081
01:48:36,510 --> 01:48:38,988
Voice: When in the course
of human events,
2082
01:48:39,012 --> 01:48:41,457
it becomes necessary
for one people
2083
01:48:41,481 --> 01:48:43,059
to dissolve the political bands
2084
01:48:43,083 --> 01:48:45,695
which have connected them
with another,
2085
01:48:45,719 --> 01:48:48,397
and to assume among
the powers of the earth
2086
01:48:48,421 --> 01:48:50,500
the separate and equal station
2087
01:48:50,524 --> 01:48:52,668
to which the laws of nature
2088
01:48:52,692 --> 01:48:55,705
and of nature's God
entitle them,
2089
01:48:55,729 --> 01:48:58,941
a decent respect to
the opinions of mankind
2090
01:48:58,965 --> 01:49:02,044
requires that they should
declare the causes
2091
01:49:02,068 --> 01:49:04,780
which impel them
to the separation.
2092
01:49:04,804 --> 01:49:07,116
♪
2093
01:49:07,140 --> 01:49:10,653
We hold these truths
to be self-evident:
2094
01:49:10,677 --> 01:49:13,990
that all men are created equal;
2095
01:49:14,014 --> 01:49:16,492
that they are endowed
by their Creator
2096
01:49:16,516 --> 01:49:19,529
with certain inalienable rights;
2097
01:49:19,553 --> 01:49:23,966
that among these
are life, liberty,
2098
01:49:23,990 --> 01:49:25,768
and the pursuit of happiness.
2099
01:49:25,792 --> 01:49:27,803
[Thomas Jefferson]
2100
01:49:27,827 --> 01:49:29,805
Wood: Everything
that we believe in
2101
01:49:29,829 --> 01:49:31,641
comes out of the Revolution.
2102
01:49:31,665 --> 01:49:34,810
Our ideas of liberty, equality,
2103
01:49:34,834 --> 01:49:39,749
it's the defining event
of our history.
2104
01:49:39,773 --> 01:49:42,018
"All men are created equal."
2105
01:49:42,042 --> 01:49:45,354
That is the most famous
and important phrase
2106
01:49:45,378 --> 01:49:46,789
in our history.
2107
01:49:46,813 --> 01:49:48,624
If we don't celebrate it,
we have
2108
01:49:48,648 --> 01:49:51,661
no reason to be a people.
2109
01:49:51,685 --> 01:49:53,229
And Lincoln knew that.
2110
01:49:53,253 --> 01:49:55,498
And that's why he says,
2111
01:49:55,522 --> 01:49:56,899
"All honor to Jefferson."
2112
01:49:56,923 --> 01:49:59,068
♪
2113
01:49:59,092 --> 01:50:01,771
Narrator: Thomas Jefferson
was proposing something
2114
01:50:01,795 --> 01:50:05,908
altogether new and radical
in the world.
2115
01:50:05,932 --> 01:50:09,045
It was the American people's
"right," he argued,
2116
01:50:09,069 --> 01:50:12,715
it was "their duty"...
To "throw off" tyranny
2117
01:50:12,739 --> 01:50:15,308
and learn to govern themselves.
2118
01:50:16,776 --> 01:50:18,854
Voice:
That to secure these rights,
2119
01:50:18,878 --> 01:50:21,857
governments are instituted
among men,
2120
01:50:21,881 --> 01:50:26,195
deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed,
2121
01:50:26,219 --> 01:50:28,164
that whenever
any form of government
2122
01:50:28,188 --> 01:50:30,866
becomes destructive
of these ends,
2123
01:50:30,890 --> 01:50:35,771
it is the right of the people
to alter or to abolish it,
2124
01:50:35,795 --> 01:50:38,074
and to institute new government,
2125
01:50:38,098 --> 01:50:41,510
laying its foundation
on such principles
2126
01:50:41,534 --> 01:50:44,780
and organizing its powers
in such form,
2127
01:50:44,804 --> 01:50:47,483
as to them shall seem
most likely
2128
01:50:47,507 --> 01:50:50,519
to effect their safety
and happiness.
