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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:01,978 Announcer: Major funding 2 00:00:02,002 --> 00:00:03,045 for "The American Revolution" 3 00:00:03,069 --> 00:00:04,480 was provided by The Better Angels Society 4 00:00:04,504 --> 00:00:05,748 and its members 5 00:00:05,772 --> 00:00:06,949 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 6 00:00:06,973 --> 00:00:08,951 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 7 00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:10,853 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 8 00:00:10,877 --> 00:00:14,390 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 9 00:00:14,414 --> 00:00:17,526 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 10 00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,861 the Lilly Endowment, 11 00:00:18,885 --> 00:00:21,030 and by Better Angels Society members: 12 00:00:21,054 --> 00:00:23,366 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 13 00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,068 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 14 00:00:26,092 --> 00:00:27,837 Additional support was provided by 15 00:00:27,861 --> 00:00:29,905 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 16 00:00:29,929 --> 00:00:31,540 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 17 00:00:31,564 --> 00:00:33,676 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 18 00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,111 the Park Foundation, 19 00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:36,846 and by Better Angels Society members: 20 00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 21 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,551 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 22 00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:46,022 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 23 00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,724 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 24 00:00:48,748 --> 00:00:50,259 John and Catherine Debs, 25 00:00:50,283 --> 00:00:52,128 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 26 00:00:52,152 --> 00:00:53,963 and these additional members. 27 00:00:53,987 --> 00:00:55,398 "The American Revolution" 28 00:00:55,422 --> 00:00:57,033 was made possible with support 29 00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:59,268 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 30 00:00:59,292 --> 00:01:02,062 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 31 00:01:03,129 --> 00:01:05,274 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 32 00:01:05,298 --> 00:01:07,543 an impact felt around the world. 33 00:01:07,567 --> 00:01:12,848 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 34 00:01:12,872 --> 00:01:14,984 and hope for a new tomorrow 35 00:01:15,008 --> 00:01:17,186 to turn the tide of history 36 00:01:17,210 --> 00:01:20,447 and set the American story in motion. 37 00:01:25,018 --> 00:01:27,863 What would you like the power to do? 38 00:01:27,887 --> 00:01:29,456 Bank of America. 39 00:01:33,326 --> 00:01:35,104 [Insects chirping, loon calling] 40 00:01:35,128 --> 00:01:37,363 [Splashing] 41 00:01:41,734 --> 00:01:45,681 Narrator: Before dawn on May 10th, 1775... 42 00:01:45,705 --> 00:01:48,984 Less than a month after Lexington and Concord... 43 00:01:49,008 --> 00:01:51,487 Some 85 New Englanders rowed across 44 00:01:51,511 --> 00:01:54,190 the southern end of Lake Champlain, 45 00:01:54,214 --> 00:01:57,517 keeping silent, muskets primed. 46 00:01:58,685 --> 00:02:00,763 Their objective was a dilapidated, 47 00:02:00,787 --> 00:02:04,467 star-shaped fortress called Ticonderoga, 48 00:02:04,491 --> 00:02:06,769 built by the French 20 years earlier 49 00:02:06,793 --> 00:02:10,339 and now occupied by 50 British soldiers 50 00:02:10,363 --> 00:02:12,866 and 24 women and children. 51 00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:16,679 If they could capture it, they might be able to stop 52 00:02:16,703 --> 00:02:19,548 British troops from attacking from the north; 53 00:02:19,572 --> 00:02:22,651 to provide American forces with a staging area 54 00:02:22,675 --> 00:02:25,554 should they ever choose to invade Canada; 55 00:02:25,578 --> 00:02:28,924 and to take possession of dozens of artillery pieces 56 00:02:28,948 --> 00:02:33,253 that the rebel forces ringing Boston desperately needed. 