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Towards the American Revolution

Towards the American Revolution. The colonies in 1750. An outpost with a few small cities Hierarchy and stratification The countryside 95% of the population Running out of land. Colonial politics. The Glorious Revolution of 1688 “English liberties” The role of royal governors

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Towards the American Revolution

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  1. Towards the American Revolution

  2. The colonies in 1750 • An outpost with a few small cities • Hierarchy and stratification • The countryside • 95% of the population • Running out of land

  3. Colonial politics • The Glorious Revolution of 1688 • “English liberties” • The role of royal governors • colonial assemblies • “little parliaments”

  4. Imperial economic policy • Mercantilism • Theory • Navigation Acts • Rules, regulations, enumerated goods, and enforcement • Real benefits • Significance

  5. “awash in a sea of faith” • The Great Awakening • A long-term process, late 1730s to 1740s • Jonathan Edwards • Northampton, Mass. • Crisis • Predestination • Emotional conversion experiences

  6. The “Grand Itinerant” • George Whitefield • His message • The implications • Opposition to the “New Lights” • Why? • Who cares?

  7. The French and Indian War • Albany Plan of Union • Inter-colonial cooperation • Rejection • American national identity • Differences • Inter-colonial similarities • “American”

  8. Grenville’s Reforms • The Sugar Act (1764) • Increased duties • Vice-admiralty courts • The Currency Act (1764) • The Quartering Act (1765) • The Stamp Act (1765) • Isaac Barre (pictured) • The Declaratory Act (1766)

  9. English radicalism • English Whigs • Glorious Revolution of 1688 • Aristotle • Real Whigs • John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon • Vigilance • Virtue • Cato’s Letters (1721)

  10. The Townshend Acts (May 1767) • The Suspending Act • The Revenue Act • External tax • American Board of Customs Commissioners • Revived fears

  11. American responses • House of Burgesses • Patrick Henry and the “Virginia Resolves” • Massachusetts General Court • Calls for a Stamp Act Congress • Crowd actions • Sons of Liberty

  12. Crowd actions • In Boston • Effigies • Destruction of property • Goals/symbolism • In New York City • Fort George • Cadwallader Colden • Destruction of property • Goals/symbolism

  13. Committees of Inspection • “enemies to the Liberties of America”

  14. American responses • Confusion and weariness • No clear unity • Nonimportation • Merchants (such as “A Trader”) • “Save your money, and you save your country” • John Dickinson • Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania • Tone • Proposals and message

  15. The redcoats arrive • General Thomas Gage • Trouble • Discipline/desertion • Behavior • “Journal of the Times”

  16. More trouble • The “Body” • Theophilus Lillie • Ebenezer Richardson • Christopher Seider • Resentment • John Gray’s ropewalk (March 2, 1770)

  17. The Massacre (March 5, 1770) • King Street, 8PM • Edward Gerrish • Private Hugh White • King Street, 9PM • Captain Thomas Preston • Richard Palmes • Private Hugh Montgomery

  18. The Tea Act (1773) • Paradox • Reality vs. reception • Sons of Liberty and mass meetings • Committees of the “people,” threats, and violence • Boston Tea Party • Mass meetings • Radical leadership

  19. The Intolerable Acts • Boston Port Act • Massachusetts Government Act • Impartial Administration of Justice Act • Quartering Act of 1774 • Quebec Act

  20. American Response • First Continental Congress (Sept.-Oct. 1774) • Suffolk Resolves • Continental Association • Divisions • Who cares?

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