The Birth of the Republic (Classic Reprint) - Couverture souple

Goodloe, Daniel R.

 
9781440033537: The Birth of the Republic (Classic Reprint)

Synopsis

A comprehensive collection of colonial and revolutionary documents that illuminate the birth of the United States. This edition gathers speeches, resolutions, and proceedings to reveal how early Americans debated liberty, rights, and independence.

The book assembles an extensive range of sources from across the colonies, offering direct access to the thinking and actions that helped shape the new nation. You’ll find statements from town meetings, provincial assemblies, and influential leaders, all presented in their historical context to help readers understand the push toward union and self-government.

- Explore the debates over rights, representation, and the improvisation of a united colonial response.
- See how key figures and assemblies argued for or against independence and constitutional reform.
- Trace the progression from protests and nonimportation agreements to plans for a continental Congress.
- Gain perspective on the varied regional voices, from New England to the South, as they navigated a growing crisis.

Ideal for readers of American history, constitutional development, and the colonial era’s road to independence.

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Présentation de l'éditeur

American Colonies were destined to become independent of Great Britain, and that the occurrence of the event was only a question of time, was foreseen nearly a century before it came to pass. Lord Mansfield, in his speech in the House of Lords, on the Duke of Grafton smo tion for an address to the King, November 15, 1775, makes this fact clear by the following statement, which at the same time exhibits the shop-keeping narrowness and illiberality of his own mind. He says: The bad consequences of planting Northern Colonies were early predicted. Sir Josiah Child foretold, before the Revolution the English Revolution of 1688- 89, that they would, in the end, prove our rivals in power, commerce, and manufactures. Davenant, adopting the same ideas, foresaw what has since happened: he foresaw that, whenever Amer ica found herself of sufficient strength to contend with the mother-country, she would endeavor to form herself into a separate and independent State. This has been the constant object of New England almost from her earliest in fancy. Their struggles in the reign of King William compelled that Prince to recall their former charter and give them a new one, and, towards the conclusion of his reigpn, to get an act passed that no law enacted in the Colonies should be valid, if contrary to any law at the time existing in England. Those disputes scarce subsided from that day to this. I remember, in 1733, Mr. Talbot (after wards counsellor) proposed a set of Resolutions, in the House of Commons, in which the nature of the disputes then subsisting were directly pointed at, and similar doc trines to those maintained at present by the British Parlia ment fully asserted. This citation from the speech of Lord Mansfield demonstrates the truth that a man may be a great lawyer, and at the same time be a very narrow-minded statesman that he may be profoundly learned in th
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