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“We All Hoisted the American Flag:” National identity among American Prisoners in Britain during the American Revolution
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“What is an American?” asked the French émigré
Hector St. John
Crèvecoeur in 1782. In so doing, Crèvecoeur posed one of
the fundamental
questions of the revolutionary era. When the colonists overthrew imperial
authority; declared independence; formed an independent confederation
of states; and waged war for its existence; they created a new nation and
a new nationality. To be sure, colonists and Britons alike had long used
the term “American,” none the less, a complete sense of American
national identity was largely inchoate before the American Revolution.
Before the Revolution, most Americans identified more with their
individual colonies than with an abstract geographic concept like
“America.” While the Revolution did not completely supplant
regional
loyalties, it introduced a new, compelling loyalty: to the United States
of
America. The Revolution forced Americans to choose between loyalty to
Britain or the United States. Ultimately, the majority opted for the United
States. Those who did, helped define what it meant to be American by
their words and actions. The purpose of this article is to examine the
development of loyalty to the United States and the development of an
American national identity among one group of Americans: sailors
imprisoned in Britain during the Revolution.
Title: “We All Hoisted the American Flag:” National identity
among
American Prisoners in Britain during the American Revolution
Description:
“What is an American?” asked the French émigré
Hector St.
John
Crèvecoeur in 1782.
In so doing, Crèvecoeur posed one of
the fundamental
questions of the revolutionary era.
When the colonists overthrew imperial
authority; declared independence; formed an independent confederation
of states; and waged war for its existence; they created a new nation and
a new nationality.
To be sure, colonists and Britons alike had long used
the term “American,” none the less, a complete sense of American
national identity was largely inchoate before the American Revolution.
Before the Revolution, most Americans identified more with their
individual colonies than with an abstract geographic concept like
“America.
” While the Revolution did not completely supplant
regional
loyalties, it introduced a new, compelling loyalty: to the United States
of
America.
The Revolution forced Americans to choose between loyalty to
Britain or the United States.
Ultimately, the majority opted for the United
States.
Those who did, helped define what it meant to be American by
their words and actions.
The purpose of this article is to examine the
development of loyalty to the United States and the development of an
American national identity among one group of Americans: sailors
imprisoned in Britain during the Revolution.
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