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Chapter 4 Keystone of a New Nation. Lesson 11 – Struggle Between Empires Lesson 12 – Colonies Unhappy with England’s Rule Lesson 13 – Struggle for Independence Lesson 14 – Formation of a New Government. Lesson 11 LEQ's: Struggle between Empires for Pennsylvania
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Chapter 4Keystone of a New Nation Lesson 11 – Struggle Between Empires Lesson 12 – Colonies Unhappy with England’s Rule Lesson 13 – Struggle for Independence Lesson 14 – Formation of a New Government
Lesson 11 LEQ's: Struggle between Empires for Pennsylvania • 1. Why did Philadelphia continue to prosper during colonial days? • 2. How did the fur trade help to settle the Pennsylvania wilderness? • 3. What were important to the colonial development of Pennsylvania?
Lesson 11 – Struggle Between Empires • Philadelphia – planned by William Penn • Orderly street and parks • Protected from ocean but had Delaware River • Major trade center • European settlers doing well – Native Americans WERE NOT • Diseases – measles and smallpox • Had no resistance to diseases
Walking Purchase – 1737 • Delaware Indians would sell a strip of land that covered as much territory as a man could walk in a day and a half • Penn’s sons cheated Natives • Cleared path • runners
Wilderness in Pennsylvania • Native Americans were skilled at trapping fur-bearing animals • Europeans wanted furs, know as pelts • Traded pelts for cloths, guns, iron kettles, etc. • No roadways through the wilderness
Trading Posts were set up by trading companies in the wilderness. • Stored items to be traded for pelts • Later, forts were built on the sites of these trading posts • Conflicts in the wilderness • France and England – set up colonies
French and English followed separate rivers, meeting at forks of the Ohio River (Pittsburgh) • Both claimed territory • Both ready to fight in order keep fur trade • French Grand Plan • Central link to establish a water transportation system • St. Lawrence River to St. Louis and Mississippi River southward, using great lakes in between
Peace-loving Quakers would not fight • Asked for help from Governor Dinwiddie of the Virginia Colony • 1753, 21 year old George Washington was sent out to order French out of the area. • Fort LeBoeuf, near present day Erie, Washington delivered message. • French refused to leave • 1754, Governor of Virginia wanted settlement built at the forks of the Ohio River • French captured settlement and built own fort, Fort Duquesne
1754, Washington and troops returned to region to save settlement • Built crude roads through thick forests and over rugged hills • Heat of summer • Washington set up camp in an open field, known as Great Meadows • Native American chief Half-King, tipped off Washington about a French attack • Traveled through night, surprising French and winning. One French soldier escaped to relay news of the battle
1754 – French and Indian War • Lasted nine years in Europe but only six in North America. • English were fighting French over control of the Ohio River Valley (control of North America) • Native Americans helped both sides • Tribes who used to fight each other sided with French and Americans and fought once again
Fort Necessity – ordered built by Washington in preparation of French attack • Washington surrendered to French • French allowed Washington and troops to return to Virginia without weapons • Fort was torn apart and burned • 1755 – English sent General Braddock with large army to capture Fort Duquesne • Washington traveled with troops
Ambushed by French and lost • Braddock shot in chest and died within days • Buried in the middle of the rough road • 1758 – British General Forbes advanced on Fort Duquesne with 8,000 troops • When arrived, fort had been set fire to • English built a new, stronger fort at location called Fort Pitt (eventually Pittsburgh) • Victory allowed English rule to continue • English won war within 2 years against French
Lesson 11 LEQ's: Struggle between Empires for Pennsylvania • 1. Why did Philadelphia continue to prosper during colonial days? • 2. How did the fur trade help to settle the Pennsylvania wilderness?
Lesson 12 LEQ’s: Multicultural Haven for Ethnic and Religious Groups • 1. What does Keystone mean? • 2. Why did the people of Pennsylvania become angry under England's rule? • 3. What major events led to the American Revolution?
Lesson 12 – Colonies Unhappy with England’s Rule • Quaker State vs. Keystone State • Quaker State since founders were Quakers • Keystone – a central wedge-shaped stone in an arch that strengthens the structure and holds all of the other stones in place • Later, term deals with the political importance in forging a new nation.
Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and Bill of Rights were all documents written and approved in Philadelphia.
