The work is a companion to McCullough's earlier biography of John Adams, and focuses on the events surrounding the start of the American Revolutionary War. The Revolutionary War ended with an American victory in 1783, due in large part to financial and military aid from France. 1776 (released in the United Kingdom as 1776: America and Britain at War) 1 is a book written by David McCullough, published by Simon & Schuster on May 24, 2005. In 1776, the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence, officially announcing their intentions to secede from the British Empire. By the 1770s, this movement had erupted into a full-on war of rebellion. By the late 1760s, there was broad support among Americans for an expulsion of British troops from America and a return to what had been the status quo prior to the French and Indian War. Up until chapter 3, McCullough discusses both Washingtons and Howe’s strategies and and how both the colonists and the English were impacted by the battles. The British crown also increased its military presence in America, often forcing American families to provide food and lodging for British soldiers in their own homes, and at their own expense. 1776, a book written by David McCullough discusses the political, social and overall major events that were caused by the American Revolution. Following the French and Indian War, which lasted from 1754 to 1763, the British Empire began to tighten controls over its American colonies, instituting heavy taxes (most infamously the Stamp Act of 1765). The primary historical event of 1776 is, of course, the Revolutionary War.
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