Friday 24 December 2021

KAKINADA

 The present Kakinada originally known as Kaki Nandiwada was originally a Dutch settlement. The Dutch had a trading post at Jagannadhapuram, then known as Jagannaickpur. The Dutch used to export Sarees known as “Coca” or “Koka” in Telugu and hence the name Coca Nada. Kakinada was also known as Coringa to the British on account of its proximity to river Coringa.

The British East India Company also called it Kakinada when they established the 1st Canadian Baptist Mission there. After independence it got its present name Kakinada. The British established Kakinada as a shipbuilding facility in 1759 and it became a shipbuilding yard of some importance. In 1802 a dock was built there for repair of the Royal Navy. Hope Island about 5 Km into the sea off the coast of Kakinada was then known internationally for ship building and repairs.

The ship building facility was destroyed in 1787 on account of a massive storm and a tidal wave of 40 feet height which killed 20,000 people. This must have been catastrophic for Kakinada as its population at that time must have been near to 20,000. This means the entire population has been virtually wiped out. A similar storm again hit in 1832. There was still another massive cyclone in 1839 which finished off the port facility as well. By 1901 due to sand silting and sand deposit of the estuary no big ships could enter the port and it was finally closed in 1905.

In the Madras presidency the district of Rajahmundry was created in the year 1823 which comprised of the present East Godavari, West Godavari and Krishna districts. In 1859 it was bifurcated into Godavari and Krishna districts. Rajahmundry became the capital of the Godavari district. In 1925 when the Godavari district itself was bifurcated into East and West Godavari districts Kakinada became the capital of East Godavari and Eluru that of West Godavari.

It is perplexing as to why Rajahmundry which was once the capital of the 3 consolidated districts was forsaken as the capital of East Godavari and Kakinada was preferred instead.

Kakinada city has an elevation of 2 meters above sea level but many areas of the city are below sea level. It has a tropical Savannah climate with hot humid weather most of the year. Warmest period is late May to early June 38-42 degrees centigrade coldest is 18-20 degrees centigrade in January. Average rainfall is 110-115 Cm. Current population of Kakinada is 5,75,000. Seasonal rainfall mainly comes from the Southwest Monsoon, and some of it also from the Northeast monsoon.

KAKINADA TOWN RAILWAY STATION.


The Kakinada city mostly depends on Agriculture, Fishing and Industrial sectors. The majority of theindustrial sector is covered by the Edible oil refineries, Fertilizer plants & Oil & Gas. The industry developed only after 1980 and prior to that Kakinada fully depended on Agriculture& Fishing.           

The Hope Island, located about 5 km away from Kakinada makes Kakinada port a natural harbor. It stretches along the coastline of Kakinada and protects the mainland of Kakinada from Cyclones by acting as a barrier.

                                                                     HOPE ISLAND



Tourists can visit Hope Island by APTDC boats and enjoy the pristine beach there.

Agro products:

1.      Several companies in and around Kakinada export coconuts.

2.      The Murugappa Group’s Silk Road Sugars has a port based sugar refinery with a capacity of 600,000 MT per annum.

3.      A number of edible oil refineries with a refining capacity of 3000 tons per day were established at Kakinada.

Fisheries:

There is a fishing harbor at Kakinada with innumerable number of deep sea fishing boats which are anchored in the Buckingham canal between Kakinda and Jagganaickpur. There are also thousands of hectares of land under prawn & fish cultivation around Kakinada and also there are many prawn hatcheries and processing and export units. Main export units are Devi Fisheries and Apex Frozen Foods.

Although the exact tonnage is not available, a large quantity of fish is caught at Kakinada and exported mostly to Orissa and Calcutta.

WHARF ROAD FISHING BOATS.



Software:

Kakinada is a tire II city and STPI has established a cluster here in 2007, since then a number of IT companies have come up in the city. Nearly 35 IT companies are operating at Kakinada including Cyient, Avineon, Krify and Primesoft

                                                                 KRIFY SOFTWARE.


