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  1. Sons of Liberty: With Ben Barnes, Marton Csokas, Henry Thomas, Ryan Eggold. The story of a group of very different men fighting in the American Colonies for freedom, and how they will shape the future for the United States of America. Based on true stories.

  2. The Sons of Liberty was a loosely organized, clandestine, sometimes violent, political organization active in the Thirteen American Colonies founded to advance the rights of the colonists and to fight taxation by the British government.

  3. Aug 19, 2019 · The Sons of Liberty were a grassroots group of instigators and provocateurs in colonial America who used an extreme form of civil disobedience—threats, and in some cases actual...

  4. The Sons of Liberty was a secret underground society created due to the social and political fallout of the French and Indian War. The war, which took place...

  5. Sons of Liberty, organization formed in the American colonies in the summer of 1765 to oppose the Stamp Act. The Sons of Liberty took their name from a speech given in the British Parliament by Isaac Barré (February 1765), in which he referred to the colonials who had opposed unjust British measures as the “sons of liberty.”

  6. The Sons of Liberty — also known as the Liberty Boys — was a radical group of American colonists in Colonial America that often met in secret in order to plan public protests against the policies of the British government.

  7. Feb 18, 2020 · The Sons of Liberty was an organization born out of rebellion to the Stamp Act. Following the French and Indian War, England sought to alleviate war debts by establishing a tax on the colonies.

  8. In folklore, the Sons of Liberty were organised, coordinated colonial groups that took radical action against unpopular British policies from 1765 onwards. The reality is that ‘Sons of Liberty’ was an umbrella term that described a range of individuals and groups who opposed British policy and actions.

  9. The Sons of Liberty was a formal underground secret society whose goal was to protect the colonists from unjust taxation by the Crown and they became famous for the phrase "no taxation without representation".

  10. Jan 1, 2024 · The end of the French and Indian War set the stage for the rise of colonists who supported the Patriot cause. Meet the Sons and Daughters of Liberty. On March 5, 1770, British soldiers shot into a crowd of rowdy colonists in front of the Custom House on King Street, killing five and wounding six.

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