57 00:02:34,554 --> 00:02:38,134 The men slipped silently onto the shore. 58 00:02:38,158 --> 00:02:41,437 The British surrendered without a shot. 59 00:02:41,461 --> 00:02:45,074 So did the 9 redcoats stationed at Crown Point, 60 00:02:45,098 --> 00:02:47,200 a smaller outpost nearby. 61 00:02:48,401 --> 00:02:50,880 The Americans had two commanders. 62 00:02:50,904 --> 00:02:52,715 One was Colonel Ethan Allen, 63 00:02:52,739 --> 00:02:55,985 the hard-drinking leader of the "Green Mountain Boys," 64 00:02:56,009 --> 00:02:59,321 a band of vigilantes who had spent years defending 65 00:02:59,345 --> 00:03:01,157 their settlements in the Vermont region 66 00:03:01,181 --> 00:03:02,825 of northwestern New England 67 00:03:02,849 --> 00:03:06,452 against New Yorkers who also claimed the land. 68 00:03:07,487 --> 00:03:10,166 The other was a newly promoted 34-year-old 69 00:03:10,190 --> 00:03:12,334 Connecticut militia colonel. 70 00:03:12,358 --> 00:03:14,336 He was descended from a distinguished 71 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:17,706 New England family that had fallen on hard times. 72 00:03:17,730 --> 00:03:21,577 Able but arrogant, sensitive to slights, 73 00:03:21,601 --> 00:03:24,313 he would become one of the most important commanders 74 00:03:24,337 --> 00:03:26,882 of the American Revolution. 75 00:03:26,906 --> 00:03:29,652 His name was Benedict Arnold. 76 00:03:29,676 --> 00:03:37,676 ♪ 77 00:03:44,624 --> 00:03:46,335 William Hogeland: Once it's a shooting war, 78 00:03:46,359 --> 00:03:49,138 as with Lexington and Concord, it's a war. 79 00:03:49,162 --> 00:03:51,307 There's no doubt about that. 80 00:03:51,331 --> 00:03:54,543 But independence was not, in any way, officially 81 00:03:54,567 --> 00:03:56,445 on the table as a goal 82 00:03:56,469 --> 00:03:59,481 of the Americans at that point. 83 00:03:59,505 --> 00:04:02,885 The idea of independence was still controversial. 84 00:04:02,909 --> 00:04:05,955 The official position was that the fight was 85 00:04:05,979 --> 00:04:07,957 essentially for redress, for 86 00:04:07,981 --> 00:04:10,392 "Let's get back to the way things used to be. 87 00:04:10,416 --> 00:04:14,287 Back when things were good, when you left us alone." 88 00:04:15,588 --> 00:04:18,534 Narrator: The blood shed at Lexington and Concord 89 00:04:18,558 --> 00:04:21,070 had deepened the divisions among Americans 90 00:04:21,094 --> 00:04:23,396 from Georgia to New Hampshire. 91 00:04:24,564 --> 00:04:27,977 "Loyalists," those who remained faithful to the Crown 92 00:04:28,001 --> 00:04:31,247 and hoped His Majesty's troops would soon restore 93 00:04:31,271 --> 00:04:34,183 law and order, dismissed those whose sympathies 94 00:04:34,207 --> 00:04:38,921 lay with the militiamen surrounding Boston as "rebels." 95 00:04:38,945 --> 00:04:42,091 The "rebels" called themselves "Patriots"... 96 00:04:42,115 --> 00:04:44,593 Or "Whigs" after British champions 97 00:04:44,617 --> 00:04:47,563 of constitutionally guaranteed rights... 98 00:04:47,587 --> 00:04:51,424 And vilified their Loyalist neighbors as "Tories." 99 00:04:52,859 --> 00:04:55,104 Alan Taylor: The term "Patriot" is a very old one 100 00:04:55,128 --> 00:04:57,606 that pre-exists the Revolution. 101 00:04:57,630 --> 00:04:59,742 It applies to people who believe that they are 102 00:04:59,766 --> 00:05:03,712 the defenders of liberty against power. 103 00:05:03,736 --> 00:05:06,915 Now, "rebel" is a term that the British will use, 104 00:05:06,939 --> 00:05:09,551 and the Loyalists will use, to apply to the people 105 00:05:09,575 --> 00:05:11,854 who call themselves the "Patriots." 106 00:05:11,878 --> 00:05:14,757 So, to be a rebel means that you are rejecting 107 00:05:14,781 --> 00:05:17,593 the legitimate authority of your sovereign, 108 00:05:17,617 --> 00:05:20,486 King George III of the British Empire. 109 00:05:22,021 --> 00:05:25,801 Voice: That we are divorced is to me very clear. 110 00:05:25,825 --> 00:05:28,771 The only question is concerning the proper time 111 00:05:28,795 --> 00:05:32,432 for making an explicit declaration in words. 