The Political Consequences Of The American Revolution

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From the 1770s to the 1780s, the American Revolution was extremely influential in developing the United States as a country, and creating the Constitution. This political upheaval was the colonists’ initial rebellious demonstration against the British, and heavily elaborated on the ideas of freedom from a dominating power, which reflected among all social divisions nationwide. From gender relations to the social hierarchy of the persecuted racial groups, every group was by some means affected by the American Revolution and the consequences that followed. The repercussions from the revolt were not entirely positive, despite the country’s newly-developed democracy and the citizens’ increase of political influence. The Revolutionary War had a …show more content…

This American freedom was purely intended for the whites, as the “Patriots were simultaneously maintaining the practice of race-based slavery in the colonies” (172). The African-Americans ' participation in the Revolutionary War, both enslaved and free, increased due to the efforts to contradict the lack of freedom in America by the British army. Lord Dunmore proclaimed that he would promise freedom to slaves who fought on the British side, initiating the “Ethiopian Regiment” (172). However, the American Elite, especially in the southern states, contradicted Britain’s views of liberty by transforming the Revolution into a war that defends slavery. The southern states were incredibly outspoken in their beliefs towards maintaining traditional racial customs, and persecuting the African-Americans and enslaved blacks. Southerners “convinced the Continental Congress to instruct General Washington to February 1776 to enlist no more African-Americans, free or enslaved” (173). When the thirteen colonies created the Continental Congress and the newly formed states emerged, the hesitation to give this racial minority an increase in freedom expanded. The American elite abstained from increasing enslaved and free black’s democracy during the Revolutionary War, ultimately causing these people to shift support from the Patriots to the Loyalists. However, in 1865, the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which reflected Britain’s notions of equality and liberty, states that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude...shall exist within the United States”

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