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Welcome to a Revolution

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Chapter 6 Review Definitions *writ of assistance *boycott *committees of correspondence *repeal *minuteman *militia More Definitions Stamp Act Boston Massacre ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Welcome to a Revolution


1
(No Transcript)
2
Chapter 6 Review
3
Definitionswrit of assistanceboycottcommitte
es of correspondencerepealminutemanmilitia
4
More Definitions
  • Stamp Act
  • Boston Massacre
  • Townshend Acts
  • Quartering Act
  • Boston Tea Party
  • Intolerable Acts

5
The French and Indian War
  • France and England competed for land in America.
  • France tried to protect its land by building
    forts in the Ohio River Valley and by befriending
    the Indians.
  • The English settlers angered the Indians by
    clearing forests to build farms.

6
  • A result of the French and Indian War was that
    France lost its lands in both America and Canada
  • The Indians were not pleased with the British
    victory and some decided to fight.
  • Chief Pontiac successfully fought the British
    because he was able to organize different Indian
    nations.

7
The British Fan the Flames!
  • The Proclamation of 1763 angered the colonists
    because it stopped them from moving west.
  • Colonists objected to the Stamp Act because they
    didnt think that they should have to pay
    Britains debt from the French and Indian War.

8
Sugar Act and Stamp Act
  • British taxed sugar and molasses
  • British imposed taxes upon all paper products and
    stamped the item once the tax had been paid.

9
  • The Sons and Daughters of Liberty were organized
    to protest British policies such as writs of
    assistance and the various acts.
  • A writ of assistance allowed a customs officer to
    search a ships cargo without permission from the
    captain.
  • The Quartering Act made colonists pay for the
    housing of British soldiers but was, in
    actuality, another form of tax because it saved
    Britain money.

10
Various protests
11
What do you notice first?
How are the British portrayed?
How are the colonists portrayed?
How would other colonies react to seeing this in
the paper?
12
  • The chief goal of the Tea Act was to raise money
    for the British East India Company which was in
    financial trouble
  • The Boston Tea Party was a bold and daring move
    in which the colonists dumped thousands of pounds
    of tea into the harbor in protest of the Tea Act

13
Colonists react
No Taxation Without Representation!
14
  • In response to the Boston Tea Party, Parliament
    created the Intolerable Acts which limited town
    meetings to once a year, shut down the port of
    Boston, and established a new Quartering Act. It
    also said that British officers who commit a
    crime would stand trial in Great Britain!

15
The Shot Heard Round the World
  • The Intolerable Acts angered Americans who formed
    the First Continental Congress. Delegates decided
    to unite against Britain. They agreed to boycott
    British goods, stop exporting American goods to
    England, and form militias.

16
  • Minutemen were busy training throughout
    Massachusetts.
  • The British discovered that a large store of arms
    was being hidden in Concord and sent out troops
    to seize them by surprise.
  • The Sons of Liberty saw them leave, and Paul
    Revere alerted the countryside.

17
  • 70 armed minutemen were waiting for the British
    in the town of Lexington outside of Concord.
  • The British ordered the minutemen to go home. The
    colonists refused to obey.
  • A shot rang out and the troops fired. Eight
    minutemen were killed.

18
  • When the British troops reached Concord, they
    found that the store of arms had already been
    removed. They headed back to Boston. Now the
    minutemen were waiting for them.
  • All along the road from Concord to Boston,
    farmers, blacksmiths, saddle makers, and clerks
    hid behind trees, rocks, and fences.
  • By the time the redcoats reached Boston, more
    than 200 were wounded and 73 were dead.

19
  • Why do people call the first gunshot at Lexington
    the Shot Heard Round the World?

20
Second Continental Congress
Representatives brought money to help establish
the Continental Army (i.e. pay soldiers, buy
guns, bullets, food, and uniforms
21
independence (n)
declaration (n)
an official statement
  • the freedom to govern on ones own.

22
Who was involved?
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • John Adams
  • Robert R. Livingston
  • Roger Sherman
  • Thomas Jefferson

23
Where did it all take place?
  • This is a replica of the Graff house where
    Jefferson wrote the majority of the 1st draft of
    the Declaration of Independence. The original
    building (at this location) was destroyed in
    1888.

24
What did it look like?
Who wrote the first draft?
25
Who signed it first?
26
What happened after it was signed and where is it
now?
Where did all of this end up?
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