Patriots were American colonists who supported independence from Great Britain and fought for colonial rights during the Revolutionary War (1775-1783), winning despite Britain's military and financial advantages through militia action, Washington's leadership, ideological commitment, and European allies.
Patriots (also called Whigs or revolutionaries) were the colonists who chose the independence side of the American Revolution. They served in colonial militias and the Continental Army, signed the Declaration of Independence, boycotted British goods, and kept the war effort alive through brutal winters and repeated battlefield losses.
Here's the part the CED actually cares about. On paper, the Patriots should have lost. Britain had the world's strongest navy, more money, and a professional army, plus considerable Loyalist opposition inside the colonies themselves. The Patriot cause succeeded anyway because of four factors: the actions of colonial militias and the Continental Army, George Washington's military leadership, the colonists' ideological commitment and resilience, and assistance from European allies (especially France after 1778). That four-part explanation is essentially the answer key for any question asking why the underdog won.
Patriots sit at the center of Topic 3.5 (The American Revolution) in Unit 3: Independence and Nation-Building, 1754-1800. The term directly supports learning objective APUSH 3.5.A, which asks you to explain how various factors contributed to the American victory. Notice the framing. The exam rarely asks "who were the Patriots?" It asks "why did the Patriots win when they shouldn't have?" That means you need the causation skill, weighing military factors (Washington, Saratoga, French aid) against ideological ones (Common Sense, commitment to republican ideals). Patriots also anchor the America in the World theme, since their victory only happened because the Revolution became an international war.
Keep studying APUSH Unit 3
Battle of Saratoga (Unit 3)
Saratoga (1777) was the Patriot win that convinced France the rebels could actually pull this off. The 1778 Franco-American alliance that followed turned a colonial rebellion into a global war Britain couldn't afford, which is why exam questions call French aid decisive.
Common Sense (Unit 3)
Thomas Paine's pamphlet turned fence-sitters into Patriots by making independence sound obvious rather than treasonous. His later work, The American Crisis, kept Patriot morale alive when the Continental Army was losing. Paine is your go-to evidence for the "ideological commitment" factor in LO 3.5.A.
Colonial Opposition (Unit 3)
Patriots didn't appear out of nowhere in 1775. They grew out of a decade of resistance to British taxation, from Stamp Act protests to the Boston Tea Party. Think of "Patriot" as the label colonists earned once opposition escalated from boycotts to bullets.
Battle of Yorktown (Unit 3)
Yorktown (1781) is where all four victory factors converge in one moment. Washington's strategy, Continental Army troops, and the French navy trapped Cornwallis and ended major fighting. It's the perfect single piece of evidence for a Patriot-victory SAQ.
Patriots show up most often in causation questions. A classic multiple-choice stem asks which factor was crucial to the success of the Patriot cause, and the right answer pulls from the LO 3.5.A list (militias and the Continental Army, Washington's leadership, ideological resilience, European allies). Other MCQs test the pieces individually, like why the 1778 Franco-American alliance proved decisive or what immediate effect Paine's The American Crisis had on the war effort. The term has also appeared on recent short-answer questions, including the 2024 and 2025 SAQs, where you're typically asked to explain a specific cause or effect of the Patriot victory with concrete evidence. The move that earns points is naming a factor AND explaining how it produced victory, not just listing battles. Watch for questions complicating the simple Patriot-vs-British story too, like the Oneida Declaration of Neutrality, which reminds you that Native nations and many colonists didn't pick the Patriot side at all.
Patriots fought for independence; Loyalists (or Tories) were colonists who stayed loyal to the British Crown. The mix-up isn't usually the labels themselves but the assumption that nearly everyone was a Patriot. The CED is explicit that there was considerable Loyalist opposition, and the Revolution was partly a civil war between neighbors. If a question highlights divided colonial opinion, it's testing whether you know the Patriot cause was contested at home, not just abroad.
Patriots were the colonists who supported independence from Britain and fought for it in the Continental Army and colonial militias.
The Patriot victory rests on four CED-listed factors: militia and Continental Army action, Washington's leadership, ideological commitment and resilience, and European (especially French) assistance.
Britain entered the war with overwhelming military and financial advantages, so exam questions almost always frame the Patriot win as an underdog story you have to explain.
Saratoga in 1777 brought France into the war in 1778, and that alliance is the single most-tested reason the Patriots won.
Not all colonists were Patriots; considerable Loyalist opposition made the Revolution partly a civil war inside the colonies.
Patriot ideology came from years of colonial opposition to British policy and was supercharged by Paine's Common Sense and The American Crisis.
Patriots were American colonists who supported independence from Great Britain and fought for colonial liberties during the Revolutionary War (1775-1783). They made up the Continental Army, the colonial militias, and the political leadership behind the Declaration of Independence.
No. The CED stresses that there was considerable Loyalist opposition, and many colonists and Native nations (like the Oneida, who declared neutrality) tried to stay out of the conflict entirely. Treating the Revolution as a unanimous Patriot uprising is a common mistake the exam likes to test.
Patriots fought for independence from Britain; Loyalists (Tories) wanted to remain under British rule. The split ran through communities and even families, which is why historians describe the Revolution as partly a civil war.
Four factors, straight from the APUSH CED: the actions of colonial militias and the Continental Army, George Washington's military leadership, the colonists' ideological commitment and resilience, and assistance from European allies. The 1778 alliance with France after Saratoga was especially decisive.
Yes. Patriots are central to Topic 3.5 and learning objective APUSH 3.5.A, and the term appeared on the 2024 and 2025 short-answer questions. You'll most often be asked to explain why the Patriot cause succeeded despite Britain's advantages.
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