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The American Revolution

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Title: The American Revolution


1
Tuesday, November 17th
Do-Now Going over the homework. Last night you read about the British and American Strategies. What did you learn? How did you respond to the questions? Recall what you know about the advantages the disadvantages on the American and British sides
Agenda Do Now HW check Notes Discussion advantages disadvantages, key battles key leaders, etc. Homework
2
The American Revolution
  • Advantages Disadvantages
  • Key events and battles
  • Notable leaders and participants

3
Strengths
  • BRITISH STRENGTHS
  • Well-equipped funded
  • Trained army
  • Strong navy, etc.
  • AMERICAN STRENGTHS
  • Home field advantage
  • Guerilla war tactics
  • Motivation

4
Weaknesses
  • BRITISH WEAKNESSES
  • War was unpopular in Britain
  • Unknown, hostile territory
  • Commanders resisted adopting guerilla tactics
  • AMERICAN WEAKNESS
  • Inexperienced,
  • No central government control,
  • Lacking funds, supplies, etc.
  • Loyalists joined British or fled to Canada

5
  • Once these rebels have felt a
  • smart blow, they
  • will submit.
  • King George III

6
British Strategy
  • Divide and conquer
  • Attack the middle Colonies to
  • separate north from south
  • Enlist help from mercenaries,
  • loyalists, and Native Americans
  • With Hessian support, the Brits attack
    Washingtons poorly trained equipped forces in
    NY
  • Throw money men at the problem

7
Continental Strategy
  • Build a military from the ground up
  • Continental soldiers, minutemen, militia,
  • privateers, etc.
  • Break tradition
  • Fight during the winter, use guerrilla support,
    etc.
  • Spies and Misinformation
  • Live to fight another day, present false
    information, use spies to secure intelligence, do
    the unexpected
  • Secure some powerful allies
  • Frances support proved key to victory

8
Support from the Swamps
  • Who was Francis Marion?
  • Famous Patriot militia leader
  • Bold, hardy, resourceful, skillful,
  • Carried his secretive plans with him to the grave
  • Nicknamed the Swamp Fox of South Carolina
  • Attacks from Marions militia unit and others
    provided indispensable support for the Patriot
    cause

9
Weapons of the Revolution
  • Muskets
  • Cannons
  • Flintlock Pistols
  • Swords Sabers
  • !Submarines!
  • Sort of Americas first (and failed) experiment
    with the concept of an underwater vessel during
    the Revolutionary War. A submarine, then
    called "the Turtle" was invented by David
    Bushnell in order to attach explosives to
    British ships without being detected. Though
    General Washington loathed this underwater manner
    of attack as "ungentlemanly", the Turtle was
    deployed on September 6th, 1776.

10
George Washington Master of Misinformation
11
  • I only regret that I have but one life to lose
    for my country.
  • Nathan Hale,
  • Captured Patriot

12
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13
New Jersey
  • Major actions in the state include
  • 11/20/1776 - Forced Abandonment of Fort Lee,
    starting the retreat of the American army across
    NJ to the other side of the Delaware river.
  • 12/26/1776 - The first battle of Trenton
  • 1/3/1777 - The battle of Princeton
  • 4/14/1777 - The Battle of Bound Brook
  • June 1777 - The Battle of Short Hills
  • Autumn 1777 - River Forts defense of the lower
    Delaware
  • 6/28/1778 - The battle of Monmouth
  • 6/6/1780 - The Battle of Connecticut Farms
  • 6/23/1780 - The Battle of Springfield, last large
    action in the north.
  • Additionally, there were hundreds, even
    thousands, of smaller battles, engagements,
    skirmishes, raids, ambushes, etc. involving
    regular troops, militia units and loyalist units,
    and many actions off the coast of sea vessels.

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16
Major Battles
Date Location Battle American British
04/19/1775 MA Lexington/Concord Parker Smith
06/17/1775 MA Bunker Hill Prescott Howe
11/13/1775 Quebec Montreal Montgomery Carleton
12/31/1775 Quebec Quebec Montgomery Carleton
08/27/1776 NY Long Island Washington Howe
12/26/1776 NJ Trenton Washington Rall
01/03/1777 NJ Princeton Washington Cornwallis
09/11/1777 PA Brandywine Washington Howe
10/04/1777 PA Germantown Washington Howe
06/28/1778 NJ Monmouth Washington Clinton
09/23/1779 North Sea Bonhomme Richard v. Serapis Jones Pearson
10/07/1780 SC Kings Mountain Campbell Ferguson
03/15/1781 SC Guilford Courthouse Greene Cornwallis
Oct. 16-19, 1781 NC Yorktown Washington Cornwallis
17
Benedict Arnold
  • Brilliant general
  • Won several battles against the British
  • then joined them.
  • He helped Ethan Allen take Fort Ticonderoga, also
    played a major part in the Patriot victory at
    Saratoga.
  • Feeling jaded and overlooked for appointment to
    higher posts, he joined the British and tried to
    help them win the war.
  • He had planned to deliver his own keys to West
    Point, site of the U.S. army, to Britain's Major
    John Andre.
  • Andre was captured and hanged. Arnold escaped and
    actually commanded British troops later in the
    war. He died in Britain, unrecognized and alone.

