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Summary Of Birth Of A Nation By Edmund Morgan

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Since the American revolution historians have had many theories on why the American Revolution taken place. Growing up one learns in school that British oppression and pure patriotism was the reason for the revolution today. School books often teach one main reason for the revolution, but really there are many theories why such a revolution has taken place, and the other Edmund S. Morgan had a theory of his own. As a teacher at Yale specializing in American Colonial history, and writing multiple books about the American revolution; Morgan writes passionately about his rejection the Progressive interpretations of the American Revolution. Instead, he focuses in on the ideas that the most creative era in history, and overtime the United States would move back its initial ideals. Edmund S. Morgan wrote the book, Birth of A Nation, a book about how the revolution came out of immediate needs and not just theory, and how taxation started the American Revolution. Morgan wrote purposefully about how the American Revolution was based on America’s need for principles and how the drive to find them changed the Revolution. …show more content…

This was very important because this is what the people had gone to war for and fought so hard for. The principle that built this country had to always be upheld. Morgan wrote a specific part of the constitution that says, “All legislative Power herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of a Senate and House of Representitives” (Consitution Article 1). THis is very important to Morgan’s thesis because it was the guiding principle which swayed the revolution that got Americans the ability to ahve their own congress. Which entern enabled them to be able to have representitives for all their rights and make sure they were not and still are not today being oppressed by the

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