1 / 45

The American Revolution (1775-1783)

The American Revolution (1775-1783). Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies?. Pontiac’s Rebellion-1763 Chief Pontiac attacks western settlements Angry at western settlement No gifts from British Destroyed forts and settlements

mbruce
Download Presentation

The American Revolution (1775-1783)

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. The American Revolution (1775-1783)

  2. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Pontiac’s Rebellion-1763 • Chief Pontiac attacks western settlements • Angry at western settlement • No gifts from British • Destroyed forts and settlements • British regulars not American militia put down rebellion

  3. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • George Grenville’s Program, 1763-1765 • King George II died in 1760 • Succeeded by his grandson King George III • Gave ministers within the government more power • 1763: Prime Minister George Grenville • Bad financial crisis • Bad wars • English citizens already highly taxed • Determined American colonists needed to pay more • Goal: reform the trading relationship

  4. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • George Grenville’s Program, 1763-1765 • Currency Act 1764: Made it illegal to print paper money in the colonies • Lack of hard currency in colonies • Sugar Act 1764: • Colonies were importing large amounts of French molasses • Increased the penalties for colonial smuggling • Forced payment of British duty on molasses • Colonial economies were suffering after Seven Years War/French and Indian War • Policies made it worse

  5. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Stamp Act 1765: • Required colonists to purchase special stamped paper for every legal document, license, newspaper, pamphlet, almanac • Imposed stamp duties on playing cards and dice

  6. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Stamp Act Protests: • Sons of Liberty organized to secretly protest the Stamp Act • Samuel Adams • Colonial Assemblies pass laws to circumvent Stamp Act • Stamp Act Congress: issued the Declaration of rights and Grievances • Stated that Parliament lacked the power to impose taxes on the colonies because colonists were not represented in Parliament • Boycott British goods • 1776 Parliament repeals the Stamp Act

  7. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Declaratory Act 1766: asserted Parliament’s full right to make laws that have the power to bind the colonies in all cases

  8. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Second Phase-1767-1773 • Townshend Acts 1767: • 1766: King George III appoints William Pitt Prime Minister • Charles Townshend=Chancellor of the Exchequer • Indirect taxes levied on imported materials • Ex: glass, lead, paint, paper • Mostly importantly tea • Colonial reaction: • Boycott • British reaction: • Stationed British troops in Boston • Repealed 1770

  9. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Boston Massacre 1770

  10. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • 1770-1773: Calming in relations between the British and the colonies • Import duties collected • Tea tax in effect • Committee of Correspondence established by Samuel Adams • The Gaspee

  11. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Boston Tea Party 1773: • Tea Act- East India Company given concessions in colonial tea business • Shuts out colonial merchants

  12. Aim: How did acts of Parliament lead to increased tensions between Britain and the American colonies? • Intolerable Acts (Coercive Acts): 1774 • Port Act: Shut down Boston harbor • Massachusetts Government Act • Administration of Justice Act • Quartering Act: authorized British commanders to house soldiers in vacant private homes • General Thomas Gage appointed the new governor of Massachusetts • Martial law: rule imposed by military forces

  13. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • First Continental Congress 1774 • 56 delegates • Philadelphia • Declaration of Rights and Grievances • Colonists would not object to measures designed to regulate their external commerce • Resist any measures that taxed them without consent • Colonies have the right to run their own affairs • Supported protests • British use of force would should warrant colonial use of force • Agreed to reconvene if demands were not met

  14. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • First Continental Congress 1774 • Suffolk Resolves: colonies would continue to boycott English imports and approve the efforts of Massachusetts to operate a colonial government free from British control until Intolerable Acts were rescinded • Raise and train their own militia • Only Georgia didn’t have a representative there • agreed to meet again in 1775

  15. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Fighting at Lexington and Concord: • Minutemen: or civilian soldiers that began to stockpile firearms and gunpowder • General Gage sends troops toward Concord to investigate the stockpiling of firearms • Goal: seize supplies and capture Sam Adams and John Hancock. • Paul Revere, William Dawes, Samuel Prescott warn that the British are coming • Battle of Lexington

  16. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution?

