All titles by
J. Revell Carr
Agent
Stuart Krichevsky
Seeds of Discontent
The Deep Roots of the American Revolution, 1650-1750
Walker & Co. , December 2009
A narrative history of the largely unexplored events—starting almost a century before—that inspired the colonists to launch the American Revolution.
The causes of the American Revolution are most often defined as the Stamp Act and other repressive actions by the Crown against its colonies in the years following the French and Indian War. While these are the direct causes, J. Revell Carr takes a longer view, and in Seeds of Discontent, he locates the roots of the Revolution a century earlier, and argues that “the cumulative effect of more than one hundred years of British disrespect, mismanagement, and exploitation prepared the minds of the colonists for revolution.”
In the latter half of the seventeenth century, tensions between colonists and the Crown were strikingly similar to those of 1775: representative legislatures had been suspended, the charters of colonies had been revoked, free trade was being impeded by Navigation Acts favoring the Crown, and heavy taxes were being levied unilaterally. The colonists’ frustration erupted in April 1689, when the king’s representative, who governed the region from Maine to Pennsylvania, was overthrown and seized in Boston. The rebellion spread down the coast, and for the first time colonists risked their lives against English firepower. Unprepared to break with England, the colonists submitted to new governance, but had demonstrated they could rebel.
Through subsequent decades, numerous instances of British abuse fostered resentment and friction built, reaching a peak after the 1745 conquest of Louisbourg, the seemingly impregnable French fortress in Nova Scotia. Won on England’s behalf at great cost to the largely American-born strike force, the British summarily returned it to France four years later—an act that outraged politicians, citizens, and soldiers alike.
Bringing to life the two generations that inspired our founding fathers, Revell Carr illuminates the eventful half-century that inspired a revolution.
“Carr (All Brave Sailors), former director of Mystic Seaport, believes the seeds of the American Revolution were first sown in the mid-17th century, when Britain began to exert control over colonies that had mostly been left to tend and fend for themselves. In 1651 the first of the anti–free trade Navigation Acts was introduced, and England began suspending representative legislatures. These and a multitude of slights (real and imagined) bred long-simmering resentments and periodic revolts; a failed rebellion in 1689 was sparked after Massachusetts’s charter was revoked. Carr focuses most of his account on the wars between Britain and France, and Britain’s postvictory surrender to the French of Louisbourg, on Nova Scotia—which had been taken at great cost in American lives. A century of British disrespect, mismanagement, and exploitation, Carr summarizes, prepared the minds of the colonists for revolution. Carr’s exploration of this background to the War of Independence is fascinating, but leaves an important question unanswered: if Britain was so oppressive, then why did a third of Americans remain loyal to the Crown?”
– Publishers Weekly
“Carr (former director, Mystic Seaport; All Brave Sailors) presents a survey of the turmoil that led up to the American Revolution, including Bacon’s Rebellion (1676), the Maine campaign of 1688, Queen Anne’s War (1702–13), the War of Jenkins’s Ear, and King George’s War, both of the 1740s, all the while describing situations that demonstrate the growing strife between the emerging “Americans” and the often heavy-handed British officials. Carr is at his best when depicting specifics that colorfully illustrate the growing tension, such as the British practice of impressing sailors and the Casco Bay siege during Queen Anne’s War. But the reader is left to wonder why Carr ends the book at 1750 and thus provides only a cursory overview of the French and Indian War, which arguably had the greatest impact on colony-crown relations, and King Philip’s War. Despite these flaws, Carr’s text provides a decent update to Douglas Edward Leach’s Arms for Empire and Roots of Conflict. Recommended only for public libraries.”
– School Library Journal