Title: Revolution in America
1Revolution in America
- The French and Indian War to the Treaty of Paris
2The French and Indian War and the Proclamation of
1763
- After Britains victory in the French and Indian
War, the British stop colonists from settling
west of the Appalachian mountains and began
taxing the colonists to pay for the debt of war. - Colonists see the Proclamation of 1763 as placing
a limit on their freedom of movement. - The British leave 10,000 troops in America
3The Colonies are Taxed
- The Sugar Act- pushes tax on molasses
- Stamp Act- tax on newspapers and other printed
material. Colonists boycott British goods,
parliament repeals Stamp Act - Townshend Acts- tax on imported goods, like
household items - Colonists protest taxation without
representation
4The Boston Massacre
- March, 1770, colonists and Redcoats clash in
Boston. 5 colonists are killed. - Parliament repeals the Townshend Acts, except tea
tax - Sam Adams revives the Boston Committee of
Correspondence, used as a tool of protest and
circulation of colonists writings of grievances
against Britain.
5The Boston Tea Party
- 1773, Parliament passes the Tea Act, driving
colonial tea merchants out of business - In protest, an angry mob dress up as Natives and
dump cargoes of tea overboard into the Boston
harbor. - To punish colonists, Britain passes the Coercive
acts, called the Intolerable Acts by colonists,
and Massachusetts is put under military rule.
Colonists are forced to quarter British troops.
6Shot heard round the world
- Continental Congress creates militias
- Colonists boycott all British goods
- British send 3,000 troops to Boston area with
orders to seize all weapons of Mass. Militia - On the night of April 18, 1875, Paul Revere and
William Dawes ride to Lexington, alerting the
militia with The regulars are out! - A shot is fired in Lexington, 8 minutemen die,
Redcoats march to Concord and 73 Brits are
killed. 20,000 militia-men hold Boston.
7Advantages/Disadvantages
The U.S.
Great Britain
Advantages Disadvantages
Knowledge of surroundings home-court advantage Determination and strong will of the Patriots Help from other nations, especially France Use of guerrilla tactics Not always well equipped Soldiers early on were not battle-hardened or well-trained Smaller fighting force
Advantages Disadvantages
Soldiers better trained and equipped Superior numbers More experienced military leaders Very long supply lines across Atlantic Much of territory was unknown New fighting tactics were unfamiliar Less to fight for
8You know, of course, this means War!
- British win the Battle of Bunker Hill, the first
major battle, but take heavy losses. - Second Continental Congress create the
Continental Army and choose George Washington as
commander.
9Hes such a Paine!
- January 1776, Thomas Paine convinces many people
that complete separation from Britain is Common
Sense, which he names his best-selling pamphlet. - The king is condemned and colonists cry for
freedom
10Yay! Its the 4th of July!!!
- The Second Continental Congress appoints Thomas
Jefferson as the head of a committee to write the
Declaration of Independence. July 4, 1776,
delegates sign, with their John Hancocks.
11The Redcoats and Patriots throw-down. Its on now!
- Summer, 1776, Britain sends 32,000 troops to New
York. Washington is defeated on Long Island. - Christmas night, Washington lead 2,400 troops
across the icy Delaware to Trenton, New Jersey
and defeat the Hessians, or German mercenaries,
giving colonists a huge boost in morale.
12This isnt finished yet!
- October 1777, Americans win first major victory
at the Battle of Saratoga - The British are trapped and surrender
- 1778, France realizes that the United states just
might win the war, so they declare war on Britain
and give aid and supplies - 1779, Spain declares war on Britain to protect
southern edges of the U.S.
13War at Sea, the West, the South
- 1779, John Paul Jones had not yet begun to
fight! American, French, and Spanish navies
threaten the big island. - 1778-1779, British forts are seized in Illinois.
- Patriots use guerrilla warfare tactics to free
Savannah and Charleston of British control
14Yeah, thats what we thought. Go home!
- 1781, at the Battle of Yorktown, the French navy
cut off British escape, while Americans and
French surround and trap the British inside
Yorktown. The British surrender. - Though some minor fighting continued, leaders
finally negotiate the Treaty of Paris in 1783. - Britain recognizes the U.S. as an independent
nation - The U.S. claim lands west to the Mississippi
River, south to Florida, and north to Canada
15The World is Watching
- Revolution fever spreads across the Atlantic
and Caribbean. - 1789, influenced by the U.S., the French begin
their own revolution - 1791, the island of Saint Domingue is led to
freedom from French rule by Toussaint-Louverture - Colonies around the world begin the fight for
freedom and democracy
16The First U.S. Flag13 Stars 13 Stripes