01. Self-Evident Truths 02. Ideas and Ideologies 03. Europeans of Colonial America 04. Natives and Slaves of Colonial America 05. The Colonies in the Atlantic World, c. 1750 06. The Seven Years' War 07. The British Constitution 08. George III and the Politics of Empire 09. Politics in British America before 1760 10. James Otis and the Writs of Assistance Case 11. The Search for Order and Revenue 12. The Stamp Act and Rebellion in the Streets 13. Parliament Digs in Its Heels, 1766–1767 14. The Crisis of Representation 15. The Logic of Loyalty and Resistance 16. Franklin and the Search for Reconciliation 17. The Boston Massacre 18. The British Empire and the Tea Act 19. The Boston Tea Party and the Coercive Acts 20. The First Continental Congress 21. Lexington and Concord 22. Second Continental Congress and Bunker Hill 23. Thomas Paine and Common Sense 24. The British Seizure of New York 25. The Declaration of Independence 26. The War for New York and New Jersey 27. Saratoga, Philadelphia, and Valley Forge 28. The Creation of State Constitutions 29. Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom 30. Franklin, Paris, and the French Alliance 31. The Articles of Confederation 32. Yorktown and the End of the War 33. The Treaty of Paris of 1783 34. The Crises of the 1780s 35. African Americans and the Revolution 36. The Constitutional Convention 37. The United States Constitution 38. The Antifederalist Critique 39. The Federalists' Response 40. The Bill of Rights 41. Politics in the 1790s 42. The Alien and Sedition Acts 43. The Election of 1800 44. Women and the American Revolution 45. The Revolution and Native Americans 46. The American Revolution as Social Movement 47. Reflections by the Revolutionary Generation 48. The Meaning of the Revolution