(Set) Ordinary Americans in the Revolution & America's Founding Fathers

(Set) Ordinary Americans in the Revolution & America's Founding Fathers

(Set) Ordinary Americans in the Revolution & America's Founding Fathers

Witness the dawn of the United States of America from the perspective of both everyday Americans and Founding Fathers with this set that pairs Ordinary Americans in the Revolution with America’s Founding Fathers. First, delve into the perspectives and experiences of the common people who made the American Revolution happen, from political activists, soldiers, and shopkeepers to Native Americans, enslaved people, and British loyalists. Then, use the Founding Fathers as a lens through which to see powerful truths about the early political history of the United States.

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Ordinary Americans in the Revolution

Ordinary Americans in the Revolution

The American Revolution was a vast insurgency movement requiring mass communication, mass mobilization, and a single-mindedness of purpose on the part of a huge number of colonists acting together, joined by a common cause. Who were these people? In Ordinary Americans of the Revolution, you’ll discover the American Revolution from a startlingly different perspective.: Professor Richard Bell of the University of Maryland introduces you to the soldiers, midwives, artisans, shopkeepers, farmers, enslaved people, and the other men and women—European American, Native American, and African American—with whom the success or failure of the revolution depended. The experience of these unfamiliar Americans offers a deeper understanding of the causes, meanings, and consequences of the American Revolution.

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(Set) American Revolution & Origins and Ideologies of the American Revolution

(Set) American Revolution & Origins and Ideologies of the American Revolution

Strengthen your understanding of the landmark conflict that gave birth to the United States of America. In American Revolution, follow the course of the war's events—from its outbreak at Lexington and Concord to its conclusion with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. Then, delve into the ideological roots of the revolution and learn how the inspirational idea of liberty was formed in Origins and Ideologies of the American Revolution.

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