2129
01:50:50,543 --> 01:50:53,089
[Thomas Jefferson]
2130
01:50:53,113 --> 01:50:55,925
Narrator: Since no one had
authority over anyone else
2131
01:50:55,949 --> 01:50:59,128
by birthright,
Jefferson was affirming
2132
01:50:59,152 --> 01:51:03,933
that all legitimate power came
from the people themselves...
2133
01:51:03,957 --> 01:51:08,270
Even if he, the owner of
hundreds of human beings,
2134
01:51:08,294 --> 01:51:12,699
could never make that truth
a reality in his own life.
2135
01:51:13,700 --> 01:51:15,211
Gordon-Reed:
His relationship to slavery
2136
01:51:15,235 --> 01:51:17,980
is foundational.
2137
01:51:18,004 --> 01:51:20,249
From the beginning to the end,
this institution
2138
01:51:20,273 --> 01:51:24,210
bounded his life, even though
he knew it was wrong.
2139
01:51:25,378 --> 01:51:27,757
How could you know something
is wrong and still do it?
2140
01:51:27,781 --> 01:51:31,927
Well, that is the human
question for all of us.
2141
01:51:31,951 --> 01:51:33,829
♪
2142
01:51:33,853 --> 01:51:35,431
Taylor: The Declaration
of Independence,
2143
01:51:35,455 --> 01:51:36,899
we remember it, primarily,
2144
01:51:36,923 --> 01:51:40,069
from its opening preamble,
2145
01:51:40,093 --> 01:51:43,572
the most famous sentences
in our history,
2146
01:51:43,596 --> 01:51:46,075
quoted ever since as a mandate
2147
01:51:46,099 --> 01:51:49,345
for expanding liberty
for other people.
2148
01:51:49,369 --> 01:51:52,381
But most of the document
is something else.
2149
01:51:52,405 --> 01:51:54,383
It is a list of crimes
2150
01:51:54,407 --> 01:51:57,586
allegedly committed by the King.
2151
01:51:57,610 --> 01:52:00,056
That means that
when the Patriot leaders
2152
01:52:00,080 --> 01:52:02,591
decide that they
want independence,
2153
01:52:02,615 --> 01:52:06,429
then they must persuade
their people in the colonies,
2154
01:52:06,453 --> 01:52:11,934
now states, that the King has
forfeited his just authority.
2155
01:52:11,958 --> 01:52:14,437
The purpose of the
Declaration of Independence
2156
01:52:14,461 --> 01:52:17,897
is to declare the King is
no longer sovereign.
2157
01:52:19,365 --> 01:52:21,811
Narrator: Throughout history,
most people
2158
01:52:21,835 --> 01:52:23,145
had been subjects,
2159
01:52:23,169 --> 01:52:26,248
living under authoritarian rule.
2160
01:52:26,272 --> 01:52:29,385
"All experience hath shewn,"
Jefferson wrote,
2161
01:52:29,409 --> 01:52:32,722
"that mankind are
more disposed to suffer,
2162
01:52:32,746 --> 01:52:35,148
while evils are sufferable."
2163
01:52:36,483 --> 01:52:41,497
George III himself, not the
Parliament, was now the enemy.
2164
01:52:41,521 --> 01:52:43,365
The Declaration denounced him
2165
01:52:43,389 --> 01:52:47,136
as "unfit to be the ruler
of a free people,"
2166
01:52:47,160 --> 01:52:51,207
guilty of 18
"injuries and usurpations,"
2167
01:52:51,231 --> 01:52:55,502
all meant to establish,
it read, "absolute tyranny."
2168
01:52:56,770 --> 01:53:00,216
It charged that he had invaded
"the rights of the people,"
2169
01:53:00,240 --> 01:53:03,319
sent "swarms of officers
to harass" them,
2170
01:53:03,343 --> 01:53:06,822
imposed a standing army
in peacetime,
2171
01:53:06,846 --> 01:53:10,192
levied taxes without
the colonists' consent,
2172
01:53:10,216 --> 01:53:13,562
and was now
waging war against them.
2173
01:53:13,586 --> 01:53:16,232
♪
2174
01:53:16,256 --> 01:53:19,368
Dunmore's Proclamation
had deepened fears
2175
01:53:19,392 --> 01:53:21,103
of slave uprisings,
2176
01:53:21,127 --> 01:53:23,539
and reports that
the governor of Canada
2177
01:53:23,563 --> 01:53:27,810
had enlisted Native people
to resist the invasion there
2178
01:53:27,834 --> 01:53:29,969
further inflamed Congress.
