Title: Revolutionary War
1Revolutionary War
- Unit 1, Part B
- SOL VUS.4a-c
2French and Indian War
- Fourth war between France and Great Britain
- Known as the Seven Years War in Europe
- France and Great Britain were competing for a
world empire - Great Britain will win after struggling early
during the war
3- France will lose all land east of the Mississippi
River and Canada - Because of the cost of the war and other
problems, Great Britain will pass several actions
which angered the colonists
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5- Proclamation Act of 1763
- prohibited settlement west of the Appalachian
Mts., an area the colonists had just fought to
win (it was too expensive for the British to
protect the colonists from the Natives)
6- New Taxes
- Britain passed taxes on legal documents (STAMP
ACT), tea, and sugar to help pay for the war and
for troops to help protect the colonists.
7- The colonists refused to pay direct taxes because
they felt they were not directly represented by
the Parliament of Great Britain (TAXATION WITHOUT
REPRESENTATION)
8Resistance to British Rule
- 1770--Boston Massacre--five colonists killed by
British soldiers after the soldiers opened fire
on a group of anti-British demonstrators
(African American Crispus
Attucks was the first to be killed)
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10- 1773--Boston Tea Party-- Colonists protested the
passage of the Tea Act by destroying tea
belonging to the East India Company. They
boarded ships and dumped it into the harbor.
Great Britain put Boston under martial law and
ordered the tea paid for.
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12- 1774--First Continental Congress meeting
in Philadelphia to discuss the problems with
Britain. Twelve out of thirteen colonies were
represented (GA). It was the first time the
colonies had acted together.
13- 1775--Lexington and Concord-- War began after a
brief skirmish between British soldiers and the
Minutemen. (citizen solders who could be ready
in a minute)
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17Differences among the Colonists
- 3 main groups
- 1. Patriots
- believed in complete independence from England
- inspired by the ideas of Locke and Paine
18- as well as the words of Patrick Henry Give me
liberty, or give me Death - Provided the troops for the American army, which
was led by George Washington (who was also from
Virginia)
19- 2. Loyalists (Tories)
- remained loyal to Britain based on cultural and
economic ties - believed that taxation of the colonies to pay for
British troops to protect American settlers from
Indian attacks
20- 3. Neutrals
- The many colonists who tried to stay as
uninvolved in the war as possible
21John Locke
- During the Enlightenment (period in Europe in the
17th and 18th centuries) new ideas developed
about the rights of people and their relationship
to their rulers.
22- Lockes ideas more than any other person
influenced the American belief in
self-government.
23- All people are free, equal, and have Natural
Rights of life, liberty, and property that
cannot be taken away.
24- All original power resides in the people, and
they consent to enter into a Social Contract
among themselves to form a government to protect
their rights.
25- In return, the people promise to obey the laws
and rules established by their government,
establishing a system of ordered liberty
26- Governments powers are limited to those the
people have consented to give to it. Whenever
government becomes a threat to the peoples
natural rights, it breaks the social contract and
the people have the right to alter or overthrow
it.
27- Lockes ideas about the sovereignty and the
rights of the people were radical and challenged
the centuries old practice throughout the world
of dictatorial rule by kings, emperors, and
tribal chiefs
28Thomas Paine and Common Sense
- Thomas Paine was an English immigrant to America
who produced a pamphlet known as Common Sense
that challenged the rule of the American colonies
by the King of England
29- Common Sense was read and acclaimed by many
American colonists during the mid 1770s and
contributed to growing sentiment for independence
from England.
30Declaration of Independence
- The eventual draft of the Declaration of
Independence, reflected the ideas of Locke and
Paine. - Authored by Thomas Jefferson of Virginia.
31- We hold these truths to be self-evident, that
all men are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable rights,
that among these are life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness.
32- That to secure these rights, governments are
instituted among men, deriving their just powers
from the consent of the governed
33- That whenever any form of government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the right of the
people to alter or abolish it, and to institute
new government
34- Jefferson then went on to detail many of the
grievances against the king that Paine had
earlier described in Common Sense.
35Factors leading to colonial victory
- 1. Diplomatic Factors
- Benjamin Franklin negotiated a Treaty of Alliance
with France. The French recognized the American
nation and provided supplies, a navy and troops
which helped the Americans win.
36- 2. Military factors
- George Washington, general of the American Army,
avoided any situation which threatened the
destruction of his army, and kept the army
together when defeat seemed inevitable.
37- Americans benefited from the presence of the
French army and navy at the Battle of Yorktown,
which ended the war with an American victory