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The Road to Revolution

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Title: The Road to Revolution Author: Susan M. Pojer Last modified by: tony_mayo Created Date: 6/22/2005 2:32:14 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Road to Revolution


1
The Road to Revolution (1770-1776)
2
American Philosophes
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Thomas Jefferson
  • John Adams
  • Thomas Paine

3
The Boston Massacre (March 5,1770)
4
Tar and Feathering
5
Committees of Correspondence
Purpose ? warn neighboring colonies
about incidents with Britain ?
broaden the resistance movement.
6
Tea Act (1773)
  • British East India Co.
  • Monopoly on British tea imports.
  • Many members of Parliament held shares.
  • Permitted the Co. to sell tea directly to
    colonies without middlemen (cheaper tea!)
  • expected the cols. to eagerly choose the
    cheaper tea.

7
Boston Tea Party (1773)
8
The Coercive or IntolerableActs (1774)
1. Port Bill
2. Government Act
3. New Quartering Act
Lord North
4. Administration of Justice Act
9
The Quebec Act (1774)
10
First Continental Congress (1774)
55 delegates from 12 colonies
Agenda ? How to respond to the Coercive Acts
the Quebec Act?
1 vote per colony represented.
11
The British Are Coming . . .
Paul Revere William Dawes make their midnight
ride to warn the Minutemen of approaching British
soldiers.
12
The Shot Heard Round the World!
Lexington Concord April 19,1775
13
The Second Continental Congress(1775)
Olive Branch Petition
14
Thomas Paine Common Sense
15
  • It was ridiculous for an island to rule a
    continent.
  • America was not a "British nation" it was
    composed of influences and peoples from all of
    Europe,
  • Even if Britain was the "mother country" of
    America, that made her actions all the more
    horrendous, for no mother would harm her children
    so brutally.
  • Being a part of Britain would drag America into
    unnecessary European wars, and keep it from the
    international commerce at which America excelled.
  • The distance between the two nations made the
    governing the colonies from England unwieldy. If
    some wrong were to be petitioned to Parliament,
    it would take a year before the colonies received
    a response.

16
  • The New World was discovered shortly after the
    Reformation. The Puritans believed that God
    wanted to give them a safe haven from the
    persecution of British rule.
  • Britain ruled the colonies for its own benefit,
    and did not consider the best interests of the
    colonists in governing them.
  • Less-quoted sections of the pamphlet include
    Paine's over-optimistic view of America's
    military potential at the time of the Revolution.
    For example, he spends pages describing how
    colonial shipyards, by using the large amounts of
    lumber available in the country, could quickly
    create a navy that could rival the Royal Navy.

17
Declaration of Independence (1776)
18
Declaration of Independence
19
Independence Hall
20
New National Symbols
21
Second Continental Congress
  • Philadelphia, PA May 10, 1775 to December 12,
    1776
  • Baltimore, MD December 20, 1776 to February 27,
    1777
  • Philadelphia, PA March 4, 1777 to September 18,
    1777
  • Court House, Lancaster, PA September 27, 1777
    (one day)
  • York, PA September 30, 1777 to June 27, 1778
  • Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    July 2, 1778 to March 1, 1781

22
The American Revolution 1775-1783
23
On the Eve of the Revolution ?
Britain Americans
Advantages ? ?
Disadvantages ? ?
24
Loyalist Strongholds
25
Washingtons Headaches
  • Only 1/3 of the colonists were in favor of a war
    for independence the other third were Loyalists,
    and the final third were neutral.
  • State/colony loyalties.
  • Congress couldnt tax to raise money for the
    Continental Army.
  • Poor training until the arrival of Baron von
    Steuben.

26
Military Strategies
The Americans
The British
  • Attrition the Brits had a long supply line.
  • Guerilla tactics fight an insurgent war ? you
    dont have to win a battle, just wear the British
    down
  • Make an alliance with one of Britains enemies.
  • Break the colonies in half by getting between the
    No. the So.
  • Blockade the ports to prevent the flow of goods
    and supplies from an ally.
  • Divide and Conquer ? use the Loyalists.

27
Phase I The Northern Campaign1775-1776
28
Bunker Hill (June, 1775)
The British suffered over 40 casualties.
29
Phase II NY PA1777-1778
30
New York City in Flames(1776)
31
Washington Crossing the Delaware
Painted by Emanuel Leutze, 1851
32
Saratoga Turning Point of the War?
A modern-day re-enactment
33
Phase III The Southern Strategy 1780-1781
34
Britains Southern Strategy
  • Britain thought that there were more Loyalists in
    the South.
  • Southern resources were more valuable/worth
    preserving.
  • The British win a number of small victories, but
    cannot pacify the countryside similar to U. S.
    failures in Vietnam!
  • Good US GeneralNathanial Greene

35
The Battle of Yorktown (1781)
Count de Rochambeau
AdmiralDe Grasse
36
Cornwallis Surrender at Yorktown
The World Turned Upside Down!
Painted by John Trumbull, 1797
37
Why did the British Lose???
38
North America After theTreaty of Paris, 1783
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