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Events of the American Revolution

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Title: Events of the American Revolution


1

Events of the American Revolution

2
  • The Boston Tea Party was one of the most
    effective pieces of political theater ever
    staged. John Adams, no fan of mob action, wrote
    of the dumping of the tea "There is a dignity, a
    majesty, a sublimity, in this last effort of the
    patriots that I greatly admire."
  • http//www.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/perspectives/daily
    life.html

3
  • About 50 members of the political organization,
    The Sons of Liberty, boarded 3 ships in Boston
    Harbor. Some were dressed, not very convincingly,
    as Mohawk Indians. In a very orderly and quiet
    fashion, they plunked sterling9,659 worth of
    Darjeeling into the sea.

4
  • The Boston Tea Party was a protest of British tax
    policies. It came in the midst of a boycott of
    English tea during which the East India Company,
    which owned the tea, had seen its profits plummet
    in the wake of a boycott of tea in the colonies.

5
  • The tea was shipped by an exporter in London,
    which is still in existence and sells a tea
    called "Boston Harbour."

6
  • 1760 - King George III ascends to the throne of
    England.
  • 1763 - Treaty signed between England and France
    ending the French and Indian War. Canada and the
    continent east of the Mississippi River added to
    Great Britain's growing empire.
  • 1765 - Parliament passes The Stamp Act as a means
    to pay for British troops on the American
    frontier. Colonists violently protest the
    measure.
  • 1766 - March 18. Stamp Act repealed, but on the
    same day parliament passes the Declaratory Act
    asserting its right to make laws binding on the
    colonies.
  • 1768 - October. British troops arrive in Boston
    to enforce
  • customs laws.
  • 1770 - March. Four workers shot by British troops
    stationed
  • in Boston. Patriots label the killings "The
    Boston Massacre."

7
  • 1773 - December. Massachusetts patriots dressed
    as Mohawk Indians protest the British Tea Act by
    dumping crates of tea into Boston Harbor.

8
  • 1774 - January. The Privy Council reprimands
    Benjamin Franklin in London for leaking letters
    damaging to the Royal Governor of Massachusetts.
    September. First Continental Congress convenes in
    Philadelphia.

9
  • 1775 - April. Shots fired at Lexington and
    Concord. "Minute Men" force British troops back
    to Boston.
  • George Washington takes command of the
    Continental Army.

10
  • 1776 - January. Thomas Paine's Common Sense
    published. Becomes an instant best seller and
    pushes the colonies closer to independence.

11
  • 1776 - July 4. Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of
    Independence ratified by the Congress.

You might have thought that George Washington was
in Philadelphia with Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin
Franklin, John Adams and the other delegates of
the Continental Congress as they wrote the
Declaration of Independence, but he wasn't. In
July 1776, Washington was in New York with his
troops. On July 9, he received his copy of the
Declaration with a note from John Hancock telling
Washington to share the news with the troops.
http//www.loc.gov/exhibits/declara/declara2.html
12
  • 1776 - July. A huge British force arrives in New
    York harbor bent on crushing the rebellion.
  • 1776 - August. Continental Army routed at Long
    Island, New York.
  • 1776 - December 26. Washington crosses the
    Delaware River and captures a Hessian force at
    Trenton, New Jersey.

13
  • December. In desperate need of financing and
    arms, Congress sends Benjamin Franklin to France
    to urge the French to ally with America.

http//www.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/perspectives/globa
lvillage.html
14
  • 1777 - July. A British force led by John Burgoyne
    takes Fort Ticonderoga in a devastating loss to
    the Americans. The Marquis de Lafayette arrives
    in America.
  • Washington defeated at Brandywine (September 11)
    and Germantown (October 4). Philadelphia is lost
    to the British.
  • October 17. Americans capture Burgoyne and his
    army at Saratoga.

15
  • 1778 -February. France signs a treaty of alliance
    with the United States and the American
    Revolution becomes a world war.

http//www.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/perspectives/milit
ary.html
16
  • 1780-'81 - Americans "lose" series of engagements
    in the south, but exact a heavy toll on the
    British army.
  • October 19. A miraculous convergence of American
    and French forces traps Lord Cornwallis at
    Yorktown, Virginia. He surrenders his British
    army.
  • September. A peace treaty is signed between Great
    Britain and the United States.

17
  • December. George Washington gives up command of
    the Continental Army and, to the astonishment of
    foreign observers, returns to private life. He
    would later become President.

Here, George Washington is seen in the black
velvet suit that he wore on official occasions
during his presidency (17891797). The portraits
symbolism clearly indicates that the head of the
new republic was a citizen himself, a concept of
great importance in the late eighteenth century,
the age of revolution.
18
  • 1783-'87 - Noah Webster creates and publishes a
    speller which helps standardize American English.
  • 1785-'86 - Treaty talks with Spain for rights to
    navigate the Mississippi fail because of regional
    conflicts between northern and southern states.
  • 1786-'87 - Shay's Rebellion, an armed
    insurrection of debt-ridden farmers in
    Massachusetts, quashed by the state militia.
  • Northwest Ordinance adopted by Confederation
    Congress. Prohibits slavery in territories and
    provides a means for new states to enter the
    union.

19
  • 1787 - In May, delegates from all 13 states
    arrive in Philadelphia to rewrite the Articles of
    Confederation. http//www.eff.org//Legislation/Fre
    edom_Shrine/articles_of.confederation
  • 1787 - September 18. The Constitutional
    Convention adjourns having passed a National
    Constitution that needs ratification from 3/4 of
    the states.
  • 1788 - The crucial states of Virginia (June 25)
    and New York (July 26) become the 10th and 11th
    states to pass the Constitution.
  • 1791 - December. A Bill of Rights
  • passed by the 1st Congress of the
  • United States.

20
http//americanhistory.com/history/
21
Declaring Freedom!
http//www.historyplace.com/sounds/ushistory/thp-d
ec-indep.ram
22
  • The Statue of Liberty was given to the United
    States by France in recognition of the friendship
    established between the 2 nations during the
    American Revolution.
  • It was originally intended as a gift to celebrate
    the 100th anniversary of America's independence
    in 1876. Raising funds to design, ship and
    construct the massive structure took longer than
    anticipated, however, and the statue didn't find
    its home in New York harbor until 1886.
  • Once there, it quickly became the world's most
  • widely recognized symbol of liberty. Immigrants
  • streaming into the United States by way of
    nearby
  • Ellis Island were guided to America's shores, in
    a
  • literal and a symbolic sense, by Liberty's
    torch.
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