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Chapter 5

Roads to Revolution. Chapter 5. Triumph of British Empire. Series of 4 Wars King William’s (1689-97) Queen Anne’s (1702-13) King George’s (1744-48). Consequences: Battle for power between Britain/France remains No real winners in wars Battle of Louisburg angers Colonists During KG’s War

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Chapter 5

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  1. Roads to Revolution Chapter 5

  2. Triumph of British Empire • Series of 4 Wars • King William’s (1689-97) • Queen Anne’s (1702-13) • King George’s (1744-48) • Consequences: • Battle for power between Britain/France remains • No real winners in wars • Battle of Louisburg angers Colonists • During KG’s War • Relationship changes • Reliance on British • Animosity

  3. Seven Years War (1754-1760) • French fortification 1753 • Ohio River Valley • George Washington 1754 • Fort Necessity = embarrassment • Albany Congress • Albany Plan on Union • 24 delegates • Franklin/Hutchinson proposal • General Braddock/ Fort Duquesne • Disaster • 1,000 British ambushed • Britain’s shortcomings • Lacked adequate troops and supplies • Tide turns for Britain 1757 • Iroquois Treaty (1758) • William Pitt • New Prime Minister • Rallies Colonists for the cause • Surrender of Montreal 1760 • War in Europe continues • Treaty of Paris 1763 • Reorganized map of Colonial America • Consequences • Britain supreme naval power • Britain in MASSIVE debt • Dual identity

  4. Imperial Revenues and Reorganization 1760-1766 • Friction among Allies 1760-1763 • Reimbursement of Colonies a problem • Increased Native conflict • Pontiac’s Rebellion 1763 • Proclamation of 1763 • 10,000 British troops remain • Writs of Assistance 1760-1761 • Anger over smuggling • Prior and during war • 1760- writ of assistance • Search and seizure • James Otis • Lawyer for Colonists • Rights of an Englishman • “beyond which if Parliament go, their Acts bind not”

  5. Acts • Sugar Act 1764 • Stamp Act 1765 • Declaratory Act 1766 • Quartering Act 1766-1767 • Townshend Duties 1767 • Tea Act 1773 • Coercive Acts 1774 • Responses • VA Resolves (Stamp Act) 1765 • Loyal Nine 1765 • Sons/Daughters of Liberty 1765 • Stamp Act Congress 1765 • Letters from a PA Farmer 1767 • John Wilkes (England) 1768 • Christian Sparta • Boston Massacre 1770 • Committees of Correspondence 1772 • Boston Tea Party 1773 • First Continental Congress 1774 • 2nd Continental Congress 1775

  6. Sugar Act

  7. Stamp Act

  8. Resistance • Virginia Resolves • Patrick Henry • Urged House of Burgesses to deny tax • Only four passed: • Virginians were same as British should have same rights • VA taxes through House of Burgesses • VA alone had right to tax • Denied legitimacy of tax law outside US • Anyone that disagreed = the enemy • Loyal Nine • Middle class • Tried to get stamp distributors to resign • Sons of Liberty • Sam Adams, John Hancock, Ebenezer Mackintosh • Daughters of Liberty too • Stamp Act Congress • Oct 17, 1765 • Reps from 9 colonies • 27 delegates total • Agree Parliament lacked authority to tax outside Britain • Resembled VA resolves

  9. Declaratory Act • "The Repeal or the Funeral Procession of Miss America-Stamp": A satiric cartoon commemorating the repeal of the Stamp Act, c. 1766. Illustration courtesy of the Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division. (larger version)

  10. Quartering Act

  11. Resistance continues • New PM in England • Charles Townschend • Colonial resistance • NY, refused to enforce • Led to Anti-colonists sentiment in House of Commons • Consequence: • NY suspending act • NY backed down

  12. Townshend Acts

  13. Colonists Reaction • John Dickinson • “Letters from a PA Farmer” • No right to tax for single purpose of raising revenue • Circular Letter • 1768 written by Sam Adams • Condemned taxation w/out rep • Advocated no illegal activities • Mass legislation adopted letters • British response • Over-reacts • Royal governors dissolve letter • Townschend creates American Board of Customs Commissioners 1767 • Raised number of port officials • $ for secret informers • “Liberty” incident June 1768 • Sons of Liberty • Reorganize • “Save your $, Save your country” campaign • Nonimportation agreement = boycott • John Wilkes • In England • Denounces KGIII • Ran for Parliament • Woman resistance • Sarah Osborn • Religious activist • Starts Daughters of Liberty • Key role in nonconsumption movvement

  14. Boston Massacre • Feb 22, 1770 • Townschend Acts eliminated • Except Tea • New British PM • Committees of Correspondence • Sam Adams in charge • 1st attempt at wide political cooperation • Gaspee Affair

  15. Tea Act

  16. “The die is cast” - KGIII

  17. Coercive Acts

  18. 1st Continental Congress • Response to Coercive Acts • Sept 5, 1774 – Philadelphia • Convention: • 56 delegates • Suffolk resolves • Voted to boycott all British goods and cease exports • Sent petition to KGIII • 1775 KGIII declares colonies in rebellion • Important People: • Patrick Henry, Sam and John Adams, George Washington, John Dickinson, John Jay

  19. Shot heard around the world • April 1775 • General Gage ordered to quell “rabble” and arrest patriot leaders • 700 troops send to seize arms and ammunition at Concord • First shots fired • 2nd Continental Congress • “Olive Branch Petition” • Written by George Dickerson • Cease-fire at Boston • Repeal coercive acts • Establish/negotiate colonists’ rights • Continental Army established • GW leader • British troops attack • Boston • Bunker Hill, Breed’s Hill

  20. “Common Sense” • Jan. 1776 Thomas Paine publishes “Common Sense” • Argues: • Not “common sense” for a large continent to be ruled by a distant island • States needed to break away and become independent • No economic need for Britain • Monarchy dangerous to liberty • Incredibly influential

  21. Declaring Independence • 2nd Continental Congress • June 7th • Richard Henry Lee proposes independence • July 2nd • United States of America created • July 4th • Adopted by Congress • What it included • Followed England’s Bill of Rights • 27 grievances with KGIII • Authors • Thomas Jefferson * • John Adams • Ben Franklin

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