18
Fort TiconderogaMay 10, 1775
  • NY fort on the western shore of Lake Champlain
  • Originally French
  • Seized by British in the Fr. Ind. War
  • Captured by Ethan Allen Green Mountain Boys
  • along with Benedict Arnold
  • First "official" victory of the Revolutionary War
  • The fort held a stock of British weapons,
    cannons, etc.
  • Delayed a planned British invasion from Canada
    and also enabled American troops to invade Canada
    themselves.

19
Battles Bunker HillJune 17, 1775
  • Fought on hills north of Boston Harbor
  • Britain lost 42 of their troops
  • Showed the American
  • forces they could do some
  • real damage to the great
  • army
  • No turning back now...
  • Losses
  • 1100 British
  • 400 Patriot
  • Victory Tactical v. Psychological

20
  • These are the times that try mens souls. The
    summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in
    this crisis, shrink from the service of their
    country but he that stands it NOW deserves the
    love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like
    hell, is not easily conquered yet we have this
    consolation with us, that the harder the
    conflict, the more glorious the triumph
  • Thomas Paine, The Crisis
  • Winter of 1776

21
  • Christmas Eve, leave their post and secretly
    cross the Delaware River

22
Battles Trenton Princeton December 26, 1776
January 3, 1777
  • Washington and his troops cross the Delaware
  • Achieve total surprise and a clear American
    victory
  • Captured nearly the entire Hessian force
  • Drunken German mercenaries celebrating the
    holidays
  • Stealthy tactics
  • Unusual winter fighting and movements at night
  • Left the fires burning to appear at camp
  • Days after Trenton, victory at Princeton drove
    the British out of NJ, almost for good
  • Morale boost
  • Chance to gain badly needed supplies

23
Wednesday, November 18th
Do-Now Recall the strengths and weaknesses of the British and Colonial forces in the war. List as many as you can. Objective To conclude study of the key battles/events/figures of the Revolutionary War. To understand the significance of its resolution.
Agenda Do Now Notes Discussion advantages disadvantages, key battles key leaders, etc. Reading Washingtons victory at Yorktown ends the war. Homework Packet work Complete the Revolutionary War Battles and Leaders worksheet
24
Battles Saratoga
  • Series of battles near Saratoga, NY
  • Resulted in a huge American victory and
    turning-point
  • 1/4 of British forces in North America
    surrendered
  • Won France as an ally
  • Many battles were yet to be fought, but American
    Independence was assured

General Burgoyne surrenders at Saratoga, NY
October 1777
25
Valley ForgeDecember 1777 to June 1778
  • Pennsylvania encampment
  • A particularly harsh winter
  • Army was short on food, clothing, supplies.
  • Training the men
  • Commander G. Washington worked to make better,
    tougher soldiers
  • With Baron von Steuben, a Prussian drill sergeant
  • Among the soldiers who were encamped with
    Washington at Valley Forge were Generals
    Nathanael Greene and Benedict Arnold Alexander
    Hamilton, Washington's personal aide the Marquis
    de Lafayette and a man named John Marshall, who
    would go on to become the first famous Chief
    Justice of the United States.

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27
Battles Bonne Homme Richard vs. Serapis
September 23, 1779
  • The most remarkable single ship duel of the
    American Revolution
  • Bonne Homme Richard
  • Barely seaworthy
  • HMS Serapis
  • a strong, 50-gun ship
  • Asked to surrender, John Paul Jones answered"
    Surrender be dammed, I have not begun to fight!"
  • And the Bon Homme Richard went on the vanquish
    the Serapis.

28
Yorktown October 6-19, 1781
  • Washingtons troops aided by French forces
    attacked Cornwallis position
  • The French fleet prevented him from being
    reinforced or rescued

General Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown
October 19, 1781
29
Articles of ConfederationDrafted in 1777 by the
Continental Congress
  • Came before the Constitution....
  • in effect, the first constitution of the United
    States.
  • Established a "firm league of friendship" between
    the 13 colonies
  • Created during the throes of the Revolutionary
    War
  • Reflected a wariness by the states of a strong
    central government
  • Fear of giving a central government too much
    power
  • Why?
  • Purposely vested the largest share of power to
    individual states
  • Weak flawed in design, it was proven
    ineffective
  • Later replaced by what?...

30
What hardships were faced by Americans during
the war?
  • Lack of support from the Continental Congress
  • Disruption in trade caused by the British
    blockade
  • Shortages of goods

Why was the fighting that took place in the South
particularly vicious?
  • Americans fighting Americans
  • Loyalists did much of the fighting for the
    British here

31
What were the major provisions of the Treaty of
Paris?
  • Britain recognizes American independence
  • Florida lands returned to Spain
  • Established the Mississippi
  • River as the boundary between
  • the new US and Spanish
  • territory to the west

32
How did the outcome of the Revolution affect
Native Americans?
  • The power of the Iroquois league was destroyed
  • For decades Native Americans were blamed for
    supporting the British

What impact did the Revolutionary War have on
African Americans?
  • In the north, it promoted the antislavery cause
  • In the south slavery only became more restrictive
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