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The Real Story of King George III: America's Last King

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
June 5, 2025 3:01 am

The Real Story of King George III: America's Last King

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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June 5, 2025 3:01 am

King George III, a constitutional monarch, is often misunderstood as a tyrant due to his role in the American Revolution. However, he was a good-natured, intelligent person who opposed slavery and believed in limited government. The American founding fathers, seeking sovereignty, painted him as a tyrant to justify their independence. The war of independence was a complex conflict involving multiple fronts and internal bickering within the British government, ultimately leading to the defeat of the British and the birth of the United States as a sovereign nation.

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Take it away, Andrew. The thing that Americans assume about King George III was that he was a tyrant. And we know that because he was mentioned as being unfit to be the ruler of a free people in the Declaration of Independence. The Common Sense pamphlet that was written by Tom Paine describes him as the royal brute of Britain. And of course, we also know that he was an absurd sort of camp but sinister and sadistic figure from Lin-Manuel Miranda's hit musical Hamilton, the American musical.

These are, none of this is right, none of this is true. He was not a tyrant. He was in fact a constitutional monarch. He believed in limited government, limited monarchy, never believed in the divine right of kings and so on, and never vetoed an act of parliament in his life.

George III was born in June 1738, the son of the Prince of Wales, Prince Frederick, and his mother, Princess Augusta. It was a very rural society. About 80% of people took their livings from agriculture. It was a very hierarchic society with a small aristocracy at the top and an awful lot of working people at the bottom of society. It was an old-fashioned, in a sense, society because this was before the Industrial Revolution and it was a country at war for much of its time for the next hundred years, primarily with France. George III had a very wide education for the day.

He had tutors who taught him much more widely and indeed deeply than the schoolboys of the day, even at the best public schools in Britain. One of the things that he was required to do by his tutor, the Earl of Butte, was to write essays about historical and constitutional issues and it was a very wide-ranging education and we can tell from these essays that he had a true belief in limited constitutional monarchy. He was totally opposed to the slave trade and to slavery. It was very remarkable that in the 1750s, when no country in the world had outlawed slavery and which an awful lot of them were practising slavery right the way across the globe, that the Prince of Wales should be writing essays, really holding the concept of slavery in execration, as he put it. He said that the arguments for it was absurd and this had a major effect on him later on because he didn't buy or sell a slave in his life.

He never invested in the companies that did that and ultimately he signed the legislation that abolished the slave trade. George III was a good-natured, charming, intelligent person. He was very much in love with his wife which was extremely unusual in the Hanoverian family which was otherwise an extremely dysfunctional group of kings and George III was a believing, pious, practising Anglican. He did believe that the Christian faith was something that needed to permeate every aspect of his life and it did and he felt that he had a close connection to the Almighty. He much preferred talking to bishops than talking to politicians.

He went to church every Sunday and enjoyed it. The Seven Years' War which started actually here in America before the official outbreak in 1756 continued until 1763 and was fought by Britain and Prussia and the American colonies on one side versus pretty much the whole rest of Europe, Russia, Austria, France primarily. So it was a world war.

It's sometimes called by historians the First World War because it continued on several continents right the way through to the East Indies and it was a tremendous victory for the British-led coalition to the point that in the Treaty of Paris in 1763 the French were flung off the North American continent altogether. The war was tremendously expensive. It doubled the national debt in Britain.

George III he had a very conservative with a small c view of the national debt. He thought it was the moral duty of the government to try to pay it down as much as he could and so in an attempt two years after the war to try to get the Americans to help defray the expenses of it or at least defray the expenses of troops that were stationed in North America because every penny of the Stamp Act was going to be spent in North America they tried to bring in this act of parliament which would raise taxes on printed paper. The Stamp Act was intended to only to raise a very small amount of money between 40 and 50 000 pounds which worked out as between the 2.5 million Americans is only about two shillings and sixpence per American per year. But it wasn't really the level of the Stamp Act so much as the principle of it because for the last hundred years or so the British had not imposed internal duties. There had been trading dues of course and they had been around since the time of Oliver Cromwell but this was a departure and one that the Americans were not going to put up with.