Power Generation:

There are 3 power plants in and around Kakinada. Spectrum Energy has a 208 MW power plant at Uppada. Reliance Energy has a 220 MW power plant and the GVK Group has a 464 MW power plant at Samalkota. GMR Energy’s barge mounted plant of 220 MW was originally commissioned at Mangalore in 2001 was shifted to Kakinada in 2010 but was lying idle due to non availability of natural gas.

Petroleum & Natural gas:

The gas find in the Krishna Godavari basin is the largest in India and ONGC, Reliance & GSPC have drilled the basin which resulted in petroleum and gas finds.

Reliance Industries has laid a 1386 Km length pipeline to transport natural gas from Kakinada to its petrochemical facility at Bharuch in Gujarat. The pipeline has a diameter on 4 feet. The pipeline is in 3 layer Polyethylene coated and internally epoxy lined.

Reliance has an onshore gas terminal at “Gadimoga” about 25 Km from Kakinada. This is the place where the natural gas of Reliance from its offshore terminal is received and then pumped through their pipeline. 

Kakinada, Peddapuram, Pithapuram and Samalkot are being supplied cooking gas through pipeline by Bhagyanagar Gas Ltd. which is a consortium of GAIL and Hindustan Petroleum. Kakinada was the 2nd city in AP to have piped cooking gas supply.

The ONGC has set up a small oil refinery at Thatipaka near Kakinada with a capacity of 250 MT per day.

RELIANCE OFFSHORE TERMINAL GADIMOGA.



RELIANCE ONSHORE TERMINAL GADIMOGA.


Fertlizer:

Nagarajuna Fertilizers Ltd. commenced operations in the year 1986-87. This is one of the largest Urea complexes in India and the plant is spread over 1130 acres. This is a natural gas based plant. The operating capacity is 1.2 million MT per annum.

NAGARJUNA FERTLIZERS.


Godavari Fertilizers Ltd.(Now Coromandel Fertilizers Ltd.) commenced operations in 1989 mainly to manufacture DAP with a capacity of 3 lakh MT initially which was later raised to 5 lakh MT per annum. It also produces Sulfuric acid and Phosphoric acid.

COROMANDEL FERTLIZERS.



Port: 

Kakinada currently has 2 ports, the Deep water port and the Anchorage port.

The Port’s principal exports include Seafood, Agricultural products like Rice & Corn, Oilmeal, Processed Food Products, Chemicals, Iron ore, Bauxite and Biofuel.

The Port’s principal imports include Crude Edible Oils, Chemicals and Agricultural products (including wheat & sugar) and Petro products.

Kakinada Deep Water Port was commissioned by the government in 1997. Presently the port is equipped to handle a cargo of 20 million MT per annum. The length of the navigation channel is 11 Km with a depth of 15 meters. There are 7 berths in the jetty and the port can handle vessels up to 50,000 DWT.

Cargo handled during the FY 2019-20--  15.35 MMT. In comparison Vizag handles 65 MMT per year

                                                                    KAKINADA PORT.



Education:

There are 65 Government Schools in Kakinada with 11,240 students apart from the numerous private schools.

Universities:

Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University. A large number of Engineering Colleges in the state are affiliated to this University.

JNTU.


There is also a PG Centre of the Andhra University.

ANDHRA UNIVERSITY PG CENTRE.


Engineering Colleges:

There are 9 Engineering Colleges in Kakinada, they are:

1.      JNTU Engineering College

2.      Aditya Engineering Colleges( 3 in number)

3.      Pragathi Engineering College

4.      Kakinda Institute of Engineering and College (KIET)

5.      Ideal Engineering College.

6.      PYDAH Engineering College

7.      VSL Engineering College for Women

 

Medical College:

There is just one medical college at Kakinada named Rangaraya Medical College.

RNGARAYA MEDICAL COLLEGE.



