Sergeants Jasper and Newton Rescuing American Prisoners from the British

About two miles north of Savannah, Georgia, in August 1779, two patriots dramatically rescued a desperate group of Americans held prisoner behind British lines. Now legendary, this Revolutionary War incident was recounted by Parson Mason Locke Weems, who also popularized the fabricated tale of George Washington and the cherry tree. Continue reading

The Stamp Act

"An Emblem of the Effects of the STAMP."

Samuel Adams

If Taxes are laid upon us in any shape without our having a legal Representation where they are laid, are we not reduced from the Character of free Subjects to the miserable State of tributary Slaves?

The Stamp Act, enacted in march 1765, was a tax imposed by the British Parliament on American colonists, requiring that almost everything from newspapers to playing cards to degrees be produced on stamped paper produced in London and carry an embossed revenue stamp. Almost every conceivable product made of paper was taxed and had to be paid in valid British currency, not in colonial paper money.

This act was imposed for “defraying the expenses of defending, protecting and securing” the colonies during the Seven Years’ War, sometimes described as the “first World War” due to its global nature. The American colonists did not accept this justification, for more importantly, it amounted to taxation without representation.
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The Boston Tea Party

Samuel Adams:

We will not submit to any tax, nor become slaves. We will take up arms, and spend our last drop of blood before the King and Parliament shall impose on us, and settle crown offers in this country to dragoon us. The times were never better in Rome than when they had no king and were a free state; and as this is a great empire, we shall have it in our power to give laws to England.

Tea was a much more valuable commodity during the eighteenth century than it is today. It only grew in warm climates in far off lands, and had to be shipped thousands of miles to get to the American colonies. England retained a small tax on tea and granted a monopoly for selling tea to America to the East India Company. The Tea Act of 1773 was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain to expand the British East India Company’s monopoly on the tea trade to all British Colonies, selling excess tea at a reduced price. Even though their tax was lower than what British citizens paid for their tea, the colonists wouldn’t stand for it. Continue reading

General Francis Marion, the “Swamp Fox”

General Francis Marion, the “Swamp Fox,” was one of the most dashing figures of the American Revolution. He sabotaged the communication and supply lines of the British forces in South Carolina in a series of surprise attacks. With his small band of poorly equipped men trained in guerilla warfare, Marion lived off the land and hid in the swamps to evade the enemy. While camped at Snow’s Island, South Carolina, about 1781, the general was said to have received a British officer who had been sent to arrange an exchange of prisoners. Their negotiations completed, Marion invited the visiting officer to stay for a meal. There are at least three differing accounts of what may have transpired, but recent scholarship has uncovered a document that may shed light on the event. Continue reading