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Explore key events from the Colonial period to the American Revolution, including protests, battles, and the Declaration of Independence. Learn about influential figures like Patrick Henry and Samuel Adams. Understanding Colonial resistance and the birth of a new nation.
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Colonial America Timeline A Write On Activity
Colonial Timeline • 1763: Great Britain issues the Proclamation of 1763 prohibiting settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains. The proclamation is greatly resented in Virginia. • 1765: Great Britain imposes the Stamp Act, taxing the American colonies.
Colonial Timeline • Patrick Henry challenges Great Britain's right to impose the tax. • In New York, delegates draw up a Declaration of Rights and Grievances.
Colonial Timeline • 1766: Parliament withdraws the Stamp Act but passes the Declaratory Act, which give Great Britain's the right to pass laws governing the American colonies. • 1767: Townshend Duties taxes imports of tea, glass, paper, lead, and paint in the American colonies.
Colonial Timeline • 1770: British troops fire into a crowd of demonstrators in Boston in an event that becomes known as the "Boston Massacre."
Colonial Timeline • Parliament repeals the Townshend Duties, except for the tax on tea. • 1772: The Boston Assembly demands the rights of the colonies and threatens secession from GreatBritain.
Colonial Timeline • Samuel Adams forms a committee for action against Great Britain. • 1773: BritishParliament passes the Tea Act.
Colonial Timeline • The Boston Tea Party takes place in Boston, Massachusetts. A party of nearly 50 men disguised as Indians, led by Samuel Adams, boards ships, breaks open 343 chests of tea, and empties them into Boston Harbor.
Colonial Timeline • 1775: Patrick Henry makes his "Give me liberty or give me death" speech in Richmond.
Colonial Timeline • Paul Revere rides to Lexington, Massachusetts.
Colonial Timeline • The first battles of the American Revolution take place in Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts.
Colonial Timeline • The Americans are defeated at Bunker Hill. • King George III declares the American colonies in rebellion. • Great Britain hires 29,000 German (Hessian) soldiers for the war in North America.
Colonial Timeline • 1776: The Second Continental Congress passes the American Declaration of Independence.
Liberty! • A group of men met in Philadelphia to declare independence from the mother country. • On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence.
Signers: • George Washington did not sign the Declaration of Independence because in July 1776 he was in New York preparing to defend Manhattan against the British.
Colonial American Lesson Plans Choosing Revolution • Colonial Reaction to the Stamp Act • Eighteenth-Century and Twentieth-Century Forms of Resistance • A Family disrupted--the Randolph Family and the Coming American Revolution • Website Resource: Daily Life of 13 Colonies • Agriculture and Education in Colonial America (slide show)
Colonial America Lesson Plans • Acrimony in Bruton Parish Church • Attitudes and Behaviors Regarding Slavery in the Colonial Period • A Colonial Christmas in Williamsburg • Colonial Home Remedies • Don't Fence Me In • Eighteenth-Century Music and Dance • Gardening in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg • Getting Into History: Visiting Museums - a Shared Experience • History Comes Alive in the Graveyard • Mathematics with a Mob Cap • Predicting Weather in the Eighteenth Century • Signs of the Times • Travel in the 18th Century • The Trial of Abigail Briggs • The Two Williamsburgs
The United States’ road to independence was not an easy one.