Parliament repealed the Townshend Acts,except for the duty on tea
Great Britain aka ENGLAND aka the USA'a mother Country We were fighting for independence from them during the late 1770s until the early 1780s.
the first Continental congress
the first Continental congress
the first Continental congress
The chreokee leader was named Sequoyah who was born in the early 1770s
The Boston Massacre and the Tea Act were key events that sharpened the division between Britain and the colonist in the late 1760s and early 1770s. King George's efforts to bring the colonies to heel, would lead them straight to revolution.
The British colonised America and the French colonised Canada. The British beat the French out of Canada with the help of the Canadian native tribes and the American colonists. However, the American colonists then fought for their independence from Britain in the 1770s. The British were helped by the Native American Indians, but eventually the French helped the Americans and the British grated independence to America.
Samuel Adams and Dr. Joseph Warren in Boston, other key political leaders in other cities. Many of them were active in the colonial legislatures under the British, until their authority was usurped by changes in the British approach to the American colonies in the early 1770s.
Samuel Adams and Dr. Joseph Warren in Boston, other key political leaders in other cities. Many of them were active in the colonial legislatures under the British, until their authority was usurped by changes in the British approach to the American colonies in the early 1770s.
The Atlantic Revolutions were a revolutionary wave in the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century. It was associated with the Atlantic World during the era 1770s to the 1820s.
Besides the war and the draft, the American counterculture or the 1960s condemned racial discrimination and "The Man" (the power of government and those who supported it) and traditional 'uptight' American values. One of the mantras of the 60s counterculture that survives today, and I still live by is, "question everything".
Early December 2011 in Moscow, Russian Federation