1 / 18

Independence Day

Independence Day. Towards Independence. January, 1776 Washington and Knox struggle to organize the new Continental Army… …a 39 year old writer named Thomas Paine sets fire to the American imagination with a booklet called Common Sense. Common Sense. Paine’s Common Sense argued:

macy
Download Presentation

Independence Day

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Independence Day

  2. Towards Independence • January, 1776 • Washington and Knox struggle to organize the new Continental Army… • …a 39 year old writer named Thomas Paine sets fire to the American imagination with a booklet called Common Sense

  3. Common Sense • Paine’s Common Sense argued: • It made no sense for an island to rule a continent • America is not a “British Nation” but composed of people from all over • Britain’s treatment of the colonies was so poor that independence was necessary

  4. The Great Debate • A national debate began, with sides arguing passionately for and against independence • Even Congress was divided

  5. The Committee • John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson agreed to write a “statement on independency” • Everyone wanted Adams to write it… • Adams however had a special talent…

  6. John Adams • John Adams was very good at recognizing the talents in others: • It was Adams who nominated George Washington to serve as commander-in-chief • Adams had the wisdom to marry a woman, Abigail, who he realized was his intellectual equal (and in many ways smarter than he was) • Recognized that Thomas Jefferson was a better writer and should draft the statement

  7. Unalienable Rights • UNALIENABLE RIGHTS: these are rights so fundamental and basic that they cannot be taken away from you • In the new United States your unalienable rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness

  8. The Consent of the Governed • THE CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED: the idea that government gets its power from the PERMISSION OF THE PEOPLE • The people have the right to take this permission away!!! • That whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it

  9. The Right of Revolution • Governments, long established, should not be changed for light and transient causes… • But when a long train of abuses…evinces a design to reduce you under absolute Despotism, it is your right…it is your duty, to throw off such Government

  10. Holy Smokes!!! • Jefferson states: if your government is being tyrannical, or abusive, you have the right to rebel and overthrow that government • The rest of the Declaration of Independence is a list of reasons why the colonies are rebelling against Great Britain

  11. Independence Day • The Declaration of Independence is finished and approved on July 2, 1776 • Two more days pass before it is signed and announced to the world • The United States of America is formed July 4, 1776

  12. Declaration of Independence • There is one small (well huge problem) with the Declaration of Independence • “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness”: • Close to 20% of the American population are slaves • Do the words of the Declaration apply to them as well?

  13. Day of Judgment • Virtually all of the Founding Fathers owned slaves: • Jefferson himself owned 100 • Washington owned 200 • Jefferson wrote a provision in the Declaration of Independence calling for the abolition of slavery • The Founders compromised: to get southern colonies to vote for independence, they took the provision out

  14. Trouble Ahead • Adams is one of the few founding fathers who actively campaigned against slavery • Refused to compromise • Warned the Continental Congress that this issue would come back to tear the Union apart • “History will not judge us kindly.” –John Adams

  15. Hang Together or Hang Separately • The Declaration of Independence was an act of treason against the British Crown • Many people did not even consider themselves “American,” rather, they considered themselves to be British • All fifty-five signers of the Declaration would be hanged for treason if any of them were caught • Their only hope now: win the war at all costs

More Related