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Written by: Greg Clevenger

Written by: Greg Clevenger. The Story Thus Far. European nations were competing with each other for: World resources Military strength Political superiority Some nations were upsetting the balance of power. Overview. Also called War for Independence

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Written by: Greg Clevenger

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  1. Written by: Greg Clevenger

  2. The Story Thus Far • European nations were competing with each other for: • World resources • Military strength • Political superiority • Some nations were upsetting the balance of power

  3. Overview • Also called War for Independence • Started in 1775 in Lexington and Concord Massachusetts • Caused America to separate from Great Britain • Ended in 1783

  4. Major Causes • The French and Indian War • The Sugar Act • The Stamp Act

  5. The French and Indian War—1754 • Rivalry between the French and British • Who will control North America? • British, colonists, and Native American allies fought French and Native American allies

  6. The French and Indian War—1754 • Great Britain’s national debt nearly doubled during the war • British expected Americans to help pay for protection • The war lasted nine years

  7. The Sugar Act - 1764 • First attempt to raise income from the Colonies • Duty on sugar and molasses not obtained from Britain • Smuggling cases tried in Great Britain

  8. The Stamp Act—1765 • Official government stamp required • First internal tax paying for British protection

  9. More Major Causes • The Townshend Acts • Boston Massacre • Boston Tea Party • The Intolerable Acts

  10. The Townshend Acts—1767 • Import duties on tea, lead, glass, and paint colors • Money used to pay royal governors • “No taxation without representation” Townshend

  11. Boston Massacre—1770 • Crowd of colonists threaten British soldiers • British open fire killing five Americans

  12. Boston Tea Party—1773 • British sold tea even more cheaply than smuggled tea • Colonists dressed up as Mohawks • Colonists boarded tea ships • Tea was dumped overboard

  13. Primary Source Activity • Groups of 4 • 2 newspaper sources, 2 “eyewitness accounts” • Each person reads one • As a group, come up with a timeline of events for the Boston Tea Party, as well as a one paragraph summary of the event using evidence from your texts

  14. The Intolerable Acts—1774 • Closed the Port of Boston • American town meetings banned • British officials in trouble sent to Great Britain for trial

  15. First Continental Congress • 56 Delegates • Included George Washington, Patrick Henry and Sam Adams • Direct response to Intolerable Acts • Met in Philadelphia – 1774

  16. Primary Source Activity With a partner, read through the document and answer the questions following it.

  17. Colonists Agreed To: • Boycott British goods • Arm themselves and form militias • Appeal to the king

  18. King George III Refused To: • Allow American colonist representation in Parliament • No respond to colonists’ complaints and official grievances King George III

  19. “The Shot Heard Round the World” • American colonists stockpiled weapons in Concord, Massachusetts • 800 British troops marched through Lexington on the way to Concord • Paul Revere: “The British are coming!” • Known as the Battle of Lexington and Concord • Uncertain which side fired first • 50 Americans killed and 45 wounded or missing • 65 British killed and 208 wounded or missing

  20. Second Continental Congress • Decided to officially separate from Britain • Committee selected to draft the reasons for separation • Thomas Jefferson selected to write document • Met in Philadelphia

  21. The Declaration of Independence • Written by Thomas Jefferson • It is the “Birth Certificate of the United States” • Document listed rights and grievances against King George III • 4 parts • Preamble • Declaration of rights • List of Grievances • Resolution

  22. Key Quotes in the Declaration • “We hold these truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal” • “That they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights” • “That among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” Locke

  23. The Declaration of Independence • John Hancock first to sign in large print • Anyone who signed it and was caught would be hanged • “We must all now hang together, or most assuredly we will all hang separately." —Benjamin Franklin Hancock

  24. Choosing Sides • Patriots – Supported the Revolution • Loyalists – Americans who supported the King • Red Coats/ Lobsterbacks – British Army

