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THE LATE EIGHTEENTH AND EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURIES

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Title: THE LATE EIGHTEENTH AND EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURIES


1
THE LATE EIGHTEENTH AND EARLY NINETEENTH
CENTURIES
To Jackson
2
EVENTS LEADING TO THE REVOLUTIONARY
WAR (1750-1776)
3
In 1754 the colonists considered themselves
English
4
ALBANY PLAN OF UNION
In 1754, representatives from seven colonies met
in Albany
5
Developed by Benjamin Franklin
6
Provided for an inter-colonial government and a
system for collecting taxes for the colonies'
defense
7
Efforts to unite the colonies met with less
success than he hoped
8
Produced Join or Die cartoon and flag
9
THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR (1754-1763)
10
Lasted ten years
11
also called the French and Indian War
They fought on SAME side
12
Colonists were expanding westward French wanted
to protect fur trade
French tried to stop them by building fortified
outposts
13
George Washington attacked a French outpost and
lost badly
Allowed to return to Virginia, he was welcomed
as a hero!!
14
When the war was over, England was the undisputed
colonial power of the continent
15
Many Americans served in the English army
English did not make a good impression!
16
Sowed the first seeds of anti-British sentiment
in the colonies
Indians particularly disliked the English
17
English raised the price of goods sold to the
Indians
Pontiac rallied a group of tribes in the Ohio
Valley and attacked colonial outposts
18
British government issued the Proclamation of
1763 forbidding settlement west of the rivers
running through the Appalachians
19
Settlers had already moved west of the line. The
proclamation agitated them
20
Pontiacs rebellion
  • First test of Brit imperial policy.
  • Chief Pontiac led an attack against settlers on
    western frontier
  • Alliance of tribes in Ohio Valley destroyed forst
    sand settlements from NY to VA
  • Brits sent troops not colonial army to deal with
    in

21
THE SUGAR ACT, THE CURRENCY ACT, AND THE STAMP ACT
WAR DEBTS
22
Colonies' tradition of self-taxation was being
usurped
23
Stamp Act affected a group that was literate,
persuasive, and argumentative-namely, lawyers
24
In MA, James Otis wrote The Rights of the British
Colonies Asserted and Proved Called for a Stamp
Act Congress reps from 9 colonies
25
Otis put forward the "No taxation without
representation" argument
26
Otis did not advocate secession
27
Patrick Henry drafted the Virginia Stamp Act
Resolves, protesting the tax
28
THE TOWNSHEND ACTS
29
Taxed goods imported directly from Britain (tea,
glass and paper)
Some of the tax collected was set aside for the
British army Allowed Brits to search colonial
houses for smuggled goods
30
Patriots were mostly white Protestant property
holders Townshend acts repealed
31
Boston Massacre
  • Bostonians resented the quartering of Brit
    soldiers there to protect customs agents from the
    Sons of Liberty
  • March 1770 crowd of colonists harassed guards
    near the customs house. Gurds fired killing 5
    including Crispus Attucks
  • Sam Adams called it a massacre

32
Boston Tea Party
  • Committee of Correspondence initiated by Sam
    Adams
  • The Gaspee - Brit customs ship successful at
    caputing smugglers. Ran aground in 1772 in RI.
    Colonists dressed as Indians ordered the crew off
    the boat and set it on fire
  • In response to the Tea Act of 1773 making the
    British East India Co tea cheaper (even with the
    tax) than the smuggled Dutch tea
  • Protested by dumping the tea into the sea 342
    chests of tea

33
Intolerable Acts
  • Coercive Acts 1774 punished Boston harbor
  • Quebec Act accepting most French Canadians and
    Catholicism

34
Enlightenment
  • John Locke
  • Secularism

35
First Continental Congress
  • All colonies except GA in Philly 1774
  • No independence yet rather protect rights and
    liberties
  • Passed
  • Suffolk Resolves reject intolerable acts with
    military preparations and boycotts
  • Declaration of the rights and grievances
    petitioning king to make right colonial
    grievances
  • Create an Association in each town to enforce and
    organize the Suffolk Resolves
  • Second Continental Congress to meet

36
Road to War
  • Lexington and Concord April 1775
  • Bunker Hill 1775 near Boston Brits took the
    hill but suffered more casualties
  • Second Continental Congress May 1775 question
    of independence
  • Military action Causes and Necessities for
    Taking Up Arms Washing to be commander
  • Peace efforts Olive Branch Petition

37
The rebels were still looking for the masterpiece
of propaganda that would rally colonists
38
Guess who comes on the scene .
39
RIGHT!
40
They got it in Common Sense
41
In a nation of 2 million, most of whom couldn't
read, it sold more than 100,000 copies in its
first three months
42
(about the same as selling 13 million compact
discs today).
43
Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of
Independence
44
With the document's signing on July 4, 1776, the
Revolutionary War officially began.
45
Continental Army (as opposed to local militias)
had trouble recruiting good soldiers
Recruited blacks, and up to 5,000 fought on the
side of the rebels (in return, most of those who
had been slaves were granted their freedom)
46
Franco-American Alliance
47
Helped the colonists considerably. Ultimately,
the colonists won a war of attrition
48
Patriots
  • African Americans fought on both sides (5000
    patriots)
  • Loyalists Tories 60,000 fought and died next
    to the british.
  • Numbered from 500,000 to 750,000 (20-30) of pop

49
Yorktown Cornwallis The Treaty of Paris, signed
at the end of 1782, granted the United States
independence and generous territorial rights.
50
CREATING A FUNCTIONING GOVERNMENT (1776-1800)
51
THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION
52
As soon as the Declaration of Independence was
signed, states began writing their own
constitutions
53
In 1777 the Continental Congress sent the
Articles of Confederation, the first national
constitution, to the colonies for ratification
54
FLAWS
55
It did not give the national government the power
to tax or to regulate trade
56
Amendments to the articles required the unanimous
consent of all the states
57
Other Problems
58
Women and blacks had made sacrifices in the fight
for liberation, and some expected at least a
degree of compensation
59
In 1787 an army of 1,500 farmers marched on
Boston to protest a number of unfair policies,
both economic and political.
60
They were armed and very angry, and they gave the
elite class the wake-up call that the revolution
might not be over yet. Shays' Rebellion helped
convince some that a stronger central government
was necessary
61
Northwest Ordinance of 1787 contained a bill of
rights, abolished slavery in the Northwest
territories
62
A NEW CONSTITUTION
63
The Virginia Plan, largely the brainchild of
James Madison, called for an entirely new
government based on the principle of checks and
balances.
64
Only three of the 42 delegates refused to sign
the finished document (two because it did not
include a bill of rights)
65
Opposition forces portrayed the federal
government under the Constitution as an
all-powerful beast
66
Anti-Federalists, were particularly appalled by
the absence of a bill of rights
67
Federalist position was forcefully and
persuasively argued in the Federalist Papers,
anonymously authored by James Madison, Alexander
Hamilton, and John Jay
68
The Constitution went into effect in 1789 the
Bill of Rights was added in 1791.
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