2179
01:53:31,037 --> 01:53:34,383
In the 18th and final charge
against the King,
2180
01:53:34,407 --> 01:53:38,478
Jefferson did all he could
to exploit their fury.
2181
01:53:40,046 --> 01:53:41,257
Voice: He has excited
2182
01:53:41,281 --> 01:53:44,026
domestic insurrections
amongst us
2183
01:53:44,050 --> 01:53:45,795
and has endeavored to bring on
2184
01:53:45,819 --> 01:53:48,230
the inhabitants
of our frontiers,
2185
01:53:48,254 --> 01:53:50,933
the merciless Indian Savages,
2186
01:53:50,957 --> 01:53:53,035
whose known rule of warfare
2187
01:53:53,059 --> 01:53:55,371
is an undistinguished
destruction
2188
01:53:55,395 --> 01:53:59,508
of all ages, sexes,
and conditions.
2189
01:53:59,532 --> 01:54:01,443
[Thomas Jefferson]
2190
01:54:01,467 --> 01:54:04,346
Narrator: Proclaiming
the equality of "all men"
2191
01:54:04,370 --> 01:54:07,483
was a genuinely
revolutionary idea,
2192
01:54:07,507 --> 01:54:11,987
but that equality was not yet
extended to Native Americans,
2193
01:54:12,011 --> 01:54:17,693
enslaved or free Blacks,
the poor, or any woman.
2194
01:54:17,717 --> 01:54:21,931
Jefferson's original list of
"injuries" had also included
2195
01:54:21,955 --> 01:54:25,868
the charge that George III
was somehow responsible
2196
01:54:25,892 --> 01:54:28,204
for the Atlantic slave trade.
2197
01:54:28,228 --> 01:54:33,342
He called it "cruel war
against human nature itself."
2198
01:54:33,366 --> 01:54:37,780
The other delegates refused
to adopt that charge.
2199
01:54:37,804 --> 01:54:41,217
♪
2200
01:54:41,241 --> 01:54:43,986
The Declaration of
Independence was formally
2201
01:54:44,010 --> 01:54:48,290
ratified on July 4th, 1776...
2202
01:54:48,314 --> 01:54:54,163
Just 1,337 words
that ended with the phrase,
2203
01:54:54,187 --> 01:54:56,599
"We mutually pledge
to each other
2204
01:54:56,623 --> 01:55:01,670
our lives, our fortunes,
and our sacred honor."
2205
01:55:01,694 --> 01:55:04,206
♪
2206
01:55:04,230 --> 01:55:07,042
When Rhode Island delegate
Stephen Hopkins,
2207
01:55:07,066 --> 01:55:09,879
who had palsy,
signed the document,
2208
01:55:09,903 --> 01:55:11,914
he is said to have remarked,
2209
01:55:11,938 --> 01:55:15,918
"My hand trembles,
but my heart does not."
2210
01:55:15,942 --> 01:55:19,355
[Crowd cheering]
2211
01:55:19,379 --> 01:55:22,324
It was first read aloud
to a cheering crowd
2212
01:55:22,348 --> 01:55:27,062
in the State House yard
at Philadelphia on July 8th.
2213
01:55:27,086 --> 01:55:30,432
It was soon published
in 29 newspapers,
2214
01:55:30,456 --> 01:55:35,204
and greeted by parades and
celebratory volleys of gunfire
2215
01:55:35,228 --> 01:55:38,707
throughout the newly
United States.
2216
01:55:38,731 --> 01:55:40,342
[Gunfire]
2217
01:55:40,366 --> 01:55:42,411
Voice: Boston, Massachusetts...
2218
01:55:42,435 --> 01:55:45,347
When Colonel Crafts
read the proclamation,
2219
01:55:45,371 --> 01:55:48,317
great attention was given
to every word,
2220
01:55:48,341 --> 01:55:51,687
and every face appeared joyful.
2221
01:55:51,711 --> 01:55:54,990
The King's arms were taken
down from the State House
2222
01:55:55,014 --> 01:55:57,693
and every vestige of him
from every place
2223
01:55:57,717 --> 01:56:01,964
in which it appeared
and burned in King Street.
