Winning the Peace - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Winning the Peace

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Title: Winning the Peace


1
Winning the Peace
  • Chapter 7. Pgs. 169-178

The painting is unfinished because the British
delegation refused to pose.
2
Introduction
  • Winning the War only the first step.
  • Task of establishing a government would be the
    next step.

3
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • Congress sent negotiators to peace talks in
    Paris.
  • Henry Laurens
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • John Adams
  • John Jay
  • Laurens captured by British and held in prison.

4
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • Benjamin Franklin.
  • Elderly.
  • Sophisticated and witty.
  • Admirer of French
  • Women.
  • Wine.

5
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • John Adams.
  • Competitive.
  • Socially inept.
  • Distain for French flamboyance.

6
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • John Jay
  • Prudish.
  • Aristocratic.
  • Strongly patriotic.
  • Made Adams and Franklin nervous.

7
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • Group proved to be very effective.
  • Franklins love of strategy.
  • Adams stubbornness.
  • Jays calm demeanor.
  • European political leaders
  • Thought the Americans would do poorly.
  • American team not naïve amateurs.
  • Understood the stakes.
  • Understood the motives of each party.
  • French, Spanish, and English each had their own
    agendas.

8
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • Americans put their agenda on the table quickly
  • Britain must formally recognize the independence
    of the United States.
  • Condition for further negotiations.
  • The British agreed (reluctantly).

9
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • The Treaty of Paris
  • Negotiations continued for about a year.
  • Each side debated, argued, and compromised.
  • Final agreement reached.
  • September 3, 1783.

10
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • Americans had two clear victories
  • The boundaries of the new nations were extensive.
  • Problems
  • Native Americans.
  • Not represented.
  • British troops in forts.
  • No timeline for withdraw.

11
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  1. The treaty granted the United States unlimited
    access to fisheries off Newfoundland.

12
The Treaty of Paris (1783)
  • The Treaty of Paris had weaknesses.
  • All sides understood this.
  • Weaknesses the price of
  • Avoiding stalemate.
  • Dangerous confrontation.

13
The Fate of Loyalists
  • Loyalists faced
  • Isolation.
  • Disapproval.
  • Tarring and feathering.
  • Imprisonment.
  • Beatings.
  • Property taken.
  • Property destroyed.

14
The Fate of Loyalists
  • After 1775
  • Loyalists flocked to British occupied cities.
  • Loyalists followed the British.
  • 1776 British abandoned Boston
  • 1,000 loyalists followed.
  • 1781 British leave New York
  • 1,500 loyalists followed.
  • Hundreds of thousands of loyalists left their
    American homes.
  • For England, Canada, West indies.

15
The Fate of Loyalists
  • Many loyalists were African-Americans.
  • Fled to the British side seeking freedom.

16
The Fate of Loyalists
  • Many loyalists who fled
  • Forbidden to return to America by new state
    governments.
  • Refused to return.
  • Equated republican rule with mob rule.
  • Some loyalists returned
  • Adjust to the new reality.

17
The Fate of Loyalists
  • Loyalists and Patriots
  • Political loyalty based on
  • Principled beliefs.
  • Self-interested expectations.
  • Loyalists
  • Chosen the losing side.
  • Forced to live with consequences.

18
End of Lesson
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