The War of Independence The War of Independence

The War of Independence

    • $0.99
    • $0.99

Publisher Description

In the middle of the eighteenth century there were four New England colonies. Massachusetts extended her sway over Maine, and the Green Mountain territory was an uninhabited wilderness, to which New York and New Hampshire alike laid claim. The four commonwealths of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island had all been in existence, under one form or another, for more than a century. The men who were in the prime of life there in 1750 were the great-grandsons and great-great-grandsons of the men who crossed the ocean between 1620 and 1640 and settled New England. Scarcely two men in a hundred were of other than English blood. About one in a hundred could say that his family came from Scotland or the north of Ireland; one in five hundred may have been the grandchild of a Huguenot. Upon religious and political questions these people thought very much alike. Extreme poverty was almost unknown, and there were but few who could not read and write. As a rule every head of a family owned the house in which he lived and the land which supported him. There were no cities; and from Boston, which was a town with 16,000 inhabitants, down to the smallest settlement in the White Mountains, the government was carried on by town-meetings at which, almost any grown-up man could be present and speak and vote. Except upon the sea-coast nearly all the people lived upon farms; but all along the coast were many who lived by fishing and by building ships, and in the towns dwelt many merchants grown rich by foreign trade. In those days Massachusetts was the richest of the thirteen colonies, and had a larger population than any other except Virginia. Connecticut was then more populous than New York; and when the four New England commonwealths acted together—as was likely to be the case in time of danger—they formed the strongest military power on the American continent...

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2015
February 20
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
179
Pages
PUBLISHER
Didactic Press
SELLER
Joshua D. Cureton
SIZE
2
MB

More Books by John Fiske

The American Revolution The American Revolution
2014
Myths and myth-makers Myths and myth-makers
1901
The War of Independence The War of Independence
1901
The Critical Period of American History The Critical Period of American History
1901
The Discovery of America Vol. 1 (of 2) The Discovery of America Vol. 1 (of 2)
1901
The Destiny of Man The Destiny of Man
1901