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The Road to Revolution

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Title: The Road to Revolution


1
The Road to Revolution (1763-1776)
2
Was the American Revolution Inevitable??
3
Mercantilism
  • Economic theory that a nations wealth depended
    upon its reserve of gold and silver and also a
    favorable balance of trade.
  • Thus, in this context, colonies were expected to
    furnish products needed in the mother country
    (tobacco, sugar, ships masts etc) while only
    trading exclusively with the mother country and
    her other colonies.
  • Required to import from Mother Country and have
    no dreams of economic self-sufficiency or
    self-government.

4
Mercantilism
  • Navigation Act
  • Goods must be shipped trough England and a duty
    put on them
  • Enumerated goods such as tobacco could only be
    sold to England.
  • Money shortages in colonies due to unfavorable
    balance of trade printed paper money that
    depreciated. Parliament banned the printing of
    money in the colonies

5
Mercantilism
  • Negatives
  • Burdened the colonists with annoying liabilities
  • Stifled economic initiative and forced dependency
    on English agents and creditors.
  • Most importantly, the colonists felt used and in
    a state of constant economic adolescence.
  • Positives
  • - Ship builders and suppliers benefitted
  • - Monopoly on tobacco in England
  • - Protection from the strongest Navy and military

6
Mercantilism
  • To prohibit a great people, however, from making
    all that they can of every part of their own
    produce, or from employing their stock and
    industry in the way they judge most advantageous
    to themselves, is a manifest violation of the
    most sacred rights of mankind.
  • -Adam Smith (1776)

7
James Otis
  • A mans house is his castle, and whilst he is
    quiet he is as well guarded as prince in his
    castle. This writ, if it should be declared
    legal, would totally annihilate these privilege.
    Custom house officers may enter our houses when
    they please we are commanded to permit their
    entry. Their menial servants may enter, may
    break locks, bars, and everything in their way
    and whether they break through malice or revenge,
    no man, no court can inquire. Bare suspicion
    without oath is sufficient.

8
George Grenvilles Program, 1763-1765
  • 1. Sugar Act - 1764
  • Currency Act 1764
  • Quartering Act 1765
  • Stamp Act 1765
  • Greenville had to eliminate debt from the war
    (140 million pounds). First, strictly enforced
    Navigation Act in 1763. Then decided to raise
    tax revenue from the colonies, starting with the
    Sugar Act

9
Stamp Act Protest
  • Stamp Act Congress of 1765
  • 27 delegates from 9 colonies meet to draw up a
    statement of their rights and grievances and to
    convince the King and Parliament to repeal stamp
    act.

Even though the statement was mostly ignored in
England and not well-known in America, the Stamp
Act Congress was one more step towards more
intercolonial unity.
10
Stamp Act Protest
  • Nonimportation Protests
  • Against British goods
  • A promising stride towards unity because average
    American colonists could participate
  • Many signed petitions swearing to uphold the
    boycott
  • Sons of Liberty and Daughters of Liberty
  • Liberty, Property, and No Stamps
  • They would tar and feather violators of the
    boycott and ransack British agents homes and
    hang effigies of stamp agents

11
Tar and Feathering
12
Stamp Act Protest
  • England hard hit by boycott (1/4 of all exports
    go to the colonies and ½ of all shipping was
    devoted to American trade.
  • English make appeals to have the Stamp Act
    repealed due to disruption to commerce and trade
  • 1766, Stamp Act was repealed by Parliament

13
Declaratory Act
  • As soon as Stamp Act repealed, Parliament passed
    Declaratory Act
  • Stated parliaments right to rule over the
    colonies in all cases and arenas.
  • Basically, it claimed absolute sovereignty over
    the North American Colonies
  • However, Colonists had already made it clear they
    wanted a measure of sovereignty of their own

14
Townshend Acts
  • Charles (Champagne Charlie) Townshend
  • 1767, passes the Townshend Acts
  • Light duty on imported goods such as glass, white
    lead (dont ask, I do not know), paper, paint,
    and tea.
  • Makes distinction between internal and external
    taxes and this is an indirect tax paid at
    colonial ports
  • Revenues earmarked to pay Royal Judges and Royal
    Governors

15
Townshend Acts
  • The tax on tea was the most hated due to the fact
    that an estimated 1 million people drank at least
    two cups per day.
  • However, in Boston, a lot of tea was simply
    smuggled so the Townshend Acts were largely
    ignored and did not cause the same unrest as the
    Stamp Act
  • So, British land two regiments of soldiers in
    Boston

16
The Boston Massacre (March 5,1770)
17
Boston Massacre
What is the difference between the two depictions
of the Boston Massacre?
18
The Gaspee Incident (1772)
Providence, RI coast
19
King George IIIand Lord North
  • George III was 32 in 1770. Good man in private
    life, but an ineffective ruler. Surrounded
    himself with Yes men like Lord North

Lord North, what do you think of my fancy
outfit? Well your majesty, YES, I think you look
ravishing!!!!!!!!!!
20
Townshend Acts Repealed
  • Lord North, under pressure from British
    Manufacturers who were losing revenue due to the
    nonimportation agreements, convinced Parliament
    to appeal the Townshend Acts.
  • However, he kept the three pence tax on tea to
    assert Parliaments authority to tax.

