America at 250: A declaration of ideals reset the world – and still resonates today

America at 250: A declaration of ideals reset the world – and still resonates today


Former President Thomas Jefferson, who drafted the Declaration of Independence, hoped that Americans would commemorate the day they broke from British rule. Writing to a friend in the last few weeks of his life, Jefferson observed that the declaration was “pregnant with our own, and the fate of the world.”

That might sound like hubris, something America’s third president was known for. But in its day, America’s revolutionary stance was a global event. Its Declaration of Independence from the British Crown, approved on July 4, 1776, reverberated around the world and gave rise to a global war that redrew boundaries and balances of power. 

Richard Bell, a Revolutionary War scholar at the University of Maryland, says that the American revolution became four distinct wars rolled into one. It was a war of independence against Britain. It was a war by France against Britain to upset the balance of power in Europe. It was a war by Spain to recover lost territory from Britain. And it was a war waged by indigenous and enslaved people for their own freedom and sovereignty. 

Why We Wrote This

The American Revolution broadcast the call for liberty and equality far and wide. From Vietnam to Venezuela, that influence endures – even in societies where critics of the United States point to an uneven record in upholding those founding ideals.

Driving these wars – in America, the Caribbean, Europe, India, and on the high seas – were powerful ideas about liberty and self-rule that spread quickly to other people living under colonial dominion. 

“One of the greatest global legacies of the American War was the Declaration of Independence,” says Professor Bell, author of “The American Revolution and the Fate of the World.” “It became one of the weapons of choice that other rebels, separatists and rights seekers, would copy in their own insurgent movements against their own empires around the world.”

Because of its broad resonance, the declaration has “taken on a life of its own,” Professor Bell says. “It’s been repurposed and repossessed by diverse figures, from the Haitian rebels to Ho Chi Minh writing the Vietnam Declaration of Independence in 1945 and quoting ours directly.” 

America at 250: A declaration of ideals reset the world – and still resonates today

“We hold these truths to be self-evident”: The Declaration of Independence, on display at the National Archives Museum, framed aspirations of freedom and equality far beyond American shores.

Americans will celebrate the declaration’s 250th anniversary this year, elevating the ideals that have become part of the country’s story: freedom, liberty, and self-government. But because those ideals reverberated internationally, people around the world are also reflecting on America’s 250th, in ways that underscore their historical ties – at times warm or frosty, and at times a mixture of both – with the declaration and the country it birthed.  

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