To what extent did colonists develop a sense of identity and unity as Americans by 1776?

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To what extent did colonists develop a sense of identity and unity as Americans by 1776?
Document 1
e
Source: Pennsylvania Gazette, 1754
d
Document 2
N.C.
Document 3
N. E.
Un
JOIN, or
or DIE.
Source: The Association of the Sons of Liberty of New York; December 15, 1773
... And thus they who, from time immemorial, have exercised the right of giving to, or withholding from the crown, their aids and
subsidies, according to their own free will and pleasure, signified by their representatives in Parliament, do, by the Act in question,
deny us, their brethren in America, the enjoyment of the same right. As this denial, and the execution of the Act, involves our
slavery, and would sap the foundation of our freedom, whereby we should become slaves to our brethren and fellow subjects, born
to no greater stock of freedom than the Americans - the merchants and inhabitants of this city, in conjunction with the merchants
and inhabitants of the ancient American colonies, entered into an agreement to decline a part of their commerce with Great Britain,
until the above mentioned Act should be totally repealed.
Source: Mather Byles, Cotton Mather's grandson, to Nathaniel Emmons, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton
Eaton, The Famous Mather Byles: The Noted Boston Tory Preacher, Poet and Wit, 1707-1788.
They call me a brainless Tory; but tell me, my young friend, which is better, to be ruled by one tyrant
three thousand miles away, or by three thousand tyrants not a mile away. I tell you, my boy, there
was just as much humbug in politics seventy years ago as there is today.
Transcribed Image Text:Document 1 e Source: Pennsylvania Gazette, 1754 d Document 2 N.C. Document 3 N. E. Un JOIN, or or DIE. Source: The Association of the Sons of Liberty of New York; December 15, 1773 ... And thus they who, from time immemorial, have exercised the right of giving to, or withholding from the crown, their aids and subsidies, according to their own free will and pleasure, signified by their representatives in Parliament, do, by the Act in question, deny us, their brethren in America, the enjoyment of the same right. As this denial, and the execution of the Act, involves our slavery, and would sap the foundation of our freedom, whereby we should become slaves to our brethren and fellow subjects, born to no greater stock of freedom than the Americans - the merchants and inhabitants of this city, in conjunction with the merchants and inhabitants of the ancient American colonies, entered into an agreement to decline a part of their commerce with Great Britain, until the above mentioned Act should be totally repealed. Source: Mather Byles, Cotton Mather's grandson, to Nathaniel Emmons, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton, The Famous Mather Byles: The Noted Boston Tory Preacher, Poet and Wit, 1707-1788. They call me a brainless Tory; but tell me, my young friend, which is better, to be ruled by one tyrant three thousand miles away, or by three thousand tyrants not a mile away. I tell you, my boy, there was just as much humbug in politics seventy years ago as there is today.
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Introduction

The Sons of Liberty was a secret society formed in the American colonies to oppose the policies of the British parliament and the Crown for the United States. The Boston chapter of the organization was involved in the Boston Tea Party event. Some of the founding fathers of the United States were its secret members. The organization also resorted to violence to achieve some of its objectives.

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