The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Some historians have argued that the American Revolution was not revolutionary in nature. Instead of fostering revolutionary change, it maintained continuity.
I think that the American Revolution was a genuine revolutionary movement stemmed from the anger and desperation of the American colonists that suffered many grievances from the British government.
The 13 American colonies had to pay heavy taxation such as the Navigation Acts, the Stamp Acts, the Tea Act. The worst part was that Colonists did not have any voice or representation in the English Parliament.
That is why colonists created secret groups such as the Sons of Liberty and people like Samuel Adams united other colonists against the English crown.
It is true that there were also some particular agendas inside the revolutionary movement, specifically, economic ones. But in essence, for me, it was a true independence movement.
impacted what ? American culture during the Gilded Age?
"The scientific method revolutionized the study of human society during the Gilded Age and onward; sparking curiosity within the members of society, and encouraged people to<u><em> gain knowledge</em></u>, discover and investigate; causing them to question old credence, and starting to prove them wrong, thus <u><em>leading to technological advances, </em></u>and large scale production methods, the inception of intellectual movements and favored<u><em> drastic reforms in education</em></u>, thus bringing opportunities to other scope of the population, because racial, ethnic, religious, gender and socioeconomic inequalities still abounded, so it also inspired some reformers to address those inequities in some form."
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U.S Constitution and the Decleration of Independence
Alexander Graham Bell was a Scottish-born inventor, scientist, and engineer who is credited with patenting the first practical telephone.
Flappers were<span> a generation of young </span>Western<span> women </span>in the<span> 1920s who wore short skirts, </span>bobbed<span> their hair, </span>listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was then considered acceptable <span>behavior</span>