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We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal...
In the summer of 1776, colonial delegates gathered in Philadelphia to debate words that would found a new nation: the United States of America. Yet the ideas, arguments, and anxieties behind that pivotal moment were forged not only across the Atlantic, but in Britain.
This book tells the story of American independence from the British side, following five sharply contrasting lives in the run up to 1776, all championing liberty, though rarely agreeing on what that meant in practice. Through the eyes of a king, a statesman, a general, a radical, and a diplomat, it explores a revolution that was as much about competing visions of freedom as it was about a rebellion against perceived tyranny.
Blending narrative history with a curated guidebook, each chapter concludes with a place-based tour that enables you to walk in the footsteps of these individuals. Walk London with King George III and Benjamin Franklin, trace Lord North's formative years in Oxfordshire, and explore Sussex with General Thomas Gage and the incendiary Thomas Paine. You'll climb towers, wander wooded hills, and tread creaking floors worn smooth by centuries of footsteps; standing where decisions were made that reshaped empires and identities.
This book offers a fresh perspective on a well-known story. It reveals the American Revolution not as a simple tale of tyranny and resistance, but as a shared, ongoing global struggle over the meaning of liberty itself.



