Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWhy 1776 Started in 1215
Episode 5581
Published 3 weeks, 2 days ago
Description
In this episode, we explore why 1776 started in 1215. Welcome in, everybody. It is Monday, March 23rd, 2026. And we are thrilled you're joining us for today's Deep Dive. Now, if I asked you when the American Revolution started, you would probably say 1776, right? With the Declaration of Independence. Right, yeah. Or maybe, you know, maybe people point to a few years earlier, like the Boston Tea Party. Exactly. Yeah. But to actually understand the true story, the real narrative here, we have to rewind the clock over 500 years before any of that happened. We really do. Today... we are pulling from a remarkably dense source document. We're looking at the Wikipedia timeline of the American Revolution. And wow, if you are looking at that timeline with us, it is just an incredibly detailed chronology. I mean, it's packed with political upheaval, warfare, shifting global power. It's a lot to take in. It is a lot. It the colonists from moving west just to keep the peace. But I mean, if you are a colonist, you are furious. You felt you bled. in that war to gain access to that land, and now London is just locking you out of it. Yep. And then the new taxes begin. In 1764 and 1765, Parliament passes the Sugar Act, the Currency Act, the Quartering Act, which, by the way, forced colonial governments to provide housing for British troops. Which nobody liked. No. And then the infamous Stamp Act, which taxed almost all printed materials, from legal documents to like ... playing cards. Prime Minister George Grenville essentially decides it is time the colonies start paying for their own defense. And this sparks incredible outrage. In Virginia, a young politician named Patrick Henry sponsors the Virginia Resolves. He argues that Virginians can only be taxed by their own elected representatives.