It was also quite unfortunate that the people who were most hit most heavily hit by the Stamp Act namely solicitors, lawyers, journalists were also and always have been and indeed are today the most vocal people in society. America deserved independence by the 1760s and early 1770s. It was a country of 2.5 million people. It had seven percent year-on-year growth and really burgeoning economy. It had more bookshops in Philadelphia than in any other city of the Empire except for London.

It also had no external French threat so the nearest French army was a thousand miles away in Haiti. So it was the right time for America to become self-governing and at the same time the British government passed a proclamation saying that the 13 colonies could not expand over the Allegheny Mountains westwards and so it essentially preserved the whole of the American continent west of the Alleghenies as one gigantic Native American reservation essentially and this was something that a lot of the founding fathers who had shares in speculative land deals especially in the Ohio River Valley were not going to put up with. So these things all coming together created by the mid to late 1760s an intellectual movement in America that understood that the best thing for the country was to become a country and a self-governing one. The truly important factor in the creation of the American Revolution was not issues over taxation and representation frankly both the South Carolinian and the Virginian delegates to the Stamp Act Congress were told not to accept representation if it were offered but it was about sovereignty it was about who ultimately was in control of the laws that were passed in America and when American local legislatures could be vetoed by the London Parliament that was something that went to the heart of whether or not America was going to become a sovereign nation. And you're listening to Andrew Roberts tell a story heck I know a lot about history and it was revealing to me and by the way we're still having the same arguments about sovereignty about who decides and who pays even here in this country with a distant power at least as many people see it called Washington D.C. When we come back more of this remarkable storytelling Andrew Roberts telling the story of the last king of America King George the third here on Our American Stories there's nothing like sinking into luxury anime sofas combine ultimate comfort and design at an affordable price. 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that required trying to straight jacket george the third into being a stewart absolutist monarch which he absolutely was not and so instead they needed to try to turn him into a tyrant which he also was not we know what tyrants did in the late 18th century one only had to look at russia or austria or prussia what the spanish were doing in new orleans what the french were doing in the corsica to see what despotism looked like in the 18th century and george the third was doing none of that he never arrested an american editor closed an american newspaper he didn't station armies in the american cities except for boston after 1768 he was not a tyrant in the 18th century meaning of the phrase which was cruel or despotic the boston tea party was an attempt in december 1773 to keep the price of tea high for those bostonian merchants many of whom were also smugglers to profit from and the british government wanted to allow the dumping essentially of huge amounts of tea from the east india company which was going bankrupt at the time this would have been very good for american consumers of tea because they would pay much less for their tea but this wasn't good at all for the bostonian merchants who had their men attack the ships that were bringing the tea into the harbour and threw 9 000 pounds in weight of teas tons and tons of tea into the harbour so this encouraged the lord north government in back in london to pass various tough acts called the intolerable acts in in america the coercive acts in britain against the port of boston and the province of massachusetts bay and the king was told that by the royal governors that the other provinces would not stand by massachusetts and it was one of many many appallingly bad pieces of advice that he got from his men on the ground it was always disastrous when the royal governors and other important peoples just like general sir thomas gage the commander in chief of the british army in america told the king that the americans would react meekly to the coercive acts he couldn't have got it more wrong in fact they reacted with fury and also in a unified way once the declaration of independence was published famously on the 4th of july 1776 the reaction across the 13 colonies was immediate and on the 9th of july the king's statue in the bowling green in southern manhattan was pulled down melted down to create 44 000 lead bullets for the continental army and right the way across the colonies his royal insignia was taken down and burnt he was burnt in effigy the names of various colleges and streets and even cities was changed to get rid of british monarchical nomenclature so it was a really very powerful and immediate response the british people split on a number of different lines on religious lines the anglicans being more in favor of the war the dissenters against it on class lines it tended to be a much more middle-class thing to be in favor of the war the working classes didn't much like the idea and also actually