2224
01:56:01,988 --> 01:56:05,067
Thus ends royal authority
in this state,
2225
01:56:05,091 --> 01:56:09,104
and all the people
shall say, "Amen."
2226
01:56:09,128 --> 01:56:10,639
Abigail Adams.
2227
01:56:10,663 --> 01:56:12,841
[Crowd cheering]
2228
01:56:12,865 --> 01:56:14,777
Narrator: On July 9th,
in New York,
2229
01:56:14,801 --> 01:56:19,782
General Washington ordered the
Declaration read to his troops.
2230
01:56:19,806 --> 01:56:23,485
Hearing the list of
George III's alleged crimes
2231
01:56:23,509 --> 01:56:26,388
so angered the men
that a number of them
2232
01:56:26,412 --> 01:56:29,258
raced down Broadway
to Bowling Green,
2233
01:56:29,282 --> 01:56:32,094
tied ropes to the statue
of the King,
2234
01:56:32,118 --> 01:56:33,896
and pulled it to the ground.
2235
01:56:33,920 --> 01:56:36,165
♪
2236
01:56:36,189 --> 01:56:39,668
Pieces of the shattered statue
were dispatched by wagon
2237
01:56:39,692 --> 01:56:43,605
to Litchfield, Connecticut,
where Patriots melted
2238
01:56:43,629 --> 01:56:49,778
the gilded lead into bullets...
42,088 of them.
2239
01:56:49,802 --> 01:56:52,147
♪
2240
01:56:52,171 --> 01:56:54,883
Far to the north
at Fort Ticonderoga,
2241
01:56:54,907 --> 01:56:58,253
the battered survivors of
the failed invasion of Canada
2242
01:56:58,277 --> 01:57:01,056
were assembled
so that the Declaration
2243
01:57:01,080 --> 01:57:03,325
could be read to them.
2244
01:57:03,349 --> 01:57:06,161
When it was over,
an eyewitness said,
2245
01:57:06,185 --> 01:57:09,565
"The language of every man's
countenance was,
2246
01:57:09,589 --> 01:57:11,333
"Now we are a people;
2247
01:57:11,357 --> 01:57:14,603
we have a name among
the states of the world."
2248
01:57:14,627 --> 01:57:17,573
♪
2249
01:57:17,597 --> 01:57:19,641
Among those who heard
the Declaration
2250
01:57:19,665 --> 01:57:23,746
read at Ticonderoga was
private Lemuel Haynes,
2251
01:57:23,770 --> 01:57:28,217
a free African-American from
Granville, Massachusetts.
2252
01:57:28,241 --> 01:57:31,086
He understood right away
what it might mean
2253
01:57:31,110 --> 01:57:35,290
for people like him... and wrote
an essay entitled:
2254
01:57:35,314 --> 01:57:37,826
"Liberty Further Extended."
2255
01:57:37,850 --> 01:57:40,229
♪
2256
01:57:40,253 --> 01:57:42,031
Voice: Liberty is a jewel
2257
01:57:42,055 --> 01:57:44,166
which was handed down to man
2258
01:57:44,190 --> 01:57:46,468
from the cabinet of heaven.
2259
01:57:46,492 --> 01:57:51,140
It hath pleased God to make
"of one blood all nations
2260
01:57:51,164 --> 01:57:55,677
of men for to dwell upon
the face of the earth."
2261
01:57:55,701 --> 01:57:59,181
And as all are of one species,
therefore, we may
2262
01:57:59,205 --> 01:58:02,251
reasonably conclude that liberty
is equally as precious
2263
01:58:02,275 --> 01:58:06,021
to a Black man as it is
to a White one,
2264
01:58:06,045 --> 01:58:10,092
and bondage
equally as intolerable
2265
01:58:10,116 --> 01:58:12,728
to the one as it is
to the other.
2266
01:58:12,752 --> 01:58:14,563
[Lemuel Haynes]
2267
01:58:14,587 --> 01:58:16,231
Maggie Blackhawk: The
Declaration of Independence
2268
01:58:16,255 --> 01:58:19,968
was deeply significant
to people at the margins.
2269
01:58:19,992 --> 01:58:23,939
It gave them a space
of moral argument.
