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Chapter 6. CONFLICTS IN THE COLONIES (1675–1774). Section l: Trouble on the Frontier Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War Section 3: Trouble over Colonists’ Rights Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions. Section 1: Trouble on the Frontier. OBJECTIVES.
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Chapter 6 CONFLICTS IN THE COLONIES(1675–1774) Section l: Trouble on the Frontier Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War Section 3: Trouble over Colonists’ Rights Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions
Section 1: Trouble on the Frontier OBJECTIVES • How did English colonists and American Indians view each other? • What wars did the English colonists fight against other European colonists? • How did the French and Indian War affect the British colonies?
Section 1: Trouble on the Frontier Relationship Between the English Colonist and American Indians • Sometimes they fought. • Sometimes they formed trade alliances.
Section 1: Trouble on the Frontier Colonial Wars • King William’s War (1689-1697) • Queen Anne’s War (1702-1713) • King George’s War (1740’s) • French and Indian War (1754-1763)
Section 1: Trouble on the Frontier Effects of the French and Indian War The Treaty of Paris 1763: • redrew the political map of North America • changed the balance of power in North America
Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War OBJECTIVES • Why did many colonists move to the frontier? • What factors led to Pontiac’s Rebellion? • What was the Proclamation of 1763, and how effective was it?
Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War The colonists moved to the frontier for: • farmland • food
Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War Causes of Pontiac’s Rebellion • British desire to build colonial settlements on Indian land • Indian desire to abandon European practices and drive out the white people
Section 2: Consequences of the French and Indian War Proclamation of 1763 • Factors Leading to the Proclamation of 1763 • British leaders feared more fighting on the frontier. • They thought that these conflicts would disrupt trade and force Britain to spend more on defense. • The Proclamation of 1763 was ineffective because it was: • difficult to enforce • ignored by settlers and traders
Section 3:Trouble over Colonists’ Rights OBJECTIVES • Why did Great Britain create new taxes for the colonies? • Why did colonists dislike the new tax laws? • How did colonists challenge these new taxes?
Section 3:Trouble over Colonists’ Rights Great Britain created new taxes to: • finance the French and Indian War • finance a standing army
Section 3:Trouble over Colonists’ Rights No Taxation without Representation The new tax laws upset the colonists who cried, “No Taxation without Representation.”
Section 3:Trouble over Colonists’ Rights The colonists challenged the new taxes by: • boycotting certain goods • protesting the Stamp Act • forming the Sons of Liberty • calling the Stamp Act Congress in October 1765 Stamp Act (1765) – law passed by Parliament that raised tax money by requiring colonists to pay for an official stamp whenever they bought paper items such as newspapers, licenses, and legal documents
Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions OBJECTIVES • How did colonists respond to the Townshend Acts? • Why were the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party significant events? • What was the purpose of the Intolerable Acts?
Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions Response to the Townshend Acts • Colonists organized boycotts on British goods. • Colonial legislatures protested and attacked homes of customs officials.
Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions The Boston Massacre and the Boston TeaParty were significant events because: • They demonstrated the colonists anger at the British government. • They forced the British to repeal the Townshend Acts to reduce tension.
Section 4: New Taxes and Tensions Purpose of the Intolerable Acts • punish Massachusetts • restore order in the colonies