Robert J. Allison

1774: The Year the Revolution Began

We know that in 1773 Bostonians destroyed three cargoes of tea. What happened next? Find out how Parliament’s attempts to tame the rebellion instead turned it into a Revolution, not isolated in Boston but bringing together Americans from throughout the colonies.

Robert Allison

Robert J. Allison, Ph.D. (robertallisonhistory.com), is a Professor of History at Suffolk University in Boston. He chairs Revolution 250 (revolution250.org), a consortium of organizations and individuals exploring the history of the American Revolution and the ways that this story still resonates in society two and a half centuries later. Allison is also the President of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts. His books include short histories of the American Revolution, Boston, the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and the debates over the U.S. Constitution, as well as longer books on Stephen Decatur and Olaudah Equiano and The Crescent Obscured: The United States and the Muslim World 1776–1815 (University of Chicago Press). His lecture series on the Age of Franklin and on Colonial America are available through Great Courses.


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