Ben F. answered 05/18/25
MSc, MA, BA, specialist in Economic History and History of Thought.
The simple answer here is that the American Revolution least follows the model. This is to say that the Brinton's presumptive pattern has the revolution end in some form of Bonapartist dictatorship.
The American Revolution ended rather with a rule of law based constitutional order, albeit with chattel slavery left in-tact in much of the country and large portions of the inhabitants of the North American continent disenfranchised.
It is interesting to consider that, in some of the states which comprised the Confederacy during the US Civil War, the pattern might be considered to have been more closely followed, with the northern army and mass uprisings tearing apart the foundations of the slaveocracy culminating in the period of Radical Reconstruction. However, subsequent to the Reconstruction period, a reactionary order was set in place through draconian violence and intimidation. The democratic rights of many inhabitants of these "Southern States" were held in check until they were challenged by mass social action and changing political economic conditions three quarters of a century later.