The Independence Trilogy
The Independence Trilogy (Spark of Independence, United for Independence, March to Independence) seeks to answer one simple question. What happened in the thirteen colonies after bloodshed erupted at Lexington and Concord in April 1775 until independence was declared in July 1776?
For the Northern colonies, the traditional view is that they reacted as one in their opposition to Great Britain, each sending troops to Massachusetts to help form an Army of Observation that within two months of Lexington became the Continental Army. This is indeed what happened, and the events at Lexington and Concord, Bunker Hill, and the siege of Boston had a tremendous impact on each New England colony.But so too did other events that occurred in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. Clashes with the British navy in far-away Machias, on the coast of present-day Maine, as well as in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts Bay, Buzzards Bay, Narragansett Bay, and the Long Island Sound; the destruction of Falmouth (present-day Portland, Maine), the bombardment of Stonington, Connecticut, and the threatened destruction of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Newport, Rhode Island, all contributed to the growing sentiment for independence that grew in New England following the outbreak of war. New Englanders, too, participated in the American effort to seize Canada in 1775 with troops under Colonel Benedict Arnold who marched through the wilderness of Maine to Quebec. New Englanders also joined General Philip Schuyler and participated in the capture of St. Jeans and Montreal. New England soldiers captured Fort Ticonderoga in New York just a few weeks after Lexington, and of course most notably, the Continental Army that besieged Boston in 1775 was comprised almost entirely of New England volunteers.
Like its companion volumes, Spark of Independence: The American Revolution in the Northern Colonies, 1775-1776 by historian Michael Cecere extensively uses primary source documents to explore both the well known and less-known clashes and events that occurred during the fifteen months between Lexington and Concord and the Declaration of Independence, and how these events contributed to the growing support across the colonies for independence from Great Britain by 1776.