Places to see:

Uppada Beach Road: Kakinada has a beach stretching from about 1 Km away from the Lighthouse at Vakalapudi right up to Uppada, a distance of 10 Km. although the entire stretch is not available for approaching the beach. As one traverses the road from Kakinada to Uppada, about 1.5 Km from the lighthouse one can see the seawaters almost touching the road and it is a visual treat to anyone passing on the road. This road has been washed away by the sea as the sea is gradually advancing, and an embankment had been laid to stop the encroachment of the road by the sea.

     ROAD TO UPPADA BEACH.



Beach Park: The Kakinada beach park has been developed by APTDC near the Vakalapudi Lighthouse. Although a considerable amount of money was spent on development of the beach from the Smart city funds and a Lasershow instituted, the equipment is is currently lying wasted as a cyclone has spoilt the equipment. When the Corona endemic cropped up, visiting of the beach has completely stopped and the park fell into disrepair. A considerable effort is now needed to attract visistors to the park once again.

KAKINADA BEACH PARK.



There is also a Shilparamam near the Lighthouse.

Coring Wildlife Sanctuary: The Coringa Wildlife sanctuary situated about 18 Km from Kakinada is the second largest mangrove forest in India after Sunderbans in West Bengal. It is a bird sanctuary with a wide variety of birds visiting it in winter. There is also the Sea Otter, Golden Jackal, Sea Turtle and Fishing Cat in this sanctuary.  This is a mangrove forest formed by the backwaters of the sea. The forest department has laid wooden pathways through the forest for about 3 Km in length. One can travel on the wooden pathway to watch the many trees and birds in the forest areas. 

PATHWAY IN KORINGA SANCTUARY.



SRMT Mall: The SRMT mall is a huge Mall with 5 floors and is quite large for a city like Kakinada and many branded goods stores and eateries have been established in it.  It is spread in an area of 2.5 acres and has a built up space of 3.75 lakh sft. It has INOX which contains 4 movie theatres.

 SRMT MALL



Vivekananda Park: The Raja Tank was originally the water supply tank for the city of Kakinada built by the Pithapuram Raja. Later it lost its utility as a water supply area because of piped water coming n from the Godavari canal. The tank was later turned into Park named Vivekananda Park. The smart city program gave enough funds to the corporation to convert it into an excellent park with all facilities.

VIVEKANANDA PARK



 Food to be enjoyed:

SUBBAYYA GARI HOTEL.



Subbayya Gari Hotel: Subbayya gari Hotel is very well known for vegetarian food all over the state. There may be thousands of hotels in the state but this hotel is unique for unmatched hospitality and taste. The customer is doted on by the waiters and food is served as though you are the son in law of their family. The hotel was started in 1955 by Subbaya garu who came from Prakasam District.

Kakinada Kaza: For food lovers the “Kakinada Kaza” is known all over the state and is famous for its unique taste, as is the case with Kakinada madata kaza. Kakinada is also famous for “Pootarekulu” made in Atreyapuram near Kakinada.

KAKINADA KAZA        

                             

KAKINADA MADATA KAZA



Sunday 26 September 2021

AFGHANISTAN CONTEMPORARY HISTORY.

 

Dost Mohammed Khan declared himself ruler in 1823. The British felt that Dost Mohammed was courting Russia. In 1838, a British Expeditionary force marched into Afghnaistan and arrested Dost Mohammed in 1940 after taking Kabul. The British then exiled him into India and replaced him with the previous ruler Shah Shujah Durani. 

After a year, the British grew complacent and withdrew some of their forces as popular resistance grew. They also stopped paying the subsidies to the Ghilzai tribe who controlled the routes between Kabul and Peshawar. A British brigade was sent in 1841 to clear the route to India through the Khyber pass. But, the resistance from the Ghilzai tribesmen halted the brigade at Jalalabad equidistant from Kabul and the Khyber pass.

In 1841 there was a popular uprising in Kabul against the British. The commander of the British garrison was not up to the task and asked for reinforcements from Kandahar and a brigade was dispatched but it had to turn back due to heavy snowfall. The son of Dost Mohammed, Akbar Khan arrived at Kabul and became Amir. He had the British troops blockaded in an encampment 

The British Commander was forced to sign a peace treaty by which the British were allowed safe passage up to Jalalabad by the king. The result was a slaughter of the British army as they marched and only 1 British surgeon and a handful of Indian Sepoys reached Jalalabad out of the 4500 plus 12000 civilains who started from Kabul.

