Explore the American Revolution using this rich collection of sources and documents that tell the history of a new nation
Sources in U.S. History Online: The American Revolution is a digital archive documenting the revolution and war that created the United States of America, from the Paris peace treaty in 1763 through the early protests in 1785 to the Paris peace treaty of 1783. The collection examines the political, social, and intellectual upheaval of the age, as well as the actual war for American independence through its eight long years of conflict. A wealth of material from the European point of view is included.The archive tells the whole story of the American Revolution -- the experiences of commanders and common soldiers, women and slaves, American Indians and Loyalists are all recorded. A variety of primary source documents -- personal narratives and memoirs, political pamphlets and speeches, sermons and poems, legislative journals and popular magazines, maps and more -- cover the diversity of:
- Battles -- from the Battle of Bunker Hill to the siege of Yorktown
- Individuals -- from John Adams to Edmund Burke
- Organizations -- from the American Philosophical Society to the Whig Party
- Perspectives -- from the American loyalists to patriot preachers
- Places -- from Falmouth, England, to Fort Ticonderoga, New York
- Topics -- from agriculture to valor
- And more
Sources in U.S. History Online: The American Revolution allows researchers to examine economics, international relations, religion, and science as well as the strategies and battlefield realities of combatants on both sides of the conflict. The archive provides a rich sense of the causes and consequences of one of the great turning points in history.
Documents in Sources in U.S. History Online: The American Revolution were drawn from other Gale sources -- including the Lost Cause Press, Eighteenth Century Collections Online, The Making of the Modern World, The Making of Modern Law: Legal Treatises, and Sabin Americana, 1500-1926 -- under the editorial supervision of legal scholar Katherine A. Hermes, professor of history at Connecticut State University.
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subjects covered
- Colonialism
- Humanities & Social Sciences
- U.S. History