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Chapter 8: lesson 3

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Title: Chapter 8: lesson 3


1
Chapter 8 lesson 3
The War in the North
2
Washingtons First Battles
Continental Army
British Army
  • Not large nor strong
  • Larger and stronger
  • Soldiers were fighting on home ground
  • Better training and weapons
  • Could use their knowledge of the land to plan
    attacks
  • They had a cause that everyone believed in
  • They also had George Washington

3
Fighting Continues
  • The British did not give up
  • Spring of 1776, soldiers forced British out of
    Boston
  • Washington retreated
  • August of 1776, the British defeated the
    Continental Army in the Battle of Long Island,
    near New York City
  • Washington sent Nathan Hale to spy behind enemy
    lines, he was caught and hanged.
  • Washington only had about 3,000 soldiers left. He
    knew he could stop the British, if he could keep
    his soldiers together.

4
Nathan Hale
  • http//pptkids.org/index-20061103.php

I only regret that I have but one life to lose
for my country
5
Victory at Trenton
  • Washington planned a surprise attack on the enemy
    in Trenton, New Jersey
  • The soldiers fighting for the British in Trenton
    were German mercenaries (paid soldiers).
  • Washington planned his attack on the night of
    December 25, 1776 because he knew the soldiers
    would be celebrating Christmas

6
Victory at Trenton
  • Washingtons soldiers rowed
  • across the icy Delaware River during the night
  • They caught the soldiers by surprise and took
    about 1,000 prisoners.
  • One soldier, James Monroe, was injured
  • during the Battle of Trenton. He later
  • became the 5th president of the United
  • States.
  • Drums were used not only as soldiers
  • marched into battle, but also to issue
  • commands during battle.

7
A Turning Point
  • In June 1777, led by General John Burgoyne, the
    British started attacking from Canada.
  • A Polish engineer,
  • Thaddeus Kosciuszko,
  • helped the Continental Army
  • by building a long wall of earth
  • and logs on a hill so they could
  • hide behind it.
  • Benedict Arnold led many
  • attacks against Britain
  • and forced Burgoyne to
  • surrender.

8
Other Countries Help
  • After the British defeat at the Battle of
    Saratoga, the French were convinced the Americans
    could win the war, so they sent money, soldiers,
    and a powerful navy to help.
  • Before the French officially became involved, a
    French soldier, Marquis de Lafayette, joined
    Washingtons army. He was only 19 years old.
  • Later, Spain, the Netherlands, and Russia also
    joined the fight against Britain.

9
Valley Forge
  • During the winter of 1777, the British settled in
    the homes of the conquered Philadelphia,
    Pennsylvania.
  • Washingtons soldiers had to set up camp 20 miles
    away in Valley Forge.
  • The soldiers slept in tents or
  • on the frozen ground.
  • Food was scarce. Most of
  • the soldiers were barefoot.
  • Many soldiers died of
  • disease.

10
A Stronger Continental Army
  • When spring came, a German
  • soldier, Baron Friedrich von
  • Steuben, joined the army.
  • Von Steuben taught the Americans to march
    together and to use their weapons correctly.
  • After their training, the American Army was ready
    for their next battle against the British.

11
Lesson 3 vocabulary
victory
  • The defeat of an enemy
  • To move back when an
  • enemy attacks
  • A soldier who is paid to
  • fight
  • A map that uses symbols to show how a battle was
    fought

retreat
mercenary
Battle map
12
Vocabulary Review
  • The crime of fighting against ones
  • own government
  • Freedom from being ruled by
  • someone else
  • Freedoms that are protected
  • by law
  • A statement that declares, or
  • announces, an idea

treason
independence
rights
declaration
13
Vocabulary Review
neutral
  • Not taking sides
  • Someone who was still
  • loyal to the king
  • A rise in prices

Loyalist
inflation
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