In retribution the British sent another army in 1842. This force took Kabul and levelled all the great bazaar and the bigger buildings of Kabul. Akbar Khan died a British prisoner in 1847 possibly poisoned by his own father. 

Dost Mohammed too remained a British prisoner till 1841 when they freed him. The British after their revenge on Kabul left him in peace and he died in 1863 due to natural causes. The British withdrew their military forces from Afghanistan in 1878.

But till the battle for Kabul, the British have never suffered a defeat in India and it affected the morale of the Bengal regiment which consisted of the bulk of troops that were stationed in Kabul before the massacre.

After Dost Mohammed came Abdur Rehman Khan. He died in 1901 and his son Habibullah Khan came to power. During world war one he was met by officials of the Axis powers who asked him to declare full independence from Britain and enter the war on their side. Habibullah Khan did not yield. But this caused a discontent among the population and he was assassinated in 1919 and Amanullah Khan came to power. He was a staunch supporter of an anti British expedition and initiated a war on the British by entering India through the Khyber pass.

 In the 3rd and final Anglo Afghan war, the British did have an upper hand and were into Afghanistan when Amir Amanullah sent a message for armistice which the British accepted and the treaty of Rawalpindi was signed accepting the independence of Afghanistan on 3rd June 1919, and Afghanistan in turn accepted the Durand line dividing Pakistan and Afghanistan. The the 3rd Anglo Afghan war lasted exactly a month. So, Afghanistan actually became independent of the British in 1919 even before India itself did.

Now the Amir Amanullah was a liberal. He encouraged women’s education and abolished the Burkha. This alienated many tribal’s and religious leaders which led to the Afghan civil war in 1928-29. With overwhelming armed opposition Amanullah had to abdicate the throne in 1929. Later his cousin Nadir Shah came to power as Amir.  

Nadir Shah’s son Zahir Shah succeeded him in 1933 and ruled till 1973. His reign was challenged by the tribal revolts of Zadran, Safi, Mangal and Wazir tribesmen between 1944 onwards, but they were snuffed out by 1947. 

Strong relations were pursued with Axis powers Germany, Italy and Japan. However, it remained neutral in the 2nd World War. Later due to the cold war both the US and the Soviet Union built Afghanistan’s main highways, airports and other infrastructure. 

Zahir Shah maintained close relations with both the US and the Soviet Union the cold war enemies and benefited from both sides. In 1973, when Amir Zahir Shah was in Italy, Daoud Khan launched a bloodless coup abolished the monarchy and became its first President.

Thus Afghanistan remained peaceful from 1933 to 1978, a period of some 45 years (there was trouble only 3 years between 1944-47 due to the tribal revolts), up till 1973 under Amir Zahir Shah and later up to 1978 under Daoud Khan who launched a bloodless coup. 

Troubles came into  Afghanistan with the Communist PDPA ( People’s Democratic Party of Afghanistan) in 1978. They seized power in a bloody coup against the President Daoud Khan in April 1978. This is called the Saur revolution (so much for the fancy name it screwed the life of all Afghans very comfortably). It set up a communist government with Nur Mohammed Taraki as the President. This idiotic move catapulted Afghanistan into a hotbed of terrorism. 

The PDPA initiated many reforms including land distribution and brutally suppressed all political dissidents. This caused unrest that slowly spiralled into a civil war by 1979 waged by the Mujahideen and the Maoist guerrillas. Pakistan supported these guerrillas with arms and training camps and the US too supported them through the ISI. The Soviet Union too is in the fray and sent thousands of military advisors to the PDPA. Things soured further when the PDPA itself had internal fissured and split into two factions, the dominant Khalq and the moderate Parcham.

