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Many causes, one outcome; independence

Many causes, one outcome; independence. Cause of the Dispute.

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Many causes, one outcome; independence

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  1. Many causes, one outcome; independence

  2. Cause of the Dispute A series of actions including the Proclamation of 1763, the Sugar Act (1764), Stamp Act (1765), the Townsend Acts (1767), the Boston Massacre (1770), and the Intolerable Acts (1774) angered the colonists, straining relations with the mother country. But it was Parliament’s attempt to tax tea (Tea Act of 1773) that spurred the colonists to action and laid the groundwork for the American Revolution.

  3. Background Victory in the French and Indian War was costly for the British. At the war's conclusion in 1763, King George III and his government looked to taxing the American colonies as a way of paying for their war costs. They were also looking for ways to control the colonial governments that had become more independent while the Britain was distracted by the French and Indian War.

  4. The Proclamation of 1763 • An order issued by the King of Britain forbidding the colonists from settling the recently acquired lands west of the Appalachian Mountains. • It was issued to avoid future conflicts with the Native American Indians. Wars are EXPENSIVE.

  5. The Sugar Act 1764 • The Sugar Act was created by the King of Britain and the British Parliament in an effort to repay some of its costs from the French Indian War. • Made the colonists upset… sugar (molasses) was a product that all people enjoyed.

  6. The Quartering Act In 1765, Parliament passed the Quartering Act to save the British government money. To help enforce the Proclamation of 1763, Britain kept 10,000 troops in the colonies. Colonists had to “quarter” or provide housing, food, and supplies to the soldiers. The colonists felt that their rights were being violated.

  7. The Stamp Act • The Stamp Act was issued in 1765, at the urging of George Grenville, the British Prime Minister. • It came about because Britain was in debt from the French Indian War. The King created the tax because he felt that the colonies should help pay for the costs of the war. • The act placed a tax on all printed materials created within the colonies. • The colonists responded by boycotting British goods. Some responded violently by attacking the tax collectors, putting tar and feathers on them and sometimes worse. • It was finally repealed in 1766.

  8. Patrick Henry’s speech – “Give me liberty or give me death…” • Sons and Daughters of Liberty • Boston Massacre Various protests:

  9. The Townshend Act (1767) • The Townshend Acts created a tax on goods the colonists imported, such as paper, lead, glass, paint, and tea shipped from England and English possessions. • Merchants in Boston and New York boycotted most British goods. • . • The colonists were opposed taxation without representation. • The Townshend Acts were finally repealed in March of 1770; EXCEPT FOR THE TAXES ON TEA.

  10. “No Taxation Without Representation!”

  11. Writs of Assistance Documents that allowed British officials to search cargo ships and homes without the owner’s permission. The colonists again believed their rights were violated and continued to boycott British goods.

  12. The Boston Massacre • March 5, 1770 A merchant and one of the soldiers were arguing and some of the townspeople gathered. They began to throw snowballs and rocks at the soldiers. Soon Captain Thomas Preston and a small group of soldiers arrived. Private Hugh Montgomery of the British troops was hit by a club thrown from the crowd. When he got up, he fired into the crowd. Soon other British soldiers started firing wildly with their guns. • Five unarmed colonists killed. John Adams defended the soldiers at trial and two were found guilty and branded. • The Boston Massacre added to the hatred between the British soldiers and the colonists.

  13. Committees of Correspondence Sam Adams established a Committee of Correspondence in order to keep in close contact with people in other colonies. The committees wrote letters and pamphlets to keep other colonists informed about British activities and unpopular acts of Parliament. The committees helped to unite the colonists.

  14. The Boston Tea Party • In 1773, Parliament passed the Tea Act which lowered the price of tea; however it gave the British East India Company a monopoly on the tea trade. • The Boston Tea Party was held in December of 1773. • The Sons of Liberty held the “tea party,” in protest of the tea tax. • They dressed up as Mohawk Indians and then dumped 342 chests of tea, into the ocean.

  15. The Intolerable Acts • Also known as: The Coercive Acts. The Intolerable Acts were passed in 1774 to punish the colonists for the Boston Tea Party. • It closed the Boston Harbor until the people of Boston paid for the tea that they threw into the harbor. • The Quartering Actrequired the colonists to provide housing and supplies for the British troops. • Town meetings in Boston were limited. • Any British official accused of a crime was tried in Canada or Great Britain not the colonies.

  16. First Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia

  17. The First Continental Congress • September - October 1774, every colony but Georgia sent representatives to what is now called the First Continental Congress. • They signed a petition demanding the Intolerable Acts be repealed and the colonies should be able to tax themselves. • Patrick Henry of Virginia made a speech. It was from this speech that his famous quote comes: "I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!“ • The colonies were encouraged to form militias and continue to boycott British goods and to meet again in May 1775.

  18. The Shot Heard Around the World April 19, 1775, 700 British soldiers met 70 minutemen at Lexington. A shot was fired. Eight colonists were killed and one British soldier wounded. Paul Revere and William Dawes rode to warn the minutemen. Concord: The British met 4,000 minutemen drove the British back to Boston, killing 73 of them and wounding another 200.

  19. Paul Revere’s Midnight Ride

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