2270
01:58:23,963 --> 01:58:26,442
It gave them
a space of legal argument
2271
01:58:26,466 --> 01:58:30,012
that could be leveraged to
reshape United States democracy
2272
01:58:30,036 --> 01:58:31,747
and become a part of it.
2273
01:58:31,771 --> 01:58:34,616
And we are going to push
every lever we had
2274
01:58:34,640 --> 01:58:37,486
to be able to make
this democracy real,
2275
01:58:37,510 --> 01:58:40,255
and to make these visions,
these values,
2276
01:58:40,279 --> 01:58:43,759
real rather than hypocritical.
2277
01:58:43,783 --> 01:58:46,395
♪
2278
01:58:46,419 --> 01:58:49,422
Voice: London,
"The Gentleman's Magazine."
2279
01:58:50,523 --> 01:58:53,802
The American Declaration
reflects no honor
2280
01:58:53,826 --> 01:58:58,607
upon either the erudition
or honesty of its authors.
2281
01:58:58,631 --> 01:59:03,879
"We hold," they say, "these
truths to be self-evident.
2282
01:59:03,903 --> 01:59:06,615
That all men are created equal"?
2283
01:59:06,639 --> 01:59:10,786
Every plowman knows that
they are not created equal.
2284
01:59:10,810 --> 01:59:13,388
It certainly is no reason
why the Americans
2285
01:59:13,412 --> 01:59:14,914
should turn rebels.
2286
01:59:16,382 --> 01:59:20,095
Atkinson: King George was
determined that the Americans
2287
01:59:20,119 --> 01:59:22,598
not be permitted to break away.
2288
01:59:22,622 --> 01:59:26,301
He believes, and his
senior ministers believe,
2289
01:59:26,325 --> 01:59:30,072
that this slippery slope
of an American insurrection
2290
01:59:30,096 --> 01:59:32,307
will only lead to
2291
01:59:32,331 --> 01:59:35,201
the dissolution of
the British Empire.
2292
01:59:36,435 --> 01:59:39,114
The sun never sets on
the British Empire.
2293
01:59:39,138 --> 01:59:42,618
That phrase was coined in 1773.
2294
01:59:42,642 --> 01:59:44,453
And George is determined
it's never going to set
2295
01:59:44,477 --> 01:59:45,821
as long as he is the monarch.
2296
01:59:45,845 --> 01:59:48,290
♪
2297
01:59:48,314 --> 01:59:50,559
Narrator: And the King
had sent a great fleet
2298
01:59:50,583 --> 01:59:53,729
to New York... with
thousands of troops...
2299
01:59:53,753 --> 01:59:56,698
To prevent that
from ever happening.
2300
01:59:56,722 --> 02:00:00,693
♪
2301
02:00:01,994 --> 02:00:05,698
♪
2302
02:00:06,732 --> 02:00:14,732
♪
2303
02:01:02,788 --> 02:01:03,733
Announcer: Next time
2304
02:01:03,757 --> 02:01:05,300
on "The American Revolution"...
2305
02:01:05,324 --> 02:01:07,002
Battleground: New York.
2306
02:01:07,026 --> 02:01:10,272
Rick Atkinson: Washington makes
a number of tactical mistakes,
2307
02:01:10,296 --> 02:01:11,707
none more serious
than at Long Island.
2308
02:01:11,731 --> 02:01:15,377
Announcer: Women continue to be
at the heart of the resistance.
2309
02:01:15,401 --> 02:01:17,379
Voice: If our men
are all drawn off
2310
02:01:17,403 --> 02:01:18,880
and we should be attacked,
2311
02:01:18,904 --> 02:01:21,750
you would find a race of Amazons
in America. [Abigail Adams]
2312
02:01:21,774 --> 02:01:24,586
Announcer:
And the reality of war.
2313
02:01:24,610 --> 02:01:27,990
Maya Jasanoff: The United States
came out of violence.
2314
02:01:28,014 --> 02:01:32,551
Announcer: When "The American
Revolution" continues next time.
2315
02:01:32,785 --> 02:01:35,364
♪
2316
02:01:35,388 --> 02:01:37,766
Announcer: Scan this QR code
with your smart device
2317
02:01:37,790 --> 02:01:41,103
to dive deeper into the story
of "The American Revolution"
2318
02:01:41,127 --> 02:01:45,240
with interactives, games,
classroom materials, and more.