Cost of French and Indian war was pushed onto the colonies. • New taxes, monies collected to help pay for services provided by the government, were placed on the American colonies • Until the 1760s, the thirteen colonies were separate. • New taxes brought them together in protest.
First Continental Congress – Sept 1774 • Congress – means coming together • Leaders of the colonies met and agreed to stop buying England’s goods brought to the colonies. • England eventually stopped the taxes on all goods except for tea • People of Pennsylvania refused to buy (boycott) tea • England felt superior to the colonists and refused to listen to their concerns - ethnocentric
Second Continental Congress – May 1775 • Met at Pennsylvania State House (Independence Hall). • John Hancock was president of 2nd Cont. Congress • Fighting between English troops and Massachusetts colonists began one month prior • Congress elected George Washington Commander of the American Army, although John Hancock wanted position • Reasons: in order to get southern support, Washington, from Virginia, was chosen
May 1776 – five people were chosen to write a Declaration of Independence • Thomas Jefferson wrote original draft • Benjamin Franklin, from Pennsylvania, helped greatly with the draft • Congress debated every paragraph and took out one-third of the original draft • Issues such as slavery taken out because of South
July 4, 1776, Declaration of Independence was approved by 12 of the 13 states, New York chose not to vote. • Liberty Bell – cast in England in 1751 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of William Penn’s Charter of Privileges. • Hidden during was in Allentown • Crack appeared the first time it was rung, unsuccessfully repaired
Lesson 13 – Struggle for Independence • American Revolution – war fought to gain our independence from England • Treasonous act by the colonies • Loyalists – people still loyal to England • 1400 Pennsylvanians joined England’s army during revolution. • Quakers did not fight
Importance of Pennsylvania’s cities during the revolution: • Rifles were made in Lancaster • Cannons were made in Philadelphia • Military supplies and ammunition were stored at Carlisle • Conestoga wagon was made in Lancaster
After 1777, English invaded Philadelphia • Americans lost these battles, English army took control of Philadelphia • Washington set up camp at Valley Forge. • Encampment – town/city built to house troops • Freezing winter, poorly fed and clothed troops, thousands died • Poor sanitary conditions at camps • Diseases unknown to doctors, typhus, typhoid, and dysentery claimed many lives
Friedrich von Steuben, German officer, volunteered to train Washington’s men • Strict discipline of the soldiers helped turn the war around • Ben Franklin, in December 1776, was sent to France to negotiate, hoping French would lend support after losing to English for control of North America • French sent money, guns, food, soldiers, and ships
Important women of the American Revolution • Mary Hays followed her husband into battle. • “Molly Pitcher” – carried pitchers of water onto battlefield for soldier who were fighting. • When her husband was wounded, she took over his post at the cannon. • Sarah Bache, daughter of Ben Franklin, organized more than 2,000 Philadelphia women to sew clothing for the troops • Betsy Ross – believed to have made our country’s first flag • 13 stars and 13 stripes (one for each colony)
Lesson 14 – Formation of a New Government • American Revolution fought to get away from a King/Queen • Articles of Confederation – written by American leaders during Revolution. • Very weak document • States were like independent countries
Major Weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation • No Central Government • No power to make people to go to war • No way to make people obey the law • No way to levy or collect taxes • No mechanism for solving arguments among the states • No way to regulate trade among states
May 1787, delegates from twelve states met in Philadelphia with the purpose of strengthening the Articles of Confederation • George Washington was elected president of the convention • Realized a new plan of government needed to be written • 55 delegates met, 8 from Pennsylvania • Gouverneur Morris and Ben Franklin
James Madison, Virginia, is given credit as being the Father of the U.S. Constitution • Major disagreements over how each state was to be fairly represented in the new government • Compromise • Smaller states were worried about not getting equal representation
Roger Sherman – compromise • Representation by population (House of Rep.) • Equal representation (Senate) • Ben Franklin – the Great Pacifier • Calmed many tempers during convention • Oldest signer of Constitution although he did not agree with all parts of it • 39 of 55 delegates approved Constitution
States needed to approve/RATIFY plan in order for it to be legal • 9 of the 13 had to approve • Promise to write a list of rights and freedoms was needed to get states to ratify • Interpretation, Compromise, and Change • Amendments were the methods to allow these to happen • Sept. 1790 – first ten amendments were proposed – BILL OF RIGHTS