History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution

History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution is a book by Mercy Otis Warren. Warren was a correspondent and adviser to many political leaders of the Revolutionary period, including Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and especially John Adams, who became her literary mentor in the years leading to the Revolution. It was published in three volumes, totalling 1,317 pages. Her magnum opus, the book covers the whole Revolutionary period, from the Stamp Act to the events leading to the writing and ratification of the United States Constitution. The book is written in a personal style, but, as is many of Warren's works, it is written in the third person. The book contained still-controversial views about the Revolution, including her idea that the Battle of Yorktown, the final battle of the Revolution, really wasn't a battle at all. Roughly one-third of the book concerns events after Yorktown.

Warren wrote drafts of the book during the events as they unfolded, and had it published after four years of additions in 1805. She credited the delay to health problems, temporary bouts of blindness, and grief at the death of three of her five sons.

President Thomas Jefferson ordered copies of the books for himself and his cabinet and wrote "her truthful and insightful account of the last thirty years will furnish a more instructive lesson to mankind than any equal period known in history." An 1851 Christmas Eve fire destroyed almost two thirds of the books that Jefferson had sold to the Library of Congress in 1815. The flames almost claimed the book as noted by the singeing of the title page.

On his part, John Adams considered it to be a radical simplification, and sometimes a falsification, of the true history of the Revolution. After its publication, Adams and Warren exchanged a somewhat hysterical series of letters debating the issue ferociously, especially Adams's part in the Revolution.

Literary influences
Similarities between ideas and phraseology in Warren's History and the Book of Mormon have led some to conclude that the Book of Mormon's author, Joseph Smith (born 1805) may have had access to History. See Origin of the Book of Mormon.