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Sugar And Snow: The American Colonies That Stayed British

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Sugar And Snow: The American Colonies That Stayed British

De: Randall Lynch
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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When the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783, Britain lost thirteen colonies but retained an empire. From the frozen fishing grounds of Newfoundland to the sugar plantations of Jamaica, from the forests of Quebec to the logging camps of Honduras, British territory in the Americas remained vast, diverse, and enormously profitable. The story of what happened to these forgotten colonies has never been fully told.

The Loyalist refugees who fled the Revolution arrived by the tens of thousands in Nova Scotia and Quebec, expecting the Crown to provide what the war had taken from them. They found instead a chaotic scramble for land, bitter winters, and the challenge of building new communities from nothing. Their arrival transformed British North America, creating the foundations of a nation that would eventually stretch from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

In the Caribbean, the real money engine of the British Empire continued to run on the labor of enslaved people who outnumbered their enslavers ten to one. Jamaica alone generated more revenue than all the lost mainland colonies combined, its sugar fields producing wealth that shaped British politics for generations. The specter of the Haitian Revolution haunted these islands, demonstrating that the brutal system could be overthrown and terrifying planters throughout the region.

The loss of America did not end British imperial ambitions; it redirected them toward Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. The lessons learned from the American disaster shaped how Britain governed its remaining colonies, eventually producing the self-governing dominions that became the model for the modern Commonwealth. This is the story of the empire that survived 1783 and the world it helped create.
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