21
Committees of Correspondence
Purpose ? warn neighboring colonies
about incidents with Br. ? broaden the
resistance movement.
First organized by Sam Adams, cousin to John
Adams. A great propagandist, he trained his mob
to resist British policy. The committees started
in Boston, then throughout Massachusetts, then
spread to other colonies. Main objective was to
exchange letters and keep alive opposition to the
British
22
Tea Act (1773)
  • British East India Co.
  • Monopoly on Br. tea imports.
  • Many members of Parl. held shares.
  • Permitted the Co. to sell tea directly to cols.
    without col. middlemen (cheaper tea!)
  • North expected the cols. to eagerly choose the
    cheaper tea.

23
Colonists Reaction to Tea Act
  • Even though the tea was cheaper- the colonists
    were still angry at the three pence tax.
  • Saw the move as a way to make the colonists
    accept the tax with cheaper tea.

24
Boston Tea Party (Dec, 16 1773)
25
The Coercive or IntolerableActs (1774)
1.Port Bill-
2. Government Act
3. New Quartering Act
Lord North
4. Administration of Justice Act
26
The Quebec Act (1774)
  • -Act designed to administer the 60,000 French who
    lived in Canada.
  • Gave French a guarantee of their Catholic
    religion and also permitted them to retain old
    customs and traditions such as not having a
    representative assembly and no trial by jury
  • Area extended into the Ohio river Valley
  • Horrible to colonists, because it had such far
    reaching implications Ohio river valley for
    Catholics and Parliament could suppress
    representative government and trial by jury

27
First Continental Congress (1774)
55 delegates from 12 colonies (Georgia did not
attend)
Agenda ? How to respond to the Coercive Acts
the Quebec Act?
1 vote per colony represented.
28
First Continental Congress
  • The Association was formed. Complete boycott of
    British goods.
  • April 1775- Lexington and Concord
  • Small British force of Redcoats were ordered to
    seize stores of colonial gunpowder and capture
    Sam Adams and John Hancock. At Lexington, 8
    Minutemen were killed and several wounded. At
    Concord, the colonial militia forced the Redcoats
    to retreat

29
The British Are Coming . . .
Paul Revere William Dawes make their midnight
ride to warn the Minutemen of approaching British
soldiers.
30
The Shot Heard Round the World!
Lexington Concord April 18,1775
31
The Second Continental Congress(1775)
Olive Branch Petition
32
Imperial Strengths
  • Population odds in their favor (2.5 million
    colonists to 7.5 million British)
  • Greater Monetary Wealth and Naval power
  • British had a professional army of 50,000
    soldiers, employed around 30,000 Hessians,
    attracted some Native Americans to fight on their
    side, and also had 30,000 Loyalists

33
Imperial Weaknesses
  • Ireland was on the brink of revolt and troops
    were sent to watch over it
  • France was eager to stab Britain in the back due
    to recent defeat in Seven Years War
  • British leadership was inept compared to the
    brilliance of William Pitt (King George III and
    Lord North
  • English Whigs openly triumphed American victories
    (at least at the beginning) and this encouraged
    Americans
  • Fighting in North America was difficult Generals
    were second rate, soldiers were treated poorly by
    officers, and provisions were scarce, rancid, and
    wormy.
  • Distance made it difficult. England was 3,000
    miles away.
  • Difficult to defeat colonists due to Geography
    The American Colonies were huge with no large
    city that served as a node.

34
American Advantages
  • Strong leadership
  • Washington, Franklin, and Lafayette
  • Americans were generally fighting a defensive war
    with the odds in their favor
  • American agriculture kept the army well fed
  • Americans were fighting for a just and moral
    cause that gave them greater morale and
    motivation
  • Understood and new the terrain and environment
    much better

35
American Negatives
  • Poorly organized and loosely united
  • Jealously and suspicions between colonies caused
    conflict and many resented the Continental
    Congress for trying to assert its authority
  • Economic issues, in particular, currency issues.
    (No metal currency, so C.C printed money that
    quickly depreciated, and later individual states
    printed their own)
  • The subsequent inflation forced many soldiers to
    desert the campaign and return home to work
  • Military supplies were scarce
  • Other shortages in manufacturing supplies and
    clothing and shoes.
  • Generally, the American soldiers were a ragtag
    group that was poorly equipped to fight the
    trained professional Redcoats.

36
Was the American Revolution Inevitable??
37
Thomas Paine Common Sense
38
Declaration of Independence (1776)
39
Declaration of Independence
40
Independence Hall
41
New National Symbols
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