In Sep 1979 President Taraki of the PDPA was assassinated by fellow Khalq member and PM Hafizullah Amin. His leadership was miserable and thousands of people went missing in the country. Displeased with him, the Soviet army invaded Afghanistan in Dec 1979 and killed Amin 3 days later. A Soviet backed regime was installed under Babrak Karmal (of the Parcham faction of the PDPA) as the President. More Soviet troops were deployed in Afghanistan to stabilize the Karmal regime.

Now, how can other nations keep quiet when the Soviet Union is making its presence felt in Afghanistan? So, the US, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and China aided the guerrillas with weapons including 2000 stinger missiles, while the Soviets supported the PDPA government. 

This is blatant interference into the affairs of the country by everyone like hawks measuring their prey. The internal war lasting 9 years cost the lives of between 0.5 million to 2 million Afghans. When we remember that the Afghan population currently is only about 4 crores these are very high casualties. It also displaced about 6 million people who fled to Iran and Pakistan and that is about 15% of its population. What can be more tragic?

Heavy bombardment in the war destroyed many villages in the countryside and also some cities like Herat and Kandahar. Millions of landmines were planted everywhere. Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province acted as a base for helping the rebels with the Deobandi Ulema of the area supporting Jihad.

Finally Gorbachev himself who sent the army into Afghanistan thought enough was enough and felt that it was futile and he cannot go on maintaining their army in Afghanistan like that when their own economy is getting affected on account of it. So the Soviet Union started pulling back its troops in May 1988 and it was completed by February 1989. 

Even when the Soviet Union was withdrawing its troops the US continued to supply arms to the rebels who attacked the withdrawing Soviet troops. Such are the acts of big powers.

After the withdrawal of the Soviet troops in 1989 there was a civil war and the PDPA regime under Najibullah collapsed in 1992. Various Mujahideen factions committed widespread rape, murder and extortion. The civil war between various factions went on till the Taliban emerged on the scene in 1994

This is a movement from the Islamic madrassas from Pakistan which had military support from Pakistan. Now the big boy has arrived to take charge (of the civil war of course). They slowly advanced their spread into Afghanistan and finally drove out the Government of Rabbani from Kabul in 1996.  The Taliban then enforced the harsh Sharia law as per which even listening to music is a sin to be punished. During its rule the Taliban committed massacres against civilians in Afghanistan. They denied UN food supplies to civilians and burnt farms and homes of thousands of people.       

To resist the Taliban a Northern alliance was formed by Massoud and Dostum. This alliance was defeated by the Taliban in 1997-98 in Mazar E Sharif. Pakistan sent thousands of army to help the Taliban in its battles against the Northern Alliance. By the year 2000, the Northern Alliance only controlled 10% of the country in the Northeast. In Sep 2001 Massoud was assassinated by a two member Arab suicide squad.

In October 2001 the USA invaded Afghanistan with the ISAF to remove Taliban from power and the Taliban hegemony came to an end. Hamid Karzai was installed as the President in Dec 2001. 

Taliban forces then regrouped in Pakistan. Over the next decade the ISAF and Afghan troops attacked the Taliban but could not fully defeat them. The ISAF (the bulk is from the US) has now completed a full 20 years in Afghanistan spending all that money but nothing had been accomplished. 

They cannot remain there forever, so they finally decided to withdraw now. The moment the withdrawal started the Taliban struck back and has now come back to power with lightning speed. So all the effort of the US for 20 years and all that money has gone down the drain. Neither has the Soviet intervention for 9 years achieved anything. So, the 29 years of foreign power intervention has only ruined the country into a civil war and catapulted a dangerous outfit like the Taliban into power.  

The Soviet Union initially and later the US have played with the country like a pawn with Pakistan aiding the process. The entire turmoil in Afghanistan faces today is because of these 2 countries playing games. Ultimately both countries despite intervening could not get any lasting solution and they not only wasted their own money but caused a huge loss of life to that country. 

Of course it was the Soviet Union that made the first move to aid the communists, destroying the peace the country enjoyed for a long time. It was the communist PDPA that initiated all this nonsense and paved the way for the invasion of first the Soviet Union and then the USA. The US initially abetted the Mujahideen and supplied them with 2000 stinger missiles through Pakistan, all in the name of stopping the Soviet Union.  