2319
02:01:45,264 --> 02:01:49,802
♪
2320
02:01:52,938 --> 02:01:55,584
Announcer: "The American
Revolution" DVD and Blu-ray,
2321
02:01:55,608 --> 02:01:58,387
as well as the companion book
and soundtrack,
2322
02:01:58,411 --> 02:02:00,989
are available online
and in stores.
2323
02:02:01,013 --> 02:02:04,326
The series is also
available with PBS Passport
2324
02:02:04,350 --> 02:02:06,652
and on Amazon Prime Video.
2325
02:02:07,853 --> 02:02:15,853
♪
2326
02:02:47,059 --> 02:02:49,438
Announcer:
The American Revolution caused
2327
02:02:49,462 --> 02:02:51,640
an impact felt around the world.
2328
02:02:51,664 --> 02:02:56,778
The fight would take
ingenuity, determination,
2329
02:02:56,802 --> 02:02:59,114
and hope for a new tomorrow
2330
02:02:59,138 --> 02:03:01,283
to turn the tide of history
2331
02:03:01,307 --> 02:03:04,543
and set the American story
in motion.
2332
02:03:08,881 --> 02:03:11,927
What would you like
the power to do?
2333
02:03:11,951 --> 02:03:13,552
Bank of America.
2334
02:03:16,655 --> 02:03:18,133
Announcer:
Major funding
2335
02:03:18,157 --> 02:03:19,068
for "The American Revolution"
2336
02:03:19,092 --> 02:03:20,469
was provided by
The Better Angels Society
2337
02:03:20,493 --> 02:03:21,703
and its members
2338
02:03:21,727 --> 02:03:23,205
Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine
2339
02:03:23,229 --> 02:03:24,940
with the Crimson Lion Foundation
2340
02:03:24,964 --> 02:03:26,975
and the Blavatnik
Family Foundation.
2341
02:03:26,999 --> 02:03:30,545
Major funding was also provided
by David M. Rubenstein,
2342
02:03:30,569 --> 02:03:33,448
the Robert D. and Patricia E.
Kern Family Foundation,
2343
02:03:33,472 --> 02:03:34,783
the Lilly Endowment,
2344
02:03:34,807 --> 02:03:36,952
and by
Better Angels Society members:
2345
02:03:36,976 --> 02:03:39,521
Eric and Wendy Schmidt,
Stephen A. Schwarzman,
2346
02:03:39,545 --> 02:03:42,224
and Kenneth C. Griffin
with Griffin Catalyst.
2347
02:03:42,248 --> 02:03:43,825
Additional support
was provided by
2348
02:03:43,849 --> 02:03:46,094
The Arthur
Vining Davis Foundations,
2349
02:03:46,118 --> 02:03:47,662
the Pew Charitable Trusts,
2350
02:03:47,686 --> 02:03:49,664
Gilbert S. Omenn
and Martha A. Darling,
2351
02:03:49,688 --> 02:03:51,299
the Park Foundation,
2352
02:03:51,323 --> 02:03:53,001
and by Better Angels Society
members:
2353
02:03:53,025 --> 02:03:56,004
Gilchrist and Amy Berg,
Perry and Donna Golkin,
2354
02:03:56,028 --> 02:03:58,707
The Michelson Foundation,
Jacqueline B. Mars,
2355
02:03:58,731 --> 02:04:02,277
the Kissick Family Foundation,
Diane and Hal Brierley,
2356
02:04:02,301 --> 02:04:04,746
John H.N. Fisher
and Jennifer Caldwell,
2357
02:04:04,770 --> 02:04:06,448
John and Catherine Debs,
2358
02:04:06,472 --> 02:04:08,250
The Fullerton Family
Charitable Fund,
2359
02:04:08,274 --> 02:04:10,118
and these additional members.
2360
02:04:10,142 --> 02:04:11,520
"The American Revolution"
2361
02:04:11,544 --> 02:04:13,021
was made possible with support
2362
02:04:13,045 --> 02:04:15,457
from the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting,
2363
02:04:15,481 --> 02:04:16,721
and Viewers Like You.
Thank You.
187054
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