Satudent
By: Wendy • Essay • 319 Words • January 24, 2010 • 697 Views
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Defining any matter is always a process. Weeding through the significant and insignificant ideas of a subject is a tedious task. Hopefully the noteworthy events will be conveyed through this paper siding that the colonies by the time of the American Revolution were more similar than different.
When you begin to analyze the American Revolution you must first look to the past and the beginning of each individual colony. The New England colonies were very different from the middle and southern colonies. The New England colonies included Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. The middle colonies consisted of four great states Delaware, Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey. The middle colonies were settled for monetary gain or religious freedom. The southern colonists were family oriented and money hungry immigrants. All three divisions made up the thread that wove America, a place for freedom.
Whenever opposition wants to be successful it must be connected and focused on the same goal. The American Revolution was a collective response to a draining monarchy. America was very different in how it fueled its economy but deathly similar in its vision for