How have historical events contributed to the development of an american identity?

journal article

American National Identity, 1750-1790: Samples from the Popular Press

The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography

Vol. 112, No. 2 (Apr., 1988)

, pp. 167-187 (21 pages)

Published By: University of Pennsylvania Press

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20092199

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The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography (PMHB) is the Historical Society of Pennsylvania’s scholarly magazine, published since 1877. PMHB publishes original research or interpretation concerning the social, cultural, political, economic, and ethnic history of Pennsylvania, or work situating Pennsylvania history within comparative regional or international contexts.

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By Gary W. Gallagher, Ph.D., University of Virginia; Patrick N. Allitt, Ph.D., Emory University; and Allen C. Guelzo, Ph.D., Gettysburg College

The story of the United States contains knaves and nobility, cads and crusaders, and enough turbulence to upset entire governments. While it appears the nation is built on constant change, there exists constant themes that have helped to define our American identity.

How have historical events contributed to the development of an american identity?
(Image: Charles Brutlag/Shutterstock)

These key themes of American identity serve as the melody for our history and provide a narrative that helps us make sense of all the changes our country has seen.

Passion for Freedom

Now one thing which has been a continuing notion amid the changes in American history has been the American passion for freedom. That freedom has taken many different forms—political, religious, economic—and it’s involved some very high-stakes risks; it hasn’t been a foregone conclusion. Sometimes, in the case of the New England Puritans, the freedom people have been searching for in America has been the freedom to be un-free, in other words, the freedom to impose a new sense of order on a world that they found too chaotic and disorganized.

This is a transcript from the video series The History of the United States, 2nd Edition. Watch it now, on Wondrium.

Pursuit of Education

How have historical events contributed to the development of an american identity?
Education has been the classic American form of the opportunity to make of yourself whatever you wish. (Image: danielo/Shutterstock)

In whatever form, however, the search for freedom has been a fundamental urge at every point in American history, from the Pilgrims to the civil rights movement. Another basic theme has been the pursuit of education. This is linked to the pursuit of freedom. Once you’ve torn yourself away from the various kinds of bondage in the past, then it’s up to you to fashion a new American identity for yourself. Education has been the classic American form of the opportunity to make of yourself whatever you wish.

Learn more about the “American System”

A third theme that shows up everywhere in American life is an unquestioned faith in the value of popular government. Call it democracy, republicanism, or what you will: Americans have never seriously doubted the right of people to rule themselves. It sometimes seems that we as Americans fight politically with each other like wild animals, but we’ve never fought over whether we should become a monarchy or whether it would be a good idea to have a dictator. That’s the moment when Americans immediately forget the issues they were fighting over and start fighting you, if what you’re trying to do is impose a dictatorship, monarchy, or another form of government that is not a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.

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Willingness to Experiment

A fourth theme running through all of American history has been the tremendous willingness of Americans to experiment with new things. Living in a new environment, in a new world, in a new continent, with new rules to govern their conduct, the American identity has always shown a kind of forward-looking-ness, a special welcome to the new and the untried. They don’t feel constrained by the habits of other peoples or of other times. It crops up in the ease with which Americans have assimilated wave upon wave of immigrants from a bewildering variety of backgrounds.

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American Exceptionalism

The last theme builds on the other four. Americans have traditionally believed that, as a nation, that we are like nothing else the world has ever seen before. We are exceptional. We are exemplary. We are a “city on a hill.” The American identity is linked to the first large-scale democratic republic in human history, and we made it work. While other nations were butchering each other over whether or not the Psalms should be sung in Latin or sung in French, we created a system of religious tolerance that put away the old religious conflicts of the past.

We also opened up our economic and political system to anyone with the brains and the talent to make a way forward, and we looked to things like that, not to the characteristics of hereditary aristocracy, but to people who had the brains, the talent, and were willing to put it to risk. That’s what we have taken as our models.

Sometimes this sense of exceptionalism or being something different from what the rest of the world has done or been in the past can degenerate. It can degenerate into a kind of smug self-congratulation, or even self-righteousness, not just that we’re different from others, but that we’re better because we’re different from others. This sentiment is what frequently grates on the ears of other peoples of other nations. Most of the time, however, that sense of being exceptional has also given to Americans a sense of having a national mission. It is the belief that what we are doing as a nation is not only different, and it’s done not just for us, but for the rest of the world. It asserts that our country is worth loving, as Abraham Lincoln once said, not just because it is our country, but because it is a country of the free.

It is a country committed to a certain set of ideas, built around not a certain race or a certain ethnicity, but around a political document, the U.S. Constitution, and a constellation of political ideas captured for the first time in the Declaration of Independence.

That brings us back to that deep-seated passion for freedom. It is a passion that we can find present in American life and the American experience from the first moment that we began to think of ourselves as something different from Europe to the beginnings of a nation. This extends to the moment when, in 1492, a Genoese entrepreneur and navigator named Christopher Columbus caught his first glimpse of the island shores of what was, for him, a new world.

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Common Questions About American Identity

Q: What are the primary religions of the USA?

Almost 3/4 of all Americans are some variant of Christianity. The other religions vary with the region. Buddhists largely make up the West while Islam reigns in the South and Mid-West. Judaism rules in the Northeast.

Q: What food defines American culture?

Aside from the Thanksgiving tradition of roasted turkey, brown gravy, dressing, green beans, and cranberry sauce, each region has its own distinctly popular foods. In the south, it’s mashed potatoes, cornbread, fried oysters, and steak. In the Northeast, it’s clam chowder and boiled crabs. In the West, it’s vegetarian food and burgers. In the Midwest, it’s lake trout and cheese.

This article was updated on May 12, 2020

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What events have shaped American identity?

Events That Shaped American Identity.
French and Indian War (1754 – 1763).
Proclamation of 1763 (October 7, 1763).
Stamp Act (March 22, 1765).
Boston Massacre (March 5, 1770).
Tea Act ( May 10, 1773).
Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776).
The Constitution (September 17, 1787).

How was the American identity developed?

It's founded on ideas. Gunnar Myrdal, a Swedish economist, used the term American Creed in his 1944 study of race relations. It's a collection of ideals that include the rule of law, equality, freedom, hard work, and individualism. This remained the central idea that formed the American identity.

What were the main ideas that contributed to the formation of American identity?

Among them was the idea that all people are created equal, whether European, Native American, or African American, and that these people have fundamental rights, such as liberty, free speech, freedom of religion, due process of law, and freedom of assembly. America's revolutionaries openly discussed these concepts.

How did the American Revolution affect American identity?

Fourth, the American Revolution committed the new nation to ideals of liberty, equality, natural and civil rights, and responsible citizenship and made them the basis of a new political order. None of these ideals was new or originated with Americans.