REJECTING THE BLESSING OF KINGSHIP: 1/8 The Cause: The American Revolution and its Discontents, 1773-1783, by Joseph J. Ellis, Ph.D.
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 7 July 2024
⏱️ 10 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
https://www.amazon.com/Cause-American-Revolution-Discontents-1773-1783/dp/1631498983
For more than two centuries, historians have debated the history of the American Revolution, disputing its roots, its provenance and, above all, its meaning. These questions have intrigued Ellis―one of our most celebrated scholars of American history―throughout his entire career. With this much-anticipated volume, he at last brings the story of the revolution to vivid life, with “surprising relevance” (Susan Dunn) for our modern era. Completing a trilogy of books that began with Founding Brothers, The Cause returns us to the very heart of the American founding, telling the military and political story of the war for independence from the ground up, and from all sides: British and American, loyalist and patriot, white and Black.
Taking us from the end of the Seven Years’ War to 1783, and drawing on a wealth of previously untapped sources, The Cause interweaves action-packed tales of North American military campaigns with parlor-room intrigues back in England, creating a thrilling narrative that brings together a cast of familiar and long-forgotten characters. Here, Ellis recovers the stories of Catherine Littlefield Greene, wife of Major General Nathanael Greene, the sister among the “band of brothers”; Thayendanegea, a Mohawk chief known to the colonists as Joseph Brant, who led the Iroquois Confederation against the Patriots; and Harry Washington, the enslaved namesake of George Washington, who escaped Mount Vernon to join the British Army and fight against his former master.
Countering popular histories that romanticize the “Spirit of ’76,” Ellis demonstrates that the rebels fought under the mantle of “The Cause,” a mutable, conveniently ambiguous principle that afforded an umbrella under which different, and often conflicting, convictions and goals could coexist. Neither an American nation nor a viable government existed at the end of the war. In fact, one revolutionary legacy regarded the creation of such a nation, or any robust expression of government power, as the ultimate betrayal of The Cause. This legacy alone rendered any effective response to the twin tragedies of the founding―slavery and the Native American dilemma―problematic at best.
Written with the vivid and muscular prose for which Ellis is known, and with characteristically trenchant insight, The Cause marks the culmination of a lifetime of engagement with the founding era. A landmark work of narrative history, it challenges the story we have long told ourselves about our origins as a people, and as a nation.
1783 JOHN ADAMS
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | This is a great pleasure to welcome |
| 0:05.0 | This is CBS Eye on the World. |
| 0:08.0 | Here's John Batchelor. |
| 0:10.0 | It's a great pleasure to welcome Professor Joseph Ellis. His new book is The Cause, |
| 0:17.0 | The American Revolution and its discontents, critical, 1773 to 1783. |
| 0:24.7 | Professor, congratulations and good evening. |
| 0:26.9 | I go immediately to your title because it requires much explanation. |
| 0:32.0 | Who called what we now see the revolution, the cause? |
| 0:36.0 | And why did they call it the cause? |
| 0:38.4 | Good evening to you. |
| 0:40.4 | Good evening to you. Good evening to me. |
| 0:42.4 | The cause is what the American colonist began to use as a term to describe their opposition to British policy in the late,1770s and nobody called it the American Revolution at that |
| 1:00.7 | time or even until at the end of the war, the British called it the American rebellion. |
| 1:07.0 | And originally, the phrase was the common cause. |
| 1:10.0 | It was a term that the 12 other colonies used to describe their willingness to support Massachusetts, |
| 1:17.0 | when Massachusetts was occupied by the British Army in the wake of the Tea Party and what's called the coercive acts as a way of |
| 1:25.3 | punishing that particular colony. Once you get to the summer of 76, the common cause becomes simply the cause. |
| 1:37.0 | And I see it as a kind of a canopy, over a verbal canopy over a variety of interest groups. |
| 1:48.0 | New England doesn't think the same way as Virginia, there are different religious groups, and there's a fundamental difference on the issue of slavery. |
| 1:57.0 | And so it's a way of gathering people into the same tent and what they have in common because its simplest form is hostility to British policy |
| 2:08.8 | and then a desire to deceive from the British Empire claim its own independence. It comes to mean more things as I think |
| 2:17.9 | you're going to ask me about early on in the game it has it begins to have radical meaning so what we have here is a war for |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from John Batchelor, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of John Batchelor and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.

