The British army faced a difficult task in suppressing a rebellion three thousand miles from Britain itself. The War of Independence, which began in 1775, was not the great American triumph that most accounts suggest. If the Americans broke out of the system of trade regulation, British ministers, MPs, and peers worried, then the Royal Navy would be seriously weakened. British politicians resisted colonial objections to parliamentary taxation at least partly because they feared that if the Americans established their right not to be taxed by Westminster, Parliament’s right to regulate colonial overseas trade would then be challenged. From 1764, the British Parliament tried to raise taxes in America to pay for a new permanent military garrison. The experience of the Seven Years’ War (which started in 1754 in North America) conditioned British attitudes to the colonies after that conflict was over. The Revolution itself had important military causes. The military history of the American Revolution is more than the history of the War of Independence.
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