There's this odd thing said (well I find it odd) that the language was put to a vote and German was almost chosen! That, I find very hard to believe - and that it would even get voted on at all. Does anyone believe there was a lot of German spoken by the early immigrant settlers?
It's hard to believe because it's not true - although it's a persistent urban myth. What happened was that there was a request that some laws in Virginia could be translated into German for the benefit of German settlers. The vote was merely on whether this request could be discussed and was rejected by one vote. So, no German didn't even close to being adopted as an official language - in fact, there is no "official" language of the US, English happens to be the most widely spoken ... for now.
Whenever in the company of our cousins across the I always refer to American Civil War as the 2nd British Civil War, they dont like that, or the fact that during said war the British proclaimed freedom for the slaves.
I thought I was the only Brit who wound up the septics with the 2nd Civil War jibe. It's a good one - mainly because it's true.
The other great myth is that the Boston Tea Party was a protest against taxation from the British, when it was really an attempt by Boston merchants to turn back cheap tea (and other imports) from Britain as they undercut their profits. Of course, this was a manifestation of colonialism too as the cheap tea came from their Asian colonies but the whole story is not quite as romantic as current US right-wingers try to portray it.