Contributor: Meghan Vestal. Lesson ID: 12238
Have you ever been convinced by someone or something you've read to do something difficult or dangerous? Breaking from England was hard for the colonists, but a certain pamphlet made the difference!
Why did many American colonists choose to remain loyal to the British during the American Revolution? Were there good reasons for separating from Great Britain?
Image by Thomas Paine, via Wikimedia Commons, is in the public domain.
Did you know that not all American colonists were interested in separating from Great Britain?
Historians estimate around 20% of colonists supported the British during the Revolutionary War. These people were called "loyalists." There were three main reasons why colonists remained loyal to the British:
Before the colonies declared independence, it is estimated that as many as half of the American colonists did not actually want to declare independence. Even people who spoke against British taxation preferred to find a way to compromise rather than separate.
Thomas Paine, an English philosopher who emmigrated to the American colonies, helped change many minds. During the late 1700s, political pamphlets became a popular way to express political opinions and persuade others to support a cause. In January 1776, Paine published the pamphlet Common Sense. It was the first political pamphlet to support independence from Great Britain.
By April 1766, more than 120,000 copies had been printed and distributed throughout the colonies. Within a year, it sold more than 500,000 copies. Common Sense became popular not only for the ideas expressed in it, but also because it was short and written using simple language, making it easy for all colonists to read and comprehend. Today, Common Sense remains one of the best-selling publications in all of American history.
Image by Auguste Millière after an engraving by William Sharp after George Romney, via Wikimedia Commons, is in the public domain.
Paine expressed two important ideas in Common Sense:
Common Sense is considered an important piece of American writing because it helped rally support for American independence throughout the colonies.
Just a few months after it was published, on July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress made the decision to declare independence. Even John Adams wrote of Paine saying, “I know not whether any man in the world has had more influence on its inhabitants or affairs […] than Thomas Paine.”
Discuss the questions with your teacher or parent. Then, move on to the Got It? section to review what you have learned and to take a closer look at the text of Common Sense.