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The Road to the Revolution

The Road to the Revolution. Why did the colonists rebel?. French and Indian War. Two sides Britain and the colonies vs. France and many Indian tribes including the Iroquois Fought over land in the Ohio River Valley and domination of overseas trade (fur, sugar, etc.) Results:

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The Road to the Revolution

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  1. The Road to the Revolution Why did the colonists rebel?

  2. French and Indian War • Two sides • Britain and the colonies vs. • France and many Indian tribes including the Iroquois • Fought over land in the Ohio River Valley and domination of overseas trade (fur, sugar, etc.) • Results: • Britain and the colonies nearly lost until British Secretary of State William Pitt poured money and troops into the war • won land in Ohio River Valley • Britain was 147 million in debt, would need to tax colonies to make up debt • Colonies felt stronger after defeating the French

  3. British Colonies before and after the French and Indian War

  4. 1763 Pontiac’s Rebellion • Indians had lost French and Indian War, colonists were settling on their land and discontinued French practice of giving annual gifts. • A group of Indian tribes, led by Pontiac, attacked colonists, killing many and destroying British forts. • Failed to take Fort Detroit and Fort Pitt (ran out of supplies and ammunition) • Result: colonists now had military control of Indian lands in the west

  5. Pontiac’s Rebellion

  6. Proclamation of 1763 • British barred colonial settlement east of the Appalachian Mountains because protecting the colonists was getting expensive. • Colonial reaction: angry because they had fought and died for this land in the Fr-Ind War and Pontiac’s Rebellion- it took away their god-given right/destiny to expand.

  7. British Proclamation Line of 1763

  8. Sugar Act of 1764 • Lowered the tax on sugar from 6 pence to 3 pence but Britain began to enforce the tax. • Now colonists had to pay the tax whereas before they had ignored it. • Hurt colonial merchants and rum distillers who had been smuggling sugar from French and Spanish colonies. • Colonists saw it as an unfair tax, British felt the colonists needed to pay their fair share.

  9. Stamp Act of 1765 • British taxed paper documents (playing cards, contracts, letters, newspapers) • Colonists revolted- • Created Stamp Act Congress to discuss their options (united the upper classes) • Staged Stamp Act Riots protesting the tax (attacked property, threatened stamp distributors, hung people in effigy)- united lower classes British response • British response- Parliament repealed the Stamp Act in 1766

  10. Stamp Act Protest from Above & Below Patrick Henry's speech on the Virginia Resolves (an 1851 painting by Peter F. Rothermel) Cartoon of a Stamp Act Riot

  11. Declaratory Act of 1766 • Parliament declares their full power and authority to make laws that are binding in the colonies.

  12. Townshend Acts of 1767 • Tax on lead, glass, paint/dyes and tea • Created writs of assistance- allowed British troops to search colonial homes to make sure people paid the tax. • Colonists were angered over invasion of privacy rights. • Boycotts involving “Daughters of Liberty” • Spinning bees- women’s contribution to boycotts

  13. Colonial Women Spinning Source: http://romancereaderatheart.com/colonial/timeline/spinningwheellrg.jpg Source: http://www.nwhm.org/images/Industry/woman%20spinning.jpg

  14. Quartering Acts of 1765 • Colonists were required to provide food and housing to British soldiers sent to enforce taxes/laws in the colonies. • Angered at loss of privacy, right to be secure in their homes • New York Assembly refused to comply • Parliament suspended the Assembly • Colonists saw it as an attack on their right to rule themselves

  15. Boston Massacre-March 1770 • General Thomas Gage sent British troops to Boston in 1768 to quell colonial rebellion. • Colonists harassed British troops, moonlighting troops fought with mainly Irish dockworkers over jobs, pub brawls • March 5 curfew broken when Sons of Liberty rang fire bells. • People out in streets saying, “Fire, fire…”

  16. Henry Pelham’s engraving of the Boston Massacre

  17. Paul Revere’s Engraving of the Boston Massacre

  18. Boston Massacre • One crowd surrounded sentry Hugh White who was guarding the Customs House (tax collection building)

  19. Committees of Correspondence 1772 • Led by Samuel Adams, 21 members • Formed to keep colonists and the world informed about violations of the colonist’s rights by the British • British saw it as ungrateful rebellion • It was propaganda (trying to convince people that the colonists were justified) • Colonists would see it as a peaceful exercise of free speech

  20. Boston Tea Party Dec. 1773 • Protested Tea Act of 1773, which excused British East India Company from paying taxes on tea (lowered the price of tea) • Colonists felt it gave the BEIC a monopoly • Colonists dressed as Indians poured tea into Boston harbor • British saw it as an attack on property • Colonists saw it as a legitimate form of protest

  21. Source: http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=96175&rendTypeId=4

  22. 1774 Intolerable (Coercive) Acts • Punished Boston and MA. for the tea party & strengthened British control over colonies • Closed the Port of Boston • Revoked the MA. Charter and forbade town meetings without Governor’s consent (took away their right to govern themselves) • British officials charged with crimes in Boston would be tried elsewhere • Renewed the Quartering Act • Colonists saw it as an attack on their freedoms to self govern and trade freely, & an effort to create unfair trials. • British saw it as a way of maintaining order and punishing the colonists for destruction of property.

  23. Quebec Act 1774 • Extended Quebec’s boundary south to OH River (land claimed by CT, MA, VA) • Gave religious freedom to Catholics in former New France

  24. First Continental Congress 1774 • All colonies except Georgia attended • To discuss their grievances and consider their options • Some for independence, some wanted to remain British colonies • Created a Declaration of Resolves that expressed loyalty to Britain but also declared their rights as British subjects • Called for a ban on trade with Britain • King George III saw it as “a State of Rebellion, blows must decide whether they are to be… independent.”

  25. Battle of Lexington and Concord • April 1775, 1st battle of the Revolution • British troops left Boston • Paul Revere’s ride… 70 minutemen met the British soldiers at Lexington village green • “Shot heard round the world” fired (who?) • Firing from British- 8 colonists dead, 10 wounded • Brits marched to Concord, destroyed supplies • On way back to Boston attacked from behind stone walls • Pats: <100 casualties, Brits: 273 killed/wounded

  26. Second Continental Congress 1775 • Met in Philadelphia • Radicals pushed to declare independence • Others urged restraint • Had to establish army- led by George Washington

  27. Dunmore’s Proclamation 1775 • Offered freedom to slaves who fought for Britain

  28. Prohibitory Act 1775 • Prohibited trade in the colonies • British blockaded the colonies, in an attempt to hurt their economy • Would seize any ship that attempted to trade with the colonies

  29. Common Sense January 1776 • By Thomas Paine, one of the radical patriots • Argued for independence

  30. Declaration of Independence • July 4, 1776 • By Thomas Jefferson • Declared independence from Britain • Still needed to win the war

  31. The Peoples of Eastern North America in 1776 Source: Gary Nash. (lecture on book) The Urban Crucible. Newberry Library, Chicago. September or October 2005.

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