112 00:05:33,499 --> 00:05:36,011 Some people must have time to look around them, 113 00:05:36,035 --> 00:05:40,049 before, behind, on the right hand, and on the left, 114 00:05:40,073 --> 00:05:44,744 then to think, and after all this, to resolve. 115 00:05:46,179 --> 00:05:48,757 Others see at one intuitive glance 116 00:05:48,781 --> 00:05:51,293 into the past and the future, 117 00:05:51,317 --> 00:05:53,786 and judge with precision at once. 118 00:05:54,754 --> 00:05:58,434 But remember you can't make 13 clocks 119 00:05:58,458 --> 00:06:01,870 strike precisely alike at the same second. 120 00:06:01,894 --> 00:06:03,839 [Ticking] 121 00:06:03,863 --> 00:06:04,873 John Adams. 122 00:06:04,897 --> 00:06:12,897 ♪ 123 00:06:21,681 --> 00:06:23,092 Taylor: I think the greatest misconception 124 00:06:23,116 --> 00:06:25,728 about the American Revolution is that it was 125 00:06:25,752 --> 00:06:28,297 something that unified Americans 126 00:06:28,321 --> 00:06:32,901 and that it was just a war of Americans against the British. 127 00:06:32,925 --> 00:06:34,770 It leaves out the reality that it was 128 00:06:34,794 --> 00:06:36,929 a civil war among Americans. 129 00:06:38,931 --> 00:06:41,510 Voice: I tremble at the thoughts of war; 130 00:06:41,534 --> 00:06:45,314 but of all wars, a civil war! 131 00:06:45,338 --> 00:06:48,283 Our all is at stake. 132 00:06:48,307 --> 00:06:49,675 Sarah Mifflin. 133 00:06:50,643 --> 00:06:52,988 Narrator: In the spring of 1775, 134 00:06:53,012 --> 00:06:55,958 a Philadelphia woman named Sarah Mifflin 135 00:06:55,982 --> 00:06:59,228 wrote to a British officer who had been her friend 136 00:06:59,252 --> 00:07:01,630 before the shooting began. 137 00:07:01,654 --> 00:07:03,699 He had suggested that the whole thing 138 00:07:03,723 --> 00:07:05,858 was just a minor disagreement. 139 00:07:07,026 --> 00:07:09,138 Voice: It is not a quibble in politics. 140 00:07:09,162 --> 00:07:13,942 It is this plain truth, which the most ignorant peasant knows, 141 00:07:13,966 --> 00:07:16,345 that no man has a right to take their money 142 00:07:16,369 --> 00:07:18,147 without their consent. 143 00:07:18,171 --> 00:07:22,885 I know this, that as free I can die but once, 144 00:07:22,909 --> 00:07:26,455 but as a slave I shall not be worthy of life. 145 00:07:26,479 --> 00:07:27,823 Sarah Mifflin. 146 00:07:27,847 --> 00:07:30,592 ♪ 147 00:07:30,616 --> 00:07:33,429 Narrator: Some 20,000 militiamen from towns 148 00:07:33,453 --> 00:07:37,399 all over Massachusetts... and from Connecticut, New Hampshire, 149 00:07:37,423 --> 00:07:39,168 and Rhode Island as well... 150 00:07:39,192 --> 00:07:42,371 Had poured into the series of impromptu camps 151 00:07:42,395 --> 00:07:46,608 that kept the British caged in Boston. 152 00:07:46,632 --> 00:07:49,545 They were united in their anger at the redcoats 153 00:07:49,569 --> 00:07:51,613 but very little else. 154 00:07:51,637 --> 00:07:54,683 They were militiamen, not professional soldiers, 155 00:07:54,707 --> 00:07:57,453 expected to meet immediate crises, 156 00:07:57,477 --> 00:08:00,956 not take part in prolonged campaigns. 157 00:08:00,980 --> 00:08:02,558 Few had uniforms. 158 00:08:02,582 --> 00:08:06,018 Many had never been more than 50 miles from home. 159 00:08:07,386 --> 00:08:10,966 Their first loyalty was to the towns from which they came 160 00:08:10,990 --> 00:08:14,803 and the neighbors whom they had elected as their officers. 161 00:08:14,827 --> 00:08:17,706 Once the shooting stopped and it became clear 162 00:08:17,730 --> 00:08:20,542 that the British were not going to attack them, 163 00:08:20,566 --> 00:08:23,803 they began drifting home to plant their crops. 164 00:08:25,037 --> 00:08:28,750 In overall charge of this dwindling, disorganized force 165 00:08:28,774 --> 00:08:30,819 was General Artemas Ward, 166 00:08:30,843 --> 00:08:33,822 the commander of the Massachusetts militia. 167 00:08:33,846 --> 00:08:37,025 From his headquarters in Cambridge, he understood 168 00:08:37,049 --> 00:08:39,761 that if there were to be any hope of holding their own 169 00:08:39,785 --> 00:08:44,333 against the British, he needed a paid, recruited army... 170 00:08:44,357 --> 00:08:46,301 And he needed it fast. 171 00:08:46,325 --> 00:08:49,238 ♪ 172 00:08:49,262 --> 00:08:50,706 Voice: Wherever you go, 173 00:08:50,730 --> 00:08:52,908 we will be by your sides. 