Episode Description
Was the American Revolution just a regional rebellion on the eastern seaboard, or something far larger? Professor Richard Bell, author of The American Revolution and the Fate of the World, argues it was a geopolitical earthquake that reshaped the global order. In this episode, Bell explores how France, Spain, and the Netherlands entered the conflict for their own strategic reasons, why Jamaica mattered more to Britain than Virginia, and how foreign intervention proved decisive at battles like Yorktown. Along the way, he shares remarkable stories: Benjamin Franklin organizing his own privateering fleet from Paris, 50,000 ordinary Americans taking to the seas as state-sponsored pirates, and Harry Washington, a man enslaved at Mount Vernon who escaped to British lines and eventually led his own anti-colonial revolution in Sierra Leone. A fresh perspective on America's founding as a truly global event.
Timestamps
- 00:54 The American Revolution as a Global Conflict
- 04:55 The British Empire and the Value of Jamaica
- 07:27 Expanding the Patriot Coalition Beyond 13 Colonies
- 09:44 Why France Joined the War
- 13:21 Spain's Strategic Goals: Gibraltar and the Caribbean
- 17:16 Dutch Financial Support and the St. Eustatius Arms Trade
- 19:34 How Foreign Intervention Boosted British Morale
- 24:06 From Philadelphia to Yorktown: Foreign Aid on the Battlefield
- 27:11 Patriot Privateers and the War on British Commerce
- 38:28 Harry Washington: From Mount Vernon to Sierra Leone
Host: Jeff Sikkenga
Executive Producer: Jeremy Gypton
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