"The Causes of the War of Independence" provides a comprehensive and scholarly examination of the complex factors that led to the American Revolution. Claude Halstead van Tyne investigates the deep-seated grievances, economic tensions, and political ideologies that fractured the relationship between Great Britain and its North American colonies.
As the first volume of a larger history on the founding of the American Republic, this work delves into the evolution of colonial identity and the legislative conflicts that precipitated the call for sovereignty. Through a detailed analysis of the prevailing social and intellectual currents of the eighteenth century, the author offers insight into the inevitable drift toward conflict and the eventual birth of a new nation. This text remains a significant contribution to American historiography, providing readers with a foundational understanding of the precursors to the Revolutionary War and the ideological foundations of the United States. It is an essential resource for students of history and those seeking to understand the structural and cultural shifts that made the pursuit of independence both possible and necessary.
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