174 00:08:52,932 --> 00:08:55,978 Our bones shall lie with yours. 175 00:08:56,002 --> 00:08:59,715 We are determined never to be at peace with the redcoats 176 00:08:59,739 --> 00:09:02,551 while they are at variance with you. 177 00:09:02,575 --> 00:09:05,888 If we are conquered, our lands go with yours. 178 00:09:05,912 --> 00:09:09,324 But if we are victorious, we hope you will help us 179 00:09:09,348 --> 00:09:12,928 to recover our just rights. 180 00:09:12,952 --> 00:09:15,254 Captain Solomon Uhhaunauwaunmut. 181 00:09:16,756 --> 00:09:19,368 Narrator: Among the troops who arrived in Cambridge 182 00:09:19,392 --> 00:09:21,436 was a company of Native Americans 183 00:09:21,460 --> 00:09:24,573 from Stockbridge, Massachusetts. 184 00:09:24,597 --> 00:09:26,441 Philip Deloria: Stockbridge is a community of 185 00:09:26,465 --> 00:09:28,010 multiple tribes, 186 00:09:28,034 --> 00:09:30,712 which has a long history of surviving colonization, 187 00:09:30,736 --> 00:09:32,981 in part through adopting Christianity 188 00:09:33,005 --> 00:09:35,684 and adopting certain kinds of strategic ways of being 189 00:09:35,708 --> 00:09:37,886 in relation with colonists. 190 00:09:37,910 --> 00:09:40,489 They come over from Western Massachusetts 191 00:09:40,513 --> 00:09:42,582 and they're part of the Siege of Boston. 192 00:09:43,783 --> 00:09:46,662 Ned Blackhawk: Most Indigenous powers stay relatively 193 00:09:46,686 --> 00:09:48,697 on the sidelines of the conflict 194 00:09:48,721 --> 00:09:50,599 during the early years. 195 00:09:50,623 --> 00:09:53,101 But many Native communities, particularly those 196 00:09:53,125 --> 00:09:56,004 who have lived with settlers for generations, 197 00:09:56,028 --> 00:09:59,708 come to share loyalties and sensibilities. 198 00:09:59,732 --> 00:10:01,476 And so, many decide 199 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 201 00:10:05,871 --> 00:10:09,918 and take up arms against the British Empire. 202 00:10:09,942 --> 00:10:11,920 Narrator: The presence of the Stockbridge men 203 00:10:11,944 --> 00:10:14,289 among the rebels, General Thomas Gage, 204 00:10:14,313 --> 00:10:16,625 the commander-in-chief of the British Army 205 00:10:16,649 --> 00:10:20,195 in North America, said, freed him to call upon 206 00:10:20,219 --> 00:10:23,699 other Native Americans to join his forces 207 00:10:23,723 --> 00:10:25,291 and fight for the Crown. 208 00:10:26,626 --> 00:10:30,872 Enslaved New Englanders were not recruited by either side. 209 00:10:30,896 --> 00:10:33,875 The Massachusetts Provincial Congress insisted 210 00:10:33,899 --> 00:10:36,545 it was engaged in a struggle for freedom 211 00:10:36,569 --> 00:10:38,680 from British "slavery." 212 00:10:38,704 --> 00:10:42,341 Enlisting them, it said, would be "inconsistent." 213 00:10:43,709 --> 00:10:46,788 But free African-Americans were welcome... 214 00:10:46,812 --> 00:10:50,926 And at least 35 and perhaps as many as 50 men of color 215 00:10:50,950 --> 00:10:53,729 had fought at Lexington and Concord 216 00:10:53,753 --> 00:10:55,731 and more would soon be engaged 217 00:10:55,755 --> 00:10:59,091 in the next, far bigger battle with the British. 218 00:11:00,126 --> 00:11:03,205 Black, White, and Native American soldiers 219 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. 221 00:11:13,172 --> 00:11:16,385 Voice: What?! 10,000 peasants keep 222 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. 224 00:11:24,016 --> 00:11:25,594 General John Burgoyne. 225 00:11:25,618 --> 00:11:28,130 ♪ 226 00:11:28,154 --> 00:11:33,035 Narrator: On May 25th, 1775, a Royal Navy frigate 227 00:11:33,059 --> 00:11:35,837 threaded its way into Boston harbor. 228 00:11:35,861 --> 00:11:38,640 Aboard were British reinforcements 229 00:11:38,664 --> 00:11:41,710 and 3 major generals. 230 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. 232 00:11:46,205 --> 00:11:48,417 A playwright as well as a soldier, 233 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 235 00:11:55,247 --> 00:11:59,085 a "rabble in arms, flushed with insolence." 236 00:12:00,286 --> 00:12:03,899 Henry Clinton had spent 6 boyhood years in New York, 237 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, 244 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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