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The Battle Of Bunker Hill

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The events that took place in an around Boston during the early American Revolution including the Battle of Bunker hill set the stage for an eventual American victory by the growing hatred of Britain and the colonists roots of freedom, this battle showed that the patriots had a chance, and it lowered the spirits of the British. What we learn from the Battle of Bunker hill is that even though the colonists lost this battle, the colonists gave the British many dead and casualties on their side and held the hill for a long time. This showed that these militia men could stand up to a disciplined, huge army. To start off, the events that took place in and around Boston during the early American Revolution set the stage for an American victory …show more content…

This led to the Coercive Acts or “Intolerable Acts” as the colonists called them, which just brought more anger and hatred of Britain. The New Englanders hated the British so much that a man named Joyce Junior became “Chairman of the Committee for Tarring and Feathering.”, when it was popular to tar and feather tax collectors. When the Quebec Act was put into place “Parliament had found a way-unrelated to the unrest in Boston- to anger and frustrate not just the citizens of Massachusetts but virtually all of colonial America” and more and more undecided were becoming patriots as the loyalists had a hard time defending the injustices set by Parliament. Until “In just about every town it had become impossible to support, publicly at least, the British Government.” This all led to an eventual American victory through the use of patriotism. The difference between the lobster backs and the continental army was that the British forces were only fighting to suppress their colonies and quite honestly to just get paid. But the Americans were fighting for something much more than that. It was Independence. They used all this frustration and anger they had at England to use in their army and made their opposition that much stronger to oppose. Before the Declaration of Independence was even signed and sent over the Atlantic, “Each town in Massachusetts

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