By 1689, the land occupied by the American colonists stretched some one thousand miles along the Atlantic Coast, but the settlers hugged the water. They had their backs to the continent and their eyes toward England. Most Colonists considered themselves transplanted Englishmen.
The Colonists saw themselves as communities that must become viable communities in their inception. They accomplished this by being self-determined. After all, when the settlers came to America, they found out that it was them and not the crown that was going to protect them at first. They had to set up local governments capable of regulating their lives and protecting them from enemies.
The Colonists were, therefore, alone in the New World. They were the pioneers, and as pioneers, they had to become independent and capable of doing things themselves.
English institutions and practices had to change and adapt to this new environment if the settlers expected to survive. Institutions such as guilds, parliamentary autocracy, suffrage, and the like had to change to meet the harsh life of the New World. The people had to become more democratic, tolerant, and, above all, they had to learn other "trade methods" such as farming and carpentry if they wanted to live and survive in America.
American society changed, but it was not only due to the environment. It was also because of three major revolutions that took place before the American Revolution. These revolutions began with the Glorious Revolution, where Parliament gained executive authority to complement and strengthen its legislative authority.
The second revolution was the diplomatic revolution in Europe. At the end of the French and Indian War, Britain became the most powerful nation in the world. She could no longer practice balance of power politics because of her new status in the family of nations. Now, everyone else would be her enemy.
The final revolution happened in America itself. It was the maturation -- politically, economically, and culturally of the English Colonies.
These three Revolutions would cause friction between America and Britain. Even the British recognized the new situation, but they failed to implement experimentation in the administration of the colonies. When America became a nation, the political practices present became institutionalized into the Constitution.
Direct representative government, the distribution of power between the respective levels of government, the significant role of the local government, and the evolution of a political structure that was eventually institutionalized are all the legacies of the formative years of the Colonial character of America.
Thus, the ideas and practices transplanted from the Old World to the New were modified by experience to emerge as American principles, redefined particularly in the crisis of revolution, but predictable within the framework of provincial society.