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French Areas – Quebec, St. Lawrence River Valley, Great Lakes, Mississippi River Interested in fur trading not colonies Better relationship with the Indians.

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Presentation on theme: "French Areas – Quebec, St. Lawrence River Valley, Great Lakes, Mississippi River Interested in fur trading not colonies Better relationship with the Indians."— Presentation transcript:

1 French Areas – Quebec, St. Lawrence River Valley, Great Lakes, Mississippi River Interested in fur trading not colonies Better relationship with the Indians English colonies want to expand and farm ( soil depletion ) Indians resist the English expansion and ally with the French

2  Old Rivalry – Multiple wars fought between French and English in past centuries  1754 – conflict ignites again as French building forts near the Virginia border  Virginia Gov’t sends George Washington to fight against the French)

3  The French easily defeat Washington and his militia  Victory will eventually be won by the English  Treaty of Paris, 1763 – France loses almost all lands in North America (Louisiana)

4  Indians in the Ohio Valley revolt against the British forts  Conflict become costly for Britain  Proclamation of 1764 – States that no colonist could cross the Appalachian Mtns.  Colonist ignore the law and continue to provoke the Indians

5  British are heavily in debt b/c of the war and keeping a British Army in America  Trading restrictions are passed to levy duties ( collect taxes ), smugglers avoid taxes  Sugar Act – affected merchants and traders; protests began against “taxation without representation”, James Otis

6  Parliament Passes the Stamp Act – Places a direct tax on the colonist SAS Interactivity  required stamp on all legal documents, newspapers, licenses, cards  taxed the rich and the poor  Quartering Act, 1765 – placed military in the homes of the colonist

7  Sons of Liberty – group of colonist that secretly harassed and led protests; Boston – Sam Adams and John Adams  No taxation without representation  Stamp Agents – bill collectors were harassed  Law Repealed

8  Townshend Acts  new tax placed on imports such as tea, glass, paper, and paint  Colonists again reacted with protests  British reacted by sending more troops

9  March 1770 – British soldiers are being harassed by Boston townsfolk  British Guns – British fire on the crowd, 5 die, Crispus Attucks is the first to fall  John Adams – represents the soldiers in court, most are found not guilty

10  Taxes on Tea – lowered the tax but it was enforced  Monopoly on tea given to British Tea Companies  Dec. 1773 – Colonist raided Boston harbor dressed as Indians and threw the British tea into the harbor before setting the British ships on fire

11  Coercive Acts (Intolerable Acts) – laws passed as a reaction to the Tea Party  Punishments –  Closed the Boston Harbor until tea was repaid  Suspended basic civil rights – writ of habeas corpus  Placed more soldiers in the homes  Colonial Reaction – Began the Committees of Correspondence, which spread the word through the colonies, colonial militias form

12  1 st Continental Congress SAS Interactivity  1774 – 1 st meeting in Philadelphia to discuss the rights of the colonies, Dickenson of Penn wants peace; agree to meet again in one year

13  April 1775 – British try to seize weapons stored in Concord  Riders – Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Samuel Prescott ride to warn colonist (Redcoats are coming)  Conflict – minutemen met British on the road at Lexington  Guerilla Warfare – colonial militia battle the British along the road to Concord

14  May 1775 – Called for an army and appointed Washington as leader  Doves – some call for Peace (Dickenson of Penn)

15  At the Second Continental Congress, some delegates wanted independence. Others still felt loyal to Britain.  Thomas Paine’s pamphlet Common Sense swayed public opinion toward independence. Finally, the Second Continental Congress agreed.

16  June 1775 – Colonist establish a position on Breeds Hill overlooking Boston  Ammo – British charge the hill 3 times, deadliest battle of the war, Colonial retreat due to lack of ammo

17  July 1775 – 2 nd Continental Congress sends King George a petition to return to the peace of the past  King George – refuses the petition and urges the rebellion be put down in the most severe fashion

18  Loyalist – people still loyal to the King and crown  Patriots – people in support of Independence  Common Sense – written by Thomas Paine in Jan. 1776 urging independence for the colonies

19  June of 1776 – Congress was debating Independence  Richard Henry Lee – Proposes a formal declaration be written  Committee appointed to work on the document (Adams, Jefferson, Franklin)  Purpose of the Document  Think pair share 25 sec

20  Explain – to give the reasons for independence  Thomas Jefferson – writes most of the document with Congress editing the final version  July 4, 1776 – The document is finalized and issued

21  The Declaration said that the purpose of government is to protect the rights of the people.  Government is based on consent of the people. If it disregards their rights or their will, the people are entitled to change or overthrow it.  The Second Continental Congress approved the Declaration on July 4, 1776.

22  Jefferson – took many ideas from the Enlightened Thinkers  John Locke – Natural Rights and the Social Contract  Rousseau – all men are created equal  Enlightenment Philosophers Sas Interactivity

23  Reasons for the declaration – listed specific grievances against the King and Parliament; does not describe any particular form of gov’t for the new nation  List of possible reasons w/shoulder partner  Look in book p. compare and see how close you were

24  Loyalists – those who remained loyal to the King, often called Tories

25  Patriots – those who supported the move for independence; risked everything because they could be hanged as traitors

26  British Early – British capture all of the major colonial cities – New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Charleston  Washington’s Retreat – Washington’s army began the retreat after the defeat of New York

27  Undecided – as many as a third of the colonists were undecided as to whether independence or remaining as part of England was best for them  Now choose sides and create a propaganda poster to bolster support for either the Tories or Patriots

28  British Early Strategy – To cut the head off of the snake, divide the New England colonies (troublemakers) from the others  Map of British strategy

29  ROE  Usually they would meet in a field (open ground)  March in formation (30-60yrds)  Fired volley on command reload. Brown Bess v. American Rifle  Field Artillery  Guerilla tactics (minutemen)

30  Not many – just enough to keep the hope alive  Dec 1776 – Trenton; British are upset at the tactics of the Rebels.  Jan 1777 – Princeton; again not playing by the rules  Revolutionary war battle!!!!!!!!!

31  The Battle of Saratoga – Large British force is defeated at Saratoga in Oct 1777; gave France and the rest of Europe reason to support the war in America

32  Campsite – Washington’s army spent the winter of ‘77-’78  British forces occupied nearby cities  Starvation – many of the American soldiers died of cold and starvation

33  Congress – struggled to gain supplies for the forces; lack of gov’t  Think pair share: How might these problems influence the formation of future gov

34  Inflation – prices soared in the colonies and shortages occurred  Women – took over the main jobs of men who were at war

35  France – Marquis de Lafayette led a volunteer army from France  Prussia – Friedrich von Steuben trained patriot soldiers  Casmir Pulaski – led and trained American soldiers

36  Southern Strategy – the British tried to divide the southern colonies  Charleston – Captured by Cornwallis  Kings Mountain – Won by the Patriots; kept the British out of North Carolina  Cowpens – Patriot victory

37  Battle of Guilford Courthouse – costly British victory, signaled the retreat of Cornwallis  Yorktown – Cornwallis is surrounded by America and its allies

38  French – French navy controls the coast line and won’t allow Cornwallis to escape by sea  Washington – drives hard from the northwest  Green – driving up out of the southwest

39  Treaty of Paris, 1783 – recognized US independence  set boundaries between Canada and the US, set boundaries to the Mississippi  Will not resolve issues that will re-surface

40  Liberty, Freedom, Equality, Opportunity  Belief in a greater cause  Set a precedent for the American future


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