interestingly regional lines some counties supported it other counties didn't in america some one-third of the population were loyalists they didn't want the war to break out at all quite a lot of them actually raised arms against the patriot cause and the continental army so it was an element of civil war as well which explains the atrocities in all civil wars you get much worse atrocities than in normal state-on-state wars in order to try to subdue the 13 colonies the british had to send an army which never exceeded 50 000 men and for most of the war was between 30 and 35 000 men which was nothing and like enough for an enormous country of 1800 miles from top to toe it was a force that had to be given one-third of a ton of supplies per man and so that also was a tremendously difficult logistical problem to get that across the atlantic 3 000 miles of the atlantic with the royal navy especially when later on in the war these ships were being attacked and it's always very dangerous to fight against people who actually use their marksmanship to put food in their children's mouths and that was true of an awful lot of americans the actual marksmanship was something that the british army was not prepared for they were the american militiamen minutemen and later continental army soldiers were an awful lot better than the british were expecting them to be the british had a strategic plan really the only workable strategic plan of the war from the british side which was to send sir william how up the hudson valley from new york with one force at the same time sir john begoin came down from canada to albany with another and they were going to meet and thereby secure the hudson valley and cut off the new england colonies from the rest of the 13 colonies and that if it had come off might have won the war but sir william howe veered off eastwards and captured philadelphia and that led to sir john begoin being captured at saratoga in october 1777 at the time of the surrender of begoin at saratoga the public opinion which hitherto hadn't really mattered very much in in british politics suddenly became an extremely important aspect and it turned against the war the radical wigs in parliament openly sided with the americans they wore blue and buff clothes which was the color of the continental army officers and was a highly difficult moment for the whole of the of the british political setup the the government essentially was in very great danger of falling and you're listening to andrew roberts tell a heck of a story and it's true it was our first civil war more from andrew roberts the book the last king of america go to amazon or the usual suspects and buy it after these messages so so time for a sofa upgrade introducing anibay sofas where designer style meets budget-friendly prices anibay brings you the ultimate in furniture innovation with a modular design that allows you to rearrange your space effortlessly perfect for both small and large 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about to land in in britain and invade britain so instead of having 50 000 men in america we had to drop that down to 35 000 and just stay in the eastern seaboard cities that we'd already held by that stage we were to capture charleston in 1780 which in many ways was the greatest british victory of the war but it didn't change the overall balance of forces because the war was being fought in gibraltar and in the east indies and the west indies africa and so on there were any number of reasons why the american war of independence was lost by the british some military historians including me in fact think that it couldn't have ever been won after the escape of george washington from manhattan if the battle of bunker hill hadn't been such a extremely expensive pyrrhic victory for the british if valley forge had gone differently and there were more desertions and the sublime charismatic leadership of george washington had either not been there or not been so impressive then there was a chance of that rebellion being smothered in its cradle however by the time that he had got through the valley forge months it was pretty much and especially when the french turned the whole thing into a world war you know it's so much more difficult to fight on more than one front there were also lots of other problems in that the british war office hated the admiralty and vice versa lots of the generals all hated each other the generals often hated the admirals and vice versa i mean that it was quite extraordinary the amount of internal bickering that went on especially of course when it looked like it was going to be a a losing war once the british were fighting a war not just on two fronts but on five or six fronts the torrent was just too strong and george the third took a long time to recognize that actually we were going to lose the 13 colonies that they were going to become independent and that the sooner the war ended the more likely it was that we weren't going to lose any more colonies as it was we did lose some but it was a question of drawing a line before the situation got even worse the defeat was the most catastrophic strategic reverse for britain between the loss of the ungevin lands in the 15th century and the fall of france in 1940 it was deeply humiliating for the king it brought down the lord north government it was expensive both in blood and treasure and of course the loyalists over 80 000 of them had to flee the united states and they got out with their lives