NAPOLEAN BONAPARTE-AN AN EVALUATION.

 Napoleon Bonaparte was born in 1769 to a Notary public Carlo Bonaparte on the island of Corsica. His parents were Italian and therefore Napoleon was Italian and not French. His native Island Corsica was occupied by the French and was continually struggling to regain its independence from the French. For the first 20 years of his life Napoleon was a Corsican patriot trying to regain the Independence of Corsica from the French. But the French Revolution that took place in 1789 has recognized the claims of Corsicans and so he slowly got into the service of France in its armed forces.

Napoleon was a fast worker. His career hardly spanned 20 years, yet in that short period he rose right up to the top. In the process, he disturbed Europe more than either Alexander or Chenghiz could do. 

He is small in stature and in the initial period of his life,  his health was not good. He never impressed anyone with his looks and was always clumsy at public functions. Neither did he have any advantage of either birth or riches. In fact, till he rose, he was abjectly poor and had to go without a meal often.

Napoleon overcame all those difficulties by his absolute and unshakable belief in his own destiny, and in his own glorious future. Ambition was the main spring of his life. The absolute will to make the name of Napoleon the most important thing in the world carried Napoleon to a pinnacle of fame which no other man has ever reached.

Surprisingly Napoleon never had any ethical or moral values and it is very difficult to decide whether he loved anyone else except himself. For a few years he was fond of Josephine his Creole wife, the daughter of a French Officer and the widow of a Baron. He later divorced her as she could not give him a son.

During the siege of Toulon Napoleon gained great fame as the commander of a battery. He studied Machiavelli well and never kept his word when it was to his advantage to break it. There is no word called gratitude in his personal dictionary. Neither did he expect any from the others though. He was totally indifferent to human suffering. He executed the prisoners of war in Egypt who had been promised their lives and committed many other such deeds. He looked after every department of his army with utmost care but neglected the medical service. He could never bear the smell of sweat of his soldiers and used much Eau De Cologne to douse it.

Why did his armies revere such a man who had no element of humanity in him? No one knows why, but a possibility is Napoleon was the greatest of actors and the whole European continent was his stage. At all times and under all circumstances he knew the precise attitude that would impress the spectators most and what words would make the deepest impression on them. At all times he was the master of the situation whenever and wherever he spoke.

He was a great success in the first part of his career from 1789 to 1804. He was then the leader of the French revolution. He was fighting in the name of the people. He defeated Austria, England, Russia and Italy because he and his soldiers were the apostles of the revolution representing “Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality” and were the friends of the people. The entire European continent came under his influence. 

In 1804 Napoleon crowned himself the hereditary Emperor of the French. Once there he forgot about what he represented and kept his shooting squads ever ready to execute anyone who went against his will. Ultimately, after all his successes in battle his fleet was destroyed by Lord Nelson at Trafalgar and subsequently his armies were defeated by Wellington at Waterloo. 

While the French revolution had spoken of Liberty, Fraternity and Equality, it gave the world Napoleon. When he was active, people in the opposing countries shivered at the mention of his name and that in the entire European continent. He got his army’s horses stabled in the mighty Kremlin and treated the royalty of Europe as scum. A man who came from nowhere, absolutely without any backing from either anyone or his family but he managed to enforce himself on the entire European continent by the mere force of his will. That is why he is called the “Man of Destiny”.

 

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.

 The European countries, Spain, Portugal, France, Holland and England were vying for colonies after the industrial revolution. In 1497 John Cabot had landed on the Northern part of America and 27 years later in 1524 Giovanni Verrazano has visited these coasts. While Cabot sailed under the English flag, Verrazano sailed under the French flag but both were Italians. So England and France proclaimed themselves as the owners of the continent.

