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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page essay that answers this question by arguing that it was egalitarian. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khamsohe.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
example many States had laws that restricted voting rights to landowners. Also, some of the Founding Fathers, most notably Alexander Hamilton, held opinions and positions that favored the upper classes.
However, on the whole, the vast majority of the Founding Fathers, as well as the American people as a whole, favored the view that their society should be egalitarian in
structure, afford each individual the rights of liberty that Americans felt were theirs under natural law. Examination of three personal perspectives from the late eighteenth-century illustrate this point. The
first perspective belongs to an imagined participant who was standing in the crowd witnessed the Boston Massacre of March 5, 1770. The account of this hypothetical eyewitness would undoubtedly relate
the civil unrest that resulted from not only the resentment of Americans toward the Townshend Acts, which were imposed on the colonies in 1768, but also on the imposition of
British soldiers stationed within the city and their lack of respect and general atrocious behavior toward the colonists (Lossing). This individual might have testified, "I heard the commotion and cry
to arms, as someone cried out the warning, The soldiers are murdering the people! To arms!...Turn out with your guns!" (Lossing). This same individual might have also added that by
7 oclock on that the evening of March 5, there were around 700 people, armed with clubs and an assortment of weapons, who were "provoked by the insolence and brutality
of the lawless soldiery," who shouted that they should drive the soldiers out of Boston, as people cried "They have no business here! Drive them out!" (Lossing). As this indicates,
the colonials felt that their rights as British citizens were violated by the actions of the British government under the Townshend Acts, which were eventually revoked, save for the infamous
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