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APUSH. Bell Work: Make a T chart for concept attainment…. Opposites. Home Soil Defensive Liberty Guerilla Warfare Long Rifle Government?. Trained Troops Well Supported (Indians, mercenaries) Navy Officers Loyalists Popularity?. The World Turned Upside Down.
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APUSH Bell Work: Make a T chart for concept attainment….
Opposites • Home Soil • Defensive • Liberty • Guerilla Warfare • Long Rifle • Government? • Trained Troops • Well Supported (Indians, mercenaries) • Navy • Officers • Loyalists • Popularity?
The World Turned Upside Down • Washington given commission of the Continental Army- compromise with the Southern colonies • Character • Doesn’t win much but continually fields in army- wears out British resolve
Early Pre-fighting • 14 months before the declaration of independence… • Remaining loyal- but fighting independence • Concord & Lexington • Bunker Hill (Breed’s Hill) May have lost engagements, but the victories were costly for the British.
Reconciliation? • Olive Branch Petition… • Bunker Hill- George III- breaking of the Olive Branch • Hessians hired (soldier from Hess- but all mercenaries are called Hessians) • Why bring outsiders?
Canadian Invasion 1775 • General Richard Montgomery & Benedict Arnold invade from the south to create a 14th colony • Thought French would join up- but defeated at Quebec • Montgomery killed- Arnold shot in the leg.
Common Sense • Most colonists are still loyal to the king (threat of hanging, drawing & quartering etc.) • Thomas Paine writes common sense- • No where in the physical universe does a smaller body control a larger one. • Using the Bible and common language- explains the idea of popular government • ?republicanism vs. social hierarchy- fear of mob rule
Independence • Richard Henry Lee- June 6th… “right ought to be, free and independent states” • Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence • Loyalists (Tories) vs. Patriots (Whigs) • Minority movement (rebels) • Conservatives and wealthy remained loyal. Along with clergy, British officers etc. • After independence- not wide persecution (ie Reign of Terror)
Round 1 1776 Washington vs William Howe • British evacuate Boston • Concentrate efforts on New York- take Long Island More Defeats but no pursuit- Howe’s experience at Bunker hill made him overly cautious • Brooklyn Heights- August 1776 • White Plains- October 1776 Retreat and Desertion • Trenton & Princeton- crossing the Delaware.
Round 2 1777 Attempts at splitting the colonies in two: Hudson River Valley Ft. Ticonderoga (sole protection against Northern Invasion) • Saratoga: Horatio Gates, Benedict Arnold vs. Gen. “Gentleman Johnny” Burgoyne • British Gen. Howe does not meet up with Burgoyne- instead attack Philadelphia • Washington defeated at Brandywine & Germantown but delays Howe (Philadelphia captured Howe!) • Burgoyne eventually encircled by colonial militia and forced to surrender. Arnold shot again in the leg- loses it. • Washington will spend most the war hemming in the British in New York (can’t join forces in the South)
Between Rounds • British reconciliation? • Ben Franklin in France- diplomacy pivotal • French- Treaty of Alliance- becomes a world war with Spain, Holland entering later in 1779 • Armed Neutrality ensues (Russia and others poised to attack) • Makes the war very costly • Valley Forge- Baron von Steuben
Round 3 The West 1778-1779 Arnold gives up West Point and joins the British… Washington- “who can we trust now?” • Indian fighting- British would halt colonial expansion • George Clark- seizes former French forts by surprise. • Fts. Kaskakia Cahokia • Recapture of Vincennes Forces the British to later give up the Ohio valley at the Paris peace talks. • Also, privateers led by John Paul Jones attacked British shipping
Round 4 The South 1780-1781 Attempts to unite with Southern loyalists- roll up the colonies beginning with Georgia heading north • Savannah & Charleston • Kings Mountain- frontiersmen (bloody frontier fighting) Fighting Quaker Nathaniel Green- loses battles but wins campaigns. • Colonial tide’s turn at Cowpens & Gulford • Siege of Yorktown 1781 (Washington and the French from the north with French encirclement by sea)
Aftermath • Treaty of Paris 1783 • Reasons for American victory
AP: Bell Work… place these events in the correct order! • Lexington & Concord • Second Continental Congress (Olive Branch Petition) • Stamp Act • Punitive Acts (Boston Port Bill, Mass. Gov’t Act, Administration of Justice Act, New Quartering Act) • Stamp Act Congress • Boston Massacre • Declaration of Independence • Sugar Act • Tea Act • Common Sense • Boston Tea Party • First Continental Congress • Bunker Hill
Bell Work… Continued • Sugar Act • Stamp Act • Stamp Act Congress • Boston Massacre • Tea Act • Boston Tea Party • Punitive Acts (Boston Port Bill, Mass. Gov’t Act, Administration of Justice Act, New Quartering Act) • First Continental Congress • Lexington & Concord • Second Continental Congress (Olive Branch Petition) • Bunker Hill • Common Sense • Declaration of Independence
CRANARY BURIAL GROUND • John Hancock, Sam Adams, several signers of the Declaration of Independence