Whose support helped the Patriots win the revolution?

Whose support helped the Patriots win the revolution?
Paul Revere, 1887, Library of Congres

Apollos Rivoire, a French goldsmith, changed his family's name upon his arrival in America. His second oldest was born as Paul Revere in Boston's North End. At the age of 19, after his father died, Paul took over the family business and started supporting his family. In 1756, he volunteered to fight the French and served as a second lieutenant in the British army.

Devoted to Freedom
In the years leading up to the Battles of Lexington and Concord, Revere worked tirelessly for the patriot cause. A member of the Freemasons, the mechanics union, the Sons of Liberty and other groups, Revere became a nexus in the social networks of the revolution. In his workshop he printed anti-occupation propaganda: engravings illustrating the arrival of the British Navy and the Boston Massacre. In the evenings, he harassed officials charged with collecting the taxes that Americans found so unfair. On December 13, 1773, Revere and his associates dressed as Indians and dumped tea into Boston Harbor.

Midnight Rider
After the British seized a supply of the colony's gunpowder, Revere organized a system to detect and warn others in advance of British troop movements. He rode to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, fifty miles north of Boston, to warn the locals there of an impending seizure. On April 18th, 1775, Revere made the most famous ride of his life, to Lexington, to warn patriot leaders in hiding there.

Disastrous Expedition
During the Revolutionary War, Revere helped fortify Boston against a possible British attack. Frustrated by his defensive posting, he lobbied to be assigned to campaigns against the enemy. He had his chance in July 1779, when forty-five American ships sailed into Penobscot Bay, where the British held a half-finished fort. The British were grossly outnumbered, but the Americans, not trusting the intelligence reports, did not attack. They waited for weeks, during which time British reinforcements arrived by land and by sea. Finally, the Americans' ships fled up the Penobscot River. Afraid the British would seize their equipment, the colonists burned seventeen of their own ships and fled by foot. The Continental Army charged Revere, commander of artillery in the expedition, with cowardice and insubordination. He was acquitted at his court martial in 1782.

Bells and Pots
After the war, Revere participated in ratifying the U.S. Constitution in Massachusetts. He then returned to his business, expanding and adapting new techniques in metallurgy. His shop led American silversmithing to standard production and industrialization. He taught himself to cast bells, and sold many to churches all around New England. The brilliant copper dome of Massachusetts' State House came from Revere's factory. The Revere Copper and Brass Company still exists today, although the Revereware copper-bottomed pots that made the factory famous are now manufactured by another company.

Legend in His Own Time
Paul Revere died on May 10, 1818. He married twice, and each of his wives bore him eight children. When he died, he left behind more than fifty grandchildren. A local legend in his own lifetime, he became a national folk hero with the publication of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's 1861 poem, "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere."

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How were the colonies able to win independence? Previous Next
Digital History ID 3220
In 1778, the royal army consisted of nearly 50,000 regular troops combined with over 30,000 German (Hessian) mercenaries. George Washington, in contrast, never had more than 20,000 troops under his command at any one time. Most of these American soldiers were young (ranging in age from their early teens to their mid-20s), landless, unskilled, and poor. Others were indentured servants and slaves who were serving as substitutes for their masters and had been promised freedom at the war's end. Also in the Continental army were many women who cared for the sick and wounded, cooked, mended clothes, buried the dead, and sometimes served in combat.

What made American victory possible?

For one thing, conquering the colonies was an almost impossible task. The sheer geographical size of the colonies made it impossible for British forces to occupy the countryside. Because of their inability to control the countryside, the British found it difficult to protect Loyalists from the fury of patriots, who sometimes tarred and feathered and even murdered those who remained loyal to the Crown. The colonies also lacked a single national capital, which, if captured, might end the conflict.

A major British mistake was failing to take sufficient advantage of Loyalists. Before the Revolutionary War began, some 50,000 Loyalists formed nearly 70 regiments to help the British maintain control the colonies. But British commanders did not trust the loyalists or respect their fighting ability. As a result, the British alienated many potential supporters.

The guerrilla tactics that Americans had learned during Indian wars proved very effective in fighting the British army. Militia men struck quickly, often from behind trees or fences, then disappeared into the forests. Because many Americans wore ordinary clothing, it was difficult for the British to distinguish rebels and loyalists.

Washington's strategy of avoiding large-scale confrontations with the royal army made it impossible for the British to deliver a knock-out blow. Only once during the Revolution (at Charleston, S.C. in 1780) did an American army surrender to British forces.

The intervention of France, Spain, and the Netherlands in the conflict made a crucial difference in the Revolution's outcome. It is highly improbable that the United States could have won its independence without the assistance of France, Spain, and Holland. Fearful of losing its sugar colonies in the West Indies, Britain was unable to concentrate its military forces in the American colonies.

All slave societies are highly vulnerable during wartime, and the British recognized that slaves might help them suppress the Revolution. In November 1775, Lord Dunmore, Virginia's royal governor, issued an emancipation proclamation, freeing any slaves or indentured servants willing to serve in the royal army. At least 800 slaves joined Lord Dunmore's forces. But the threat of slave emancipation led many southern slaveholders to support the patriot cause.

Perhaps the single most important reason for the patriot victory was the breadth of popular support for the Revolution. The Revolution would have failed miserably without the participation of thousands of ordinary farmers, artisans, and laborers who put themselves into the line of fire. The Revolution's support cut across region, religion, and social rank. Common farmers, artisans, shopkeepers, petty merchants were major actors during the Revolution. Ex-servants, uneducated farmers, immigrants, and slaves emerged into prominence in the Continental Army.

The growth of popular participation in politics began even before the Revolution. In the years preceding the war, thousands of ordinary Americans began to participate in politics--in non-importation and non-exportation campaigns, in anti-Tory mobs, and in committees of correspondence linking inland villages and seaports. Many men joined groups like the Sons of Liberty to protest British encroachments on American liberties. Many women took the lead in boycotts of British goods; they also took up the spinning wheel to produce homespun clothes. During the Revolution itself, some 400,000 Americans, including at least 5,000 African Americans, served in the fighting for at least some time.

How was the war paid for?

Congress was reluctant to levy taxes. Instead, it borrowed money by issuing bonds. It also printed money, resulting in terrible inflation. The worthlessness of Continental currency inspired the phrase, "not worth a Continental." It became more difficult to get people to lend money. By 1779 and 1780, Washington's army had to confiscate supplies in order to feed and clothe itself.

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Who supported the Patriots in the Revolutionary War?

According to Robert Calhoon, between 40 and 45 percent of the white population in the Thirteen Colonies supported the Patriots' cause, between 15 and 20 percent supported the Loyalists, and the remainder were neutral or kept a low profile.

Who supported the Revolutionary War Loyalists or Patriots?

Loyalists: colonists of the American revolutionary period who supported, and stayed loyal, to the British monarchy. Patriots: colonists who rebelled against British control during the American Revolution.

Which leader helped the Patriots the most?

General George Washington led the American army to victory during the Revolutionary War. Despite having little practical experience in managing large, conventional armies, Washington proved to be a capable and resilient leader of the American military forces during the Revolutionary War.

What country helped the Americans win the revolution?

Between 1778 and 1782 the French provided supplies, arms and ammunition, uniforms, and, most importantly, troops and naval support to the beleaguered Continental Army. The French navy transported reinforcements, fought off a British fleet, and protected Washington's forces in Virginia.