Negative, ghostwriter.
The seeds for the American Revolution were first sown in what's called the Radical Reformation. I'd recommend one do the digging, but you can see how the early Reformers like Luther, Zwingli, and others favored state-sanctioned faith. Then come the Calvins and others who felt the same. However, school of Calvin (and then Calvinism) greatly influenced the early English Baptists, but then so did the Anabaptist thought in the strand known as the General Baptists. Very long story short, the Baptists, Congregationalists and even the Puritain/Presbyterian presence all held ideals that were passed down from these two strands. IMHO, as Calvinist soteriology divorced from full Calvinism (ecclesiology, sacraments, etc) then it wedded itself to Baptistic and Scottish Presbyterian influences. Thus we have the Glorious Revolution in England, which failed, as a sort of harbinger of the American Revolution, which suceeded quite wildly.
The linkage is evident in things like the Geneva Bible which saw the Pope as the antichrist often because of the amount of power the papacy held. This was ultimately trained on the Church of England and finally Anglicanism in America. Of course the establishment Anglicans would have been Loyalists, but you could really see the intensity of this play out in the Southern colonies, where the American Revolution looked much more like a Civil War. Notable in this were that many of the Generals and guerrillas of the war were Presbyterians. I think I remember Thomas Sumter being a Presbyterian. I know Colonel Pickens was a Presbyterian and the famed Francis "SwampFox" Marion was a Huguenot.
Here's further evidence from the Journal of the American Revolution:
http://allthingsliberty.com/2013/09/presbyterian-rebellion/
A Wikipedia list of clergy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_clergy_in_the_American_Revolution
Quite a few American founding fathers were Calvinist as well. It's all very interesting.