  25. Patriots (aka Rebels) • Minority Movement: 30-40% • Younger • Felt recent British laws on violated their rights as British citizens (e.g. taxing without consent, quartering soldiers in citizens’ homes, and denying colonists the right to a trial, trade restrictions). • Many live in the New England Colonies, especially Massachusetts • Most numerous in Presbyterian & Congregationalist areas

  26. Loyalists (aka Tories) • About 20%- 30% • Educated • Aristocratic (wealthy) • Older • Wealthy landowners • People who benefitted from the crown: Anglican clergymen, king’s officers • People with close business or political ties to Britain

  27. Revolutionary Armies – The British • British Army most powerful in world • Also well-equipped with weapons • Highly trained and disciplined for war on land or high seas

  28. British Advantages • Well-equipped • Disciplined • Strongest navy

  29. British Leaders • General Charles Cornwallis • General John Burgoyne • Benedict Arnold • William Howe • All considered America one of the worst places to serve

  30. Revolutionary Armies – The Americans • Revolutionary Army knew lay of the land • Used weapons appropriate for landscape • Wore pieces of different uniforms • Brown army clothing

  31. American Advantages • Accuracy of the rifle • Knowledge of the land • Guerilla warfare tactics • Superb command

  32. Military Leaders—American • George Washington: Commander of Americans Forces • Nathanael Greene: Top Strategist • Henry Knox: Artillery Expert • Benedict Arnold: Commander under Washington

  33. Both sides used propaganda in the war Propaganda: information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote or publicize a particular political cause or point of view. Propaganda

  34. Your Task • You have descriptions of different techniques that advertisers use for propaganda. Read over them • Choose one event that led to the American Revolution and create a propaganda poster about that event. Choose a side to support and make that clear in your poster! • MUST include text and visuals!

  35. John Paul Jones Battle of Yorktown—1781 • French blockade aided this final battle • Escape for the British was impossible • British General Cornwallis faced American forces approximately twice his size

  36. Yorktown

  37. Yorktown • Approximately 8,700 British troops surrendered • Pinned in by American and French Naval fleets • General Benjamin Lincoln accepted the surrender sword • British bands played “The World has Turned Upside Down”

  38. British Peace Efforts • Throughout the war, and especially as the American armies began to gain steam, the British made attempts at peace. • You will read through the British Peace efforts and fill in the chart • Then you will read about the colonists response and fill in the chart

  39. The Treaty of Paris • 1783: The Treaty of Paris officially ends the Revolutionary War

  40. Treaty of Paris • With a partner, read through the Treaty of Paris which ended the Revolutionary war. • Together, fill in the chart

  41. The Treaty of Paris—1783 • Officially ended the American Revolution • Set many geographic borders, including U.S. and Canada • Florida was returned to Spain • British merchants must be paid for lost items • Loyalists must be paid for lost property

  42. The Aftermath: • Penalties inflicted on Loyalists • Some Loyalists were “tarred and feathered” and put on ships bound for Canada or Great Britain

  43. The Articles of Confederation • Written by John Dickson in 1777 • Ratified in 1781 • Governed Americans in 1781-1787 • Paved way for new Constitution

  44. Articles of Confederation Video Single click screen to view video:

  45. Strengths • Wage war • Issue money • Sign treaties (make peace) • Set up post offices • Appoint ambassadors • Settle conflicts between states

  46. Weaknesses • NO President (Executive) • NO Army • NO Courts (Judicial) • NO Taxing Power (monetary problems) • No power to enforce laws (regulate trade) • States were sovereign • One vote per state regardless of population • 9/13 states to pass a law • 13/13 states to amend (make changes)

  47. Effects/Results/Outcomes Northwest Ordinance of 1787 • Set up rules for statehood once 60,000 people • Outlawed slavery in new states (Northwest territories) • Free education in new states

  48. Effects/Results/Outcomes Shays Rebellion • Led by former Continental army captain Daniel Shay • Farmers wanted government to stop taking their land • Formed an army that attacked local militias • Made Americans frightened of more uprisings. • Showed that the Articles could not protect them.

  49. Concluding Thoughts • Eight years • Timeless impact • Subject of countless plays and films • Maker of heroes • Birth of a nation

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