World War .75 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

World War .75

Description:

Worst impact in cities, particularly Boston and New York. ... Boston Massacre. March 5, 1770. Customs House. Right: Paul Revere's engraving of the Boston ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: dobbs
Category:
Tags: boston | massacre | war | world

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: World War .75


1
World War .75
  • The Seven Years War and the Colonial Crisis
  • 1754-1770

2
France in North America
  • 1663 New France founded
  • 1670s French expansion down Mississippi
  • 1682 La Salle founds Louisiana
  • Right Louis XIV by Charles le Brun, 1661

3
Colonial War World War
  • European wars tended to spill over onto other
    continents
  • Most important in North America War of Austrian
    Succession, 1744-1748
  • Brought English and French settlement in closer
    contact along the Ohio River
  • French establish a set of forts in modern western
    Pennsylvania to keep the English out
  • English colonies claim lands claimed by France
  • Sell and grant land to speculators in disputed
    territory

4
Origins of the Seven Years War
  • 1754 Its all George Washingtons fault.
  • 1755 British send Edward Braddock to clear
    French out of Ohio Valley.
  • Doesnt go so well.
  • Right George Washington during the French and
    Indian War, by J. B. Stearns, 1850s.

5
Course of the War
  • War breaks out in Europe in 1756, hence Seven
    Years War
  • British navy destroys French navy
  • Canada vulnerable to invasion
  • French defeated at Montreál, 1760
  • Right Death of General Wolfe, Benjamin West,
    1770

6
Peace of Paris, 1763
  • Britain gets Canada and North America east of the
    Mississippi
  • Spain gets Louisiana
  • Britain now the dominant power in the world stays
    that way until 1914

7
Fallout from war
  • Costs. Britain must raise funds to service and
    pay off debts.
  • Colonists very proud of their role in war.
  • British feel colonists should pay their fair
    share of costs.
  • British resent colonial smuggling and trade with
    French during war.
  • Right Image of George II on British coin, 1746.

8
A New Sheriff in Town
  • George III becomes king in 1760.
  • Self-identifies as a Whig.
  • Attached to England, less so to Germany.
  • Desire to do good.
  • Mania for details.
  • Frequent change of prime ministers
  • Left George III, by Allan Ramsay, 1762

9
Three Big Problems in Victory
  • How do we pay for war?
  • How do we handle newly conquered lands?
  • How to we avoid another war?

10
Paying for war
  • Taxes must go up
  • Colonists must pay their share
  • Collections need to be made more efficient
  • Right George Grenville, prime minister, 1763-1765

11
New Taxes
  • Sugar Act (1764)
  • Reduces sugar tax, broadens items taxed
  • Currency Act (1764)
  • All colonial debts must be paid in specie
  • Stamp Act (1765)
  • Most controversial
  • Right two types of sugar molecules, sucrose (l)
    and fructose (r)

12
Stamp Act SO WHAT!
  • Would pay most of costs of 10,000 British
    soldiers in America
  • Passed easily in February, 1765
  • Tax on practically all papers
  • Newspapers, pamphlets, bonds, leases, deeds,
    licenses, insurance policies, playing cards, etc.

13
Quartering Act (1765)
  • Required private citizens and inns to quarter,
    feed and provide needs of British soldiers sent
    to protect colonies.
  • Worst impact in cities, particularly Boston and
    New York.
  • Below Regimental Flags of 29th Regiment of Foot
    (Worcestershire) posted in Boston in 1760s.
    (www.fifeanddrum.org)

14
Colonists violent response
  • Sons of Liberty an intercolonial organization
    designed to offer and coordinate resistance.
  • Right Samuel Adams, Boston Sons of Liberty
    leader, by John Singleton Copley, 1772

15
Colonists violent response
  • Sons often put fig leaf of respectability on mob
    action.
  • August 26, 1765 destruction of Thomas
    Hutchinsons house in Boston.
  • Right Lt. Governor Thomas Hutchinson

16
Colonists violent response
  • Boycotts of British goods
  • Tar and feathering common
  • Threats and reprisals
  • Tendency to target property rather than persons
  • Carefully choreographed generally
  • Often deters distribution and use of stamps

17
Stamp Act Congress
  • Sons organize
  • Representatives of nine colonies
  • New York, October 1765
  • Condemns act cannot tax for imperial purposes
  • Critical of parliament
  • Loyalty to king

18
Grenville Out, Rockingham in
  • George III replaces Grenville with Marquis of
    Rockingham
  • Rockingham sympathetic to colonists
  • Conciliatory gestures
  • Right Paul Revere cartoon of Sons tar and
    feathering a tax collector

19
Rockingham makes nice
  • Stamp Act repealed assert right to tax
  • Reduced tax on molasses to less than cost of a
    bribe
  • Rockingham worried about centralization

20
Rockingham out, Pitt in
  • Pitt not himself, losing it
  • Charles Townshend the real power
  • Taxes to balance the budget
  • Right William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham

21
Townshend and taxes
  • Revenue Act (1767)
  • Paints, lead, tea, paper, glass
  • Colonists resume boycotts
  • Colonial assembly of NY shut down
  • Protests in colonies grow more heated
  • British government sends more troops, 1768

22
Pitt out, North in
  • Finally, someone George III likes and trusts
  • Wants to conciliate situation
  • But colonial events out of control
  • Right Frederick North, Lord North

23
Boston Massacre
  • March 5, 1770
  • Customs House
  • Right Paul Reveres engraving of the Boston
    Massacre, 1770
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com