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Causes of the American Revolution

Explore the key causes of the American Revolution, including the French and Indian War, Proclamation of 1763, Quartering Act, Sugar Act, and Stamp Act. Discover how these events led to conflict between the colonists and the British government.

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Causes of the American Revolution

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  1. Causes of the American Revolution • French and Indian War - The French and British were in competition over land in America. The British win and the French are forced out. • Colonists move west of the Appalachian Mountains and have trouble with the Indians. The British cannot provide the colonists protection.

  2. Proclamation of 1763 Because the British could not protect the colonists from the Natives, they passed the Proclamation of 1763. This forbids the colonists from settling west of the Appalachians.

  3. Proclamation of 1763 (cont.) • The colonists were angry because they wanted to settle the Ohio River Valley and the ignored the law. • The British wanted the land to remain in the hands of the Native Americans. • The British government left 10,000 soldiers in the colonies to enforce the Proclamation and keep peace.

  4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofYmhlclqr4&feature=PlayList&p=7D05F2E62228AE48&index=1http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofYmhlclqr4&feature=PlayList&p=7D05F2E62228AE48&index=1

  5. Quartering Act • In 1765 Parliament passed this act which required colonists to house the British soldiers and provide them with food and supplies. • Although this reduced costs, it did not provide the revenue (income) needed by Britain to pay off the large debt created during the French and Indian War.

  6. Sugar Act • Britain wanted to pay off their debt and for the first time Parliament voted to tax the colonies directly. • In 1764, The Sugar Act was passed. It placed a tax on all sugar and molasses shipped to the colonies. It called for strict enforcement of the act and harsh punishment for smugglers. • James Otis claimed that they had no right to tax because the colonies had no representation in Parliament. “Taxation without representation is tyranny!”

  7. Stamp Act • Passed in 1765, this law required all legal and commercial documents to carry an official stamp showing that a tax had been paid. • All diplomas, contracts and wills had to carry a stamp. Even newspapers had to be printed on special, stamped paper.

  8. Colonists Protest NO TAX Boycott • Patrick Henry from the Virginia’s House of Burgesses, called for resistance to the tax. • In Oct. 1765, nine colonies meet to write a petition to the king protesting the tax. Britain ignores the petition. • Colonial merchants organized a boycott (refusal to buy) of British goods.

  9. Sons of Liberty • A secret society formed to oppose British policies. • Many members were lawyers, merchants, and craftspeople – those affected most by the Stamp Act. • Not all protests were peaceful. • In 1766 Parliament repealed the Stamp Act and passed the Declaratory Act stating that Parliament had supreme authority to govern the colonies.

  10. Copy on a new sheet of paper! OPTIC A document analysis for primary visual sources • O – overview – what do you think it is • P – parts – specific details you can point to • T – title – copy if given, if not create one • I – interrelationship – if the picture has a title relate it to the parts you highlighted or if you made up the title why did you choose it based on the highlighted parts • C – conclusion – tell me why I am showing you this picture and make a connection to the context or predict what is happening

  11. Bostonians Paying the Taxman

  12. Townshend Acts • New Yorkers were tired of housing the British troops and refused to continue. • Britain still needs money to pay its debts. • Charles Townshend came up with a way to raise revenue and in 1767, Parliament passed his plan

  13. Townshend Acts (cont.) • First it suspended New York’s assembly until housing was once again provided. • Next it placed import taxes on goods brought into the country such as glass, paper, paint, lead, and tea. • To enforce the acts, writs of assistance (search warrants) would be issued to enter homes and search for smuggled goods.

  14. Townshend Acts (cont.) • Once again, colonists protested and boycotted British goods. • Samuel Adams, a leader of the Boston Sons of Liberty, was a driving force in this action. • Colonists tried peaceful protests but riots still tended to break out. • As a result, in the fall 1768, 1000 British soldiers arrived in Boston.

  15. The Bloody Massacre Perpetrated in King Street

  16. The Boston Massacre • On March 5, 1770, youths and dock workers started trading insults in front of the custom House. • A fight broke out, soldiers started firing. • Four laborers and Crispus Attucks were killed in the attack. • The soldiers were arrested for murder. • John Adams defended them in court stating that “law should be deaf…to the clamors of the populace.”

  17. The Tea Act • On the day of the Boston Massacre, Parliament repealed the Townshend Acts – all except the tax on tea. • Samuel Adams started Committees of Correspondence in various towns to exchange letters on colonial affairs. • He didn’t want people to forget the cause of liberty.

