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This 3 page paper examines the minds of the settlers at the time in question. Was there an American fervor in the New World or was it merely a European reflection of culture? Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA515176.rtf
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emerge was really a unique culture, or merely a reflection of European thought. To address this issue, one of course has to look at historic facts. It seems that both
the colonists and the natives would go along parallel paths, as well as paths that would intersect, after 1763 (Carson, 2002). Each group would become more entrenched in the lives
of the other (2002). Hence, after 1763 at least one sees some sort of assimilation. This is true even though today, many Native Americans live in their own communities or
nations. During the early time period, there were no connections of empire that could be exploited and so the natives fell into a confrontation with Anglo-Americans but this would
culminate in defeat during the War of 1812 and once aging during the 1830s (Carson, 2002). The Americans it seems then did not have the support of Europe. After
all, not even a decade after 1763, the Americans would fight against the Europeans. Yes, they were essentially European but they were the seekers and searchers of Europe. They were
a breed apart from those who stayed at home. By exploring unknown shores, these renegades would live next to people from other countries as well as with Native Americans. The
blend would see a change in the people and the offspring were certainly American. The children growing up in the 1700s and even many of the adults were American born
and had few ties to Europe. When America gained independence, it would change things immeasurably. Richter suggests that the history of expansion and conquest had been
inherited from a period that hides things more than it allows in respect to the "complexity of life in America before 1763" (Carson, 2002, 101). In part, it seems
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