This piece by Margaret Kimberley seems like a very timely one - both in terms 
of the calendar and also in terms of the larger struggles and conversations 
going on in 2021 regarding indigenous peoples, legacies of slavery , racism and 
more.
Charles Keener
The Terrible Origins of July 4th - PopularResistance.Org


THE TERRIBLE ORIGINS OF JULY 4TH
By Margaret Kimberley, Black Agenda Report July 3, 2021  | EDUCATE!The British 
crown and the colonists were both determined to seize lands from native peoples 
and to continue enslavement.”
“White Settlers Were In A Constant State Of Fear Of Slave Revolts.”
“He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring 
on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known 
rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and 
conditions.” — Declaration of IndependenceThe July 4 holiday in the United 
States commemorates the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. 
Anyone educated in this country has been propagandized with lies about 
patriotic colonists seeking freedom from a tyrannical British monarch. Our 
minds were filled with tales of Paul Revere and Betsy Ross which erase the role 
that indigenous and Black people played as they attempted to end true tyranny 
over their lives. The present day traditions of enjoying cookouts, vacations, 
and fireworks should not obscure the true meaning of this date. In fact, 
analyzing this history is an absolute necessity.The men who every school child 
is taught to think of as “patriots” had two concerns which pushed them to 
declare independence. First, in 1763 the British emerged victorious after the 
end of a conflict against France. It was known in Europe as the Seven Years War 
and in America as the French and Indian War. The American moniker existed 
precisely because the French allied themselves with indigenous nations against 
the British. British victory brought them French held territory west of the 
Appalachians in the region now comprising midwestern states, but they knew they 
could not easily end indigenous wars if settlers along the eastern seaboard 
were allowed to go further west.
“Tales Of Paul Revere And Betsy Ross Which Erase The Role That Indigenous And 
Black People Played As They Attempted To End True Tyranny Over Their Lives.”
Because of continued resistance from leaders such as Pontiac of the Ottawa 
nation, King George III issued the Proclamation of 1763, which forbade 
settlement west of the Appalachian mountains. One of the speculators poised to 
become a wealthier man if settlements were permitted to move westward was 
George Washington.He was not alone in his wish to conquer the entire continent 
and to get rich doing it. Property claims had already been made in these 
regions, and neither he nor the rest of his cohort were going to let British 
treaties with indigenous people stand in their way. They largely ignored the 
edict and went wherever they wanted to go.Their second concern was whether the 
British were committed to continuing the previously unfettered right to slave 
holding. In 1769 an enslaved man named James Somerset was purchased in Virginia 
and brought to England. He eventually escaped but was recaptured and was in the 
process of being sold to Jamaica. But Somerset had friends who went to court on 
his behalf. In 1772 a judge ruled that enslaved people could not be forcibly 
removed from England.
“George Washington Was Not Alone In His Wish To Conquer The Entire Continent 
And To Get Rich Doing It.”
The ruling didn’t end slavery in British territories and in fact it lasted in 
those regions for 50 more years. But even this narrow decision was too much for 
white Americans who feared that the crown might undermine or even end their 
right to slaveholding.The ongoing effort to subdue native peoples created more 
conflict with colonial settlers. Virginia’s royal governor Lord Dunmore joined 
colonists in encroaching on western native lands and he incited the short lived 
Dunmore’s War 1774. But the marriage of convenience was short lived as the 
crown sought to keep the settlers under control by seizing their stores of 
gunpowder. The battle of Lexington and Concord was just one result of this 
conflict over armaments. In Virginia it ended with Dunmore taking refuge on a 
ship offshore in 1775. From that hiding place he hoped to manage people who 
were determined to do what they wanted. He declared martial law, threatened to 
burn Williamsburg to the ground, and declared that enslaved people would win 
freedom by serving in the king’s army. Some 800 of them did just that and 
formed what became known as the Ethiopian Regiment. White settlers were in a 
constant state of fear of slave revolts and Dunmore’s actions meant to keep 
them in check only heightened their determination to run the country without 
British interference.While slaveholding appeared to be under threat, British 
efforts to create loyalty among the people of Quebec again threatened the 
colonists’ plan to take the entire continent. The Quebec Act of 1774 provided 
religious freedom to Catholics and declared that their land claims extended to 
the regions of the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley that American colonists wanted 
for themselves.
“Lord Dunsmore Declared That Enslaved People Would Win Freedom By Serving In 
The King’s Army.”
The crown and the colonists were both determined to seize lands from native 
peoples and to continue enslavement. But their interests were also hostile to 
one another and war was the inevitable result. White settlers wanted full 
independence for themselves and no control over their actions at all.The 
indigenous populations were nearly eradicated in the decades long quest for 
conquest. Expanding slavery was an integral part of those efforts against 
native peoples. Genocide could not be carried out completely nor could any 
accommodation be made with European nations in the quest to control land from 
sea to shining sea. That is why the settlers declared their independence.The 
process of decolonizing ourselves is a difficult one. We have been cut off from 
our history and we don’t know where or how our people played a part. As we try 
to educate ourselves we may find it difficult to give up traditions that we 
have claimed as our own. Regardless of personal choices made on July 4th, the 
causes of the Declaration of Independence must be known and acknowledged. That 
is the beginning of true independence for Black people.


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