Best 1770s
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Thomas Paine’s Common Sense was a pivotal political pamphlet published in 1776. It powerfully advocated for American independence from British rule, presenting arguments for a republican government in clear and persuasive language. The work dramatically broadened support for separation among colonis...
Thomas Paine’s *American Crisis* was a series of pamphlets published between 1776 and 1783. These writings aimed to galvanize support for the American Revolution by articulating the colonists' cause as a struggle against tyranny and injustice. Paine’s powerful prose, often employing biblical imagery...
Edmund Burke’s *Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents* (1770) offered a foundational critique of British politics. The pamphlet detailed how perceived Crown overreach and attempts to diminish Parliament fueled public unrest. It remains significant for its early articulation of conservativ...
A Summary View of the Rights of British America is an influential political pamphlet drafted by Thomas Jefferson in 1774. Originally written as a set of instructions for the Virginia delegates to the First Continental Congress, it was widely circulated in published form. Jefferson argued that the Am...
Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty is a political pamphlet by the British dissenting minister and moral philosopher Richard Price, published in 1776 in defense of the American Revolution. Price argued that legitimate government depends on the consent and representation of the governed, pres...
Thoughts on Government is a political pamphlet written by John Adams in 1776 during the American Revolution. Originally composed as a letter to Richard Henry Lee and later published anonymously, the document provided a framework for the new state constitutions. Adams argued for a government structur...
"The Farmer Refuted" is a political pamphlet written by Alexander Hamilton in 1775 during the early stages of the American Revolution. It was composed as a direct rebuttal to Samuel Seabury, a loyalist clergyman who wrote under the pseudonym "A.W. Farmer." In the text, a young Hamilton articulates a...
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