  17. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Second Continental Congress 1775: • Goal: Debate colonists next move and get colonies ready for war • Created a Continental Army • John Adams radical plan (Massachusetts): • Each colony set up their own government • Declare colonies independent • Name a general to lead the Continental Army • John Dickenson moderate plan (Pennsylvania): • Called for reconciliation

  18. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Second Continental Congress 1775: (cont.) • Appointed George Washington General of the Continental Army • Printing of paper money to pay troops • Committee to deal with foreign nations

  19. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Olive Branch Petition 1775: • Urged a return to “former harmony” between Britain and colonies • British reaction: • King George III rejected the petition • Stated colonies are in state of rebellion • Ordered naval blockade of American coast

  20. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Thomas Paine’s –Common Sense: • Published anonymously • Called for independence • Economic and social opportunities for all • Increase trade with foreign nations • Creation of a society free of tyranny

  21. Aim: How did the tensions between Britain and the colonists lead to start of the American Revolution? • Battle of Bunker Hill: • 450 colonists die • Over 1000 British • Deadliest battle of the war

  22. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Thomas Jefferson drafts the Declaration of Independence: • Promotes natural rights of “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” • Government power derived from the governed • Influenced by Enlightenment ideas • Right to abolish governments that challenge unalienable rights • All men are created equal • July 4, 1776 Declaration of Independence adopted

  23. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Loyalists: • those who opposed independence and remained loyal to the Crown • Patriots: supporters of independence

  24. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Imperial Strengths and Weaknesses • Britain had the heavy advantage: • 7.5 million people to America’s 2 million • superior naval power • great wealth • Some 30,000 Hessians (German mercenaries) were also hired by George III • Weakness: • no desire to kill their American cousins • Provisions were often scarce • America was also expansive

  25. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • American Pluses and Minuses • Advantages • Americans had great leaders like George Washington, and Ben Franklin • French aid (indirect) • guns, supplies, gunpowder • Marquis de Lafayette • The colonials were fighting in a defensive way • self-sustaining • better marksmen • moral advantage in fighting for a just cause

  26. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • American Pluses and Minuses • Disadvantages • Americans were terribly lacking in unity • colonies resented the Continental Congress’ attempt at exercising power • Sectional jealousy • Inflation

  27. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Defeat in New York: • General William Howe and Admiral Richard Howe lay siege to New York • Plan was to isolate New England • Washington forced to retreat

  28. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Battle of Trenton: • Victory for Washington • Surprises the British Hessian (mercenary soldiers)

  29. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • British fight for Philadelphia: • General Howe and the British capture Philadelphia • Continental Congress flees city

  30. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Battle of Saratoga:(Turning Point of American Revolution) • American colonists are victorious • General Horatio Gates • General Howe never meets up with General Burgoyne “Gentlemen Johnny” • Result: • British troops do not venture to far inland for the remainder of the war • International aid to American Revolutionaries increase • French convinced to openly wage war against Great Britain

  31. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • Valley Forge 1777-1778

  32. Aim: How did the signing of the Declaration of Independence lead to opposing factions within the colonies? • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIZBPpAJcNA

  33. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • European allies: • Friedrich von Steuben (Prussian) • Helped train colonial soldiers • Stand at attention • Execute field maneuvers • Fire and reload quickly • Wield bayonets

  34. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • European allies: (cont.) • Marquis de Lafayette (French) • French reinforces key to winning the war

  35. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • British change strategy 1778: • Shift operations to southern colonies • Goal: • Rally Loyalist support • Reclaim former colonies • Slowly fight way back north

  36. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • British change strategy 1778: (cont.) • British success in the South 1780 • General Charles Cornwallis • Capture Georgia and South Carolina • British loses in the South 1781 • Nathaniel Greene and Daniel Morgan lead Continental Army • Succeed at weaken British forces • Redcoats surrender at Cowpens, South Carolina

  37. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • British surrender at Yorktown: • French reinforcements help to defeat Cornwallis at Yorktown • October 17, 1781 Cornwallis surrenders

  38. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • Treaty of Paris1783: • John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay negotiate treaty • Recognize American independence • Set boundaries of nation • Atlantic Ocean to Mississippi River • Canada to Florida • Treaty does not specify when British would evacuate American forts • British could collect debts

  39. Aim: How did international aid help the American colonists win the Revolution? • Impact: • Revolutionary ideals set a new course for American society • Class distinctions began to blur • Rise of egalitarianism • Ability, effort, and virtue • No increased rights for women or slaves • Native American interests in jeopardy • Set out to establish a Republic

More Related