During the 17th century initially 10 English colonies have been formed between Maine and the Carolinas. They were generally a refuge for colonies of sects of English dissenters. The Puritans founded the colony of New England (the current states of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut & Rhode Island) in the year 1620 and the Quakers founded the colony of Pennsylvania in 1681. They were initially small colonies bordering the sea where people wanted to start a new life away from Royal interference.  As for the French colonies, they always remained under the French crown. The English colonies therefore represented an advance over their French counterparts. They were freemen nominally recognizing the suzerainty of England.

While English colonies represented the English middle class who wanted to settle in the country, the French colonies were represented by crown representatives of France who wanted to later go back to France.

The French had discovered the mouth of Saint Lawrence in the 16th century. From the region of the Great lakes they worked their way down the continent to Mississippi and built several fortifications along that line. After a century of exploration about 60 French forts have cut the English colonies from the interior of the continent to the west of them.

The English land grants made to various trading companies mentioned the continent from sea to sea. However, this is merely on paper and the English hold ended where the French fortifications began.

As long as the Stuarts reigned over England there was no problem between England and France. The Stuarts needed the Bourbons in France to cut the power of the Parliament and make themselves autocratic.

In 1689 the last of the Stuarts rule has ended in England and it fell in the hands of the Dutch William III who was a great enemy of Louis XIV of France. From then onwards till the treaty of Paris in 1763, England and France fought for possessions in North America as well as India. During these wars the English navy always beat the French navy, so by the time the war ended French had lost most of their possessions in North America and virtually the entire continent fell into British hands.

Only a small part of this vast continent was inhabited. From Massachusetts in the North to the Carolinas and Virginia (the tobacco raising provinces) stretched a thin line of sparsely populated territory. The men who lived there are totally different from the citizens of England who lived in the home country. They learnt self reliance and independence. They are hard working people because no ordinary person could sustain the hard travails that may befall them in the long sea journey to North America.

The British government started annoying the colonists by trying to control them. They in turn started annoying the British government. The colonists ultimately took to arms to have their own say in their affairs. King George III, the then English monarch hired German soldiers to subdue the American colonists.

In June 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia proposed a motion in the continental Congress to the effect that they are now left the allegiance to the British crown and all relations with them are dissolved. This motion was seconded by John Adams of Massachusetts. That was followed by the declaration of Independence which was the work of Thomas Jefferson. 

The first 13 colonies which started the war:

1.       1. New Hampshire

2.       2. Massachusetts

3.       3. Rhode Island

4.       4. Connecticut

5.       5. New York

6.       6. New Jersey

7.       7. Pennsylvania

8.       8. Delaware

9.       9. Maryland

1       10. Virginia

1       11. North Carolina

1       12. South Carolina

1       13. Georgia.

There were 7 men who were its ideologues and founders of the current USA. Among them the first 4 listed served as the first 4 Presidents of the United States. They are

1.       1. George Washington

2.       2. John Adams

3.       3. Thomas Jefferson

4.       4. James Madison

5.       5. Alexander Hamilton

6.       6. John Jay

7.       7. Benjamin Franklin

The war between England and the American colonies started in 1776 and lasted 7 years. During the war the victory of the colonists seemed doubtful. A great number of people in the cities proved to be loyal to the English king. They wanted to compromise and were willing to sue for peace. However, George Washington stood guard like a colossus on the side of the colonists thwarting any such bid.

Well assisted by some brave men he used his determined but poorly equipped armies to fight with the king. Whenever defeat seemed certain, his strategy turned the tide of battle. His men were not properly fed and did not have any winter clothing and shoes and lived in dugouts. But their trust in Washington was absolute and they stuck with him till the time of victory unquestioningly.

While Washington was winning victories with his armies, it was Benjamin Franklin who looked on the money side. He was in Europe getting money from the French Government and the Dutch bankers in the first year of the revolution.

The news of this reached Europe along with news of the adoption of a constitution in 1787 (first of all written constitutions). At that time Europe was a place where the lower sections are held in check with great power by the nobility and the kings. The dynasties of kings were at the Zenith of their power. The success of the American Revolution gave great hope those oppressed peoples. This in turn had an electrifying effect on the people of France who then had their revolution in 1789.