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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 9 page paper discussing the development of American attitudes. The American psyche developed over the first century or so that the northern range of the New World contributed 13 colonies to Britain. As intolerance for the British crown grew and the colonies developed their own national personalities, the ideal and reality of what would become the United States began to take shape. The purpose here is to assess political, social and economic climates during the periods of 1750-1790 and 1790-1860. Bibliography lists 5 sources in 8 footnotes.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KShistAmAtt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
became the New Worlds first permanent settlers from northern Europe were a sturdy people, strong in their convictions and stoic in their approach to difficulties. People with less determination
or less desire for personal freedom likely would not have survived, with the result that todays America might have been very different from that which exists today.
They did survive, however, and the American psyche developed over the first century or so that the northern range of the New World contributed 13 colonies
to Britain. As intolerance for the British crown grew and the colonies developed their own national personalities, the ideal and reality of what would become the United States began
to take shape. The purpose here is to assess political, social and economic climates during the periods of 1750-1790 and 1790-1860. Revolutionary America, 1750-1790 Political Climate
All of Britains colonies were populated with adventuresome individuals with independent spirits, but the 13 colonies in the New World held a still different variety of
independence and strength of will. John Winthrop, an early governor and a church leader, had set a course in which only church members could be elected to office or
appointed to non-elected stations. Winthrop was certain that God had made a covenant with the settlers and that the world would be watching how the Puritans behaved in their
new land; Winthrop was determined that they would not be found lacking in their determination or commitment to God. This attitude persisted well
into the Revolutionary era, and resistance to the British crown only grew stronger with each measure that the king imposed in efforts to keep the colonists in their proper place.
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