many of them and escaped to canada from where they helped build the second british empire in india and africa and elsewhere it was also very fortunate that the slaves who had escaped from their masters including those actually who belonged to george washington a couple of them were also allowed off in the british ships from new york to canada and so were not forced to return to their servitude but actually when one looks at the germane clan at the low level of recruitment at the hatred mutual jealousies and bickering between the departments and so on and indeed the just sheer width of the atlantic none of these were george the third's fault he can indeed slightly be faulted over the low recruitment actually because of some decisions that he supported but this was the lord north ministry getting things wrong constantly and also the generals not even supporting the plan that they put their names to so you know it's very often that king george the third is blamed for losing the american war of independence but of the 10 or so factors that did lose britain that war he was only really marginally involved in one of them i think that the real genius of the american founding was that the founding fathers did something totally exceptional in history because there are any number of other countries and peoples throughout history who have escaped oppression and set up their own country and founded their own sovereignty one thinks of the israelites escaping from the egyptians the spanish fighting the dutch the austrians and the italians the turks and the greeks you know in each case these were oppressive forces and the other people escaped from oppression what america did was to demand its own freedom and independence and sovereignty from a power that was not oppressing it from a king who was not a tyrant in any way that you can use the uh the term you know he was not cruel he was not despotic but he was somebody who had to go because america was ready for its own independence and that was proved to have been absolutely the right decision for america because a century later you were the most powerful nation in the world i think that the um sort of takeaway message is that america's demand for autonomy was more important and more powerful than anything else and certainly that george the third's so-called tyranny has to be seen in that light he was not a tyrant the declaration was wrong when it said that he was unfit to be the ruler of free people because he was the ruler of britain and we were a free people at the time article two of your constitution invests huge amounts of power in your president and i noticed last april the harvard law review argued very convincingly that in fact the present american president the imperial presidency as it has grown to become is in fact much more powerful than george the third was as king of england so unless you believe that the imperial presidency of today is a tyranny then i don't think that you can continue to believe that george the third was one and the king had learned a lot of the um of the lessons really of the american war of independence so in the french revolutionary and subsequently napoleonic wars britain was in a much better state military in fact there's nothing there's nothing better for an army than to lose a war in time for the next one because people learn from the necessity of defeat far better than from anything else so by the napoleonic wars you know we had people who were officers who were able to be chosen on their talents rather than how rich they were or where they came from in society and we had one thing that george learned was how important it was to stick to the war we didn't trust the french royalists who like the loyalists in america never really amounted to as much as was hoped for and so overall it was a better war for britain to fight and not least of course it was against the french the king was the uh was on the throne for longer than any other king of england he was on the throne for nearly 60 years but the last 10 years of which was a regency because he had gone blind and deaf and he was also senile and he was mad so the last decade of his life from uh 1810 to 1820 is a very sad and pathos ridden one where he was in uh windsor castle and no one came to visit him he played the harpsichord to himself and couldn't even hear the music writing of great britain in the king's obituary in the times it said under the guidance of georgia the third she held fast by the laws and religion of her ancestors and escaped the vortex of the french revolution on the edge of which she stood and in december 1768 john wesley wrote his whole conduct both in private and in public ever since he began his reign the uniform tenor of his behavior the general course both of his words and actions has been worthy of an englishman worthy of a christian and worthy of a king and a special thanks on the production to monty montgomery and a special thanks to andrew roberts the book the last king of america go to amazon and the usual suspects and pick up a copy and my goodness what a story about what we were really fighting about and for which was our autonomy it wasn't about money it was about us deciding for ourselves who we were and who we would become in the end the story of america here on our american stories so with amex gold you can make dining out before the big event a big event hey you made it it's been so long and earn four times membership rewards 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