  18. The Tea Act (cont.) • Parliament passed the Tea Act in 1773. • This gave the British East India Company control over American tea trade. • People who were avoiding the taxes with smuggled tea, would now have to pay taxes. • Protests began to take place all over the colonies.

  19. The Boston Tea Party • The Sons of Liberty organized what came to be known as The Boston Tea Party. • On Dec. 16, 1773 a group of men disguised as Native Americans boarded three tea ships docked in Boston Harbor. They destroyed 342 chests of tea, hoping Britain would see how strongly colonists opposed taxation without representation.

  20. The Boston Tea Party

  21. The Boston Tea Party

  22. The Intolerable Acts • Called the Coercive Acts by the British, these acts were passed to punish the Massachusetts Colony and serve as a warning to the others. • One act would close the port of Boston until the colonists paid for the destroyed tea. • Others banned the Committees of Correspondence, allowed British to house troops wherever necessary, and let British officials stand trial in Britain.

  23. The Intolerable Acts (cont.) • General Thomas Gage was appointed governor of Massachusetts. • Once the Intolerable acts were passed, other colonies immediately offered MA their support by sending food and money to Boston. • The Committees of Correspondence called for a meeting of colonial delegates to discuss what they would do next.

  24. First Continental Congress • In September of 1774, delegates met from all of the colonies except Georgia. • They voted to ban all trade with Britain until the Intolerable Acts were repealed. • They called on each colony to begin training troops. • Georgia agreed to be part of this action even though it did not send delegates. • They planned to meet again in seven months.

  25. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VQA5NDNkUM&feature=PlayList&p=7D05F2E62228AE48&index=3http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VQA5NDNkUM&feature=PlayList&p=7D05F2E62228AE48&index=3

  26. The British are Coming • On April 18, 1775 an attack was ordered by General Gage but the Sons of Liberty were ready. • Messengers (Paul Revere and Williams Dawes) were sent to spread the news of the attack. • At dawn on April 19, some 700 British troops reached Lexington.

  27. The British are Coming • Captain John Parker and 70 militiamen awaited them. • No one knows who fired the first shot but within minutes eight militiamen were dead. • The British headed on to Concord where nearly 4000 militiamen awaited them. • The British quickly retreated.

  28. Lexington and Concord • These were the first battles of the Revolutionary War. • Americans now had to choose sides • Loyalists supported the British • Patriots sided with the rebels

  29. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdM44rovn6c&feature=PlayList&p=B1B47834432B5895&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=14http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdM44rovn6c&feature=PlayList&p=B1B47834432B5895&playnext=1&playnext_from=PL&index=14

  30. The Continental Army • After the battles at Lexington and Concord, about 20,000 troops gathered around Boston. • In May, Ethan Allen and the Green Mountain Boys captured Britain’s New York fort and all its artillery. • That same day the Second Continental Congress met and agreed to form the Continental Army. • George Washington was chosen as its commanding general.

  31. The Battle of Bunker Hill • As the British troops advanced, Colonel William Prescott ordered “Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes.” • Although the Americans lost the battle, they held their own against the Brits – killing and wounding over 1000 while suffering only 400 casualties of their own.

  32. The Death of General Warren at Bunker Hill

  33. Olive Branch Petition • In July 1775, the moderates in congress drafted this petition and sent it to London hoping to restore peace. • The king rejected the petition and announced new measures to punish the colonists. • George Washington continued training the troops and sent Benedict Arnold to Canada in the hopes of gaining support there. • They failed in their attack and returned home.

  34. Common Sense • A pamphlet written by Thomas Paine that was published in early 1776. • He claimed all monarchies were corrupt. • He believed America should follow its own destiny.

  35. The Declaration of Independence • In June of 1776 Congress appointed a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence. • Members included Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston, and Thomas Jefferson. • Thomas Jefferson was selected to write the document because he was an excellent writer from Virginia. • It was completed by July 2, 1776.

  36. The Declaration of Independence • It is adopted on July 4, 1776. • John Hancock was the first to sign it. • The core idea of it was based on the idea that people have unalienable rights (rights the government can’t take away). • It explained the reasons from breaking with Britain and declared the colonies to be free, independent states. • The “people” referred to in the document only included free white men.

  37. Signing the Declaration

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