Ordinary Americans in the Revolution

Ordinary Americans in the Revolution « Series from 2022

Series from 2022

Broadcast info
Genres: Documentary

The American Revolution was a mass insurgency movement, requiring a single-mindedness of purpose on the part of a huge number of colonists. Meet the soldiers, midwives, artisans, shopkeepers, farmers, enslaved people, and others who made the revolution happen.

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Ordinary Lives in Revolutionary Times

Begin by considering the focus of this series: the men and women who peopled the American Revolution, who made history happen, but who are largely unknown to us now. Grasp the ways in which the legacy of the revolution was much more complex for common people than it was for the wealthy and privileged. Take a first look at the roles common people played in the revolution and its impact on them.

Down and Out in Colonial America

Assess the reality of urban poverty among American colonists in the 1760s. Learn about the economic depression that followed the Seven Years’ War, which was exacerbated by incoming waves of poor immigrants. Note how high costs of living, lack of job security, and a stark gulf between rich and poor left many at the bottom rungs of society in extreme hardship, which fueled resentment.

Jane Mecom: Franklin’s Struggling Sister

Learn about the experience of Jane Mecom, the sister of Benjamin Franklin, whose story we know through letters she wrote to her famous brother. Follow the arc of her life, characterized by poverty and adversity, noting how she became enmeshed in politics in Boston. Observe the details of her circumstances during the revolution and afterward, and how the conflict affected her and her family.

Boycotting the Townshend Taxes

Take a broad look at commerce in the pre-revolution American colonies. Take account of the great proliferation of British manufactured goods in the colonies and their role as markers of status. Follow the advent of harsh British taxation of imports and the resulting boycott of British goods, which required vast mobilization and coordination, uniting colonists in a common identity.

Ebenezer Mackintosh: Stamp Act Protestor

Ebenezer Mackintosh was a shoemaker who became a leader of mass protests against the British. Trace his early life and how his career as a fireman thrust him into the public eye. Witness the crisis surrounding the Stamp Act, in which Mackintosh led what became violent insurrections. Learn also of his connection with the Sons of Liberty, a powerful group protesting British taxation.

The Occupation of Boston

Hear the story of the British military occupation of Boston, beginning in 1768, following violent reprisals against customs and tax officials. Track the simmering tensions between the colonists and the occupying forces, the oppressive stresses on the soldiers, and the types of altercations that grew from a pattern of retaliation and revenge to gang warfare between civilians and soldiers.

Crispus Attucks: The Massacre’s Martyr

Sailors, Shoemakers, Crowds, and Class

George Hewes: Tea Party Captain

Forging a Common Cause in the Colonies

Tom Paine: Immigrant Pamphleteer

Colonial Soldiering Life

Deborah Sampson: Woman Soldier

War on the American Home Front

Mary Silliman: Soldier’s Wife

The Revolution in Indian Country

Molly Brant: Native Power Broker

The African American Revolution

Thomas Jeremiah: Free Black Pilot

The Price of Loyalism

Harry Washington: Runaway Rebel

An American Workers’ Revolution

Daniel Shays: Veteran Turned Rebel

An American Sexual Revolution

Martha Ballard: A Midwife’s Tale