History of the United States by Mary Ritter Beard;Charles A. Beard
page 96 of 800 (12%)
page 96 of 800 (12%)
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earth; but the broad empire of Britain was open to American ships and
merchandise. It could be said, with good reason, that the disadvantages which the colonists suffered through British regulation of their industry and trade were more than offset by the privileges they enjoyed. Still that is somewhat beside the point, for mere economic advantage is not necessarily the determining factor in the fate of peoples. A thousand circumstances had helped to develop on this continent a nation, to inspire it with a passion for independence, and to prepare it for a destiny greater than that of a prosperous dominion of the British empire. The economists, who tried to prove by logic unassailable that America would be richer under the British flag, could not change the spirit of Patrick Henry, Samuel Adams, Benjamin Franklin, or George Washington. =References= G.L. Beer, _Origin of the British Colonial System_ and _The Old Colonial System_. A. Bradley, _The Fight for Canada in North America_. C.M. Andrews, _Colonial Self-Government_ (American Nation Series). H. Egerton, _Short History of British Colonial Policy_. F. Parkman, _France and England in North America_ (12 vols.). R. Thwaites, _France in America_ (American Nation Series). |
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