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Causes of Revolution

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Title: Causes of Revolution


1
Causes of Revolution
  • 1763-1775

2
Background
  • In 1763 the colonies and the Mother Country had
    a great deal to feel good about. They had just
    defeated the French in the French and Indian War
  • Almost immediately relations between the two
    allies started to deteriorate
  • Britain was about to embark on the Industrial
    Revolution with interests on four continents
  • The colonists wanted to know how they would
    benefit from the new system
  • The English wanted to know who would pay for the
    cost of the war and maintaining the peace

3
  • The war and the demand for products had
    revolutionized industry in the colonies
  • Factories replaced small workshops, but still the
    colonists imported far more after the war than
    they had before the war
  • New England merchants especially benefited for
    the post-war economic boom
  • But the war had alsoa) created widows and
    orphans that need to be looked afterb) inflated
    pricesc) caused unemploymentd) caused a
    shortage of raw materialse) opened the western
    land for settlement

4
The Cost of War
  • The British had passed a series of acts to
    regulate their mercantilist system, starting with
    the Navigation Laws but these laws were loosely
    enforced and easily circumvented
  • The British government found itself with over
    100 million in debt. They had paid most of the
    costs for the war and now expected the colonies
    to pay towards their own defense
  • The colonists argued that the British should bear
    the expense since they benefited from the
    colonies
  • Royal governors began trying to enforce the
    Navigation Acts to help pay for the thousands of
    British troops still in North America

5
The Reforms
  • In 1764 the Sugar Act replaced the Molasses Act
    (1733)
  • The Molasses Act placed a tax on imported
    molasses which was needed to make rum. The Act
    had not been widely enforced and where it was it
    was circumvented by smuggling
  • The colonists raised their objections to the
    Sugar Act and eventually the taxes were lowered
  • The next act was the Quartering Act of 1765 which
    required the colonists to feed and house British
    troops at their own expense
  • Also in 1765 the British passed the most
    notorious act the Stamp Act

6
  • The courtswere run without the normal codes of
    law the accused was assumed to be guiltythere
    were no juries
  • The courts ended decades of salutatory neglect by
    the British and proved to the colonists that they
    had to follow British law but not be afforded the
    same protection and rights as Englishmen
  • The courts violated the rights of every
    Englishman and the colonists viewed themselves as
    Englishmen
  • The colonists also started to question why so
    many British soldiers needed to be stationed in
    the colonies unless it was to suppress
    rebellion!

7
  • The cry of no taxation without representation
    was heard throughout the colonies
  • Its interesting to note that the colonists
    actually paid less taxes then people in England
    and in certain areas of the colonies the Stamp
    and Sugar Acts had very little impact. But there
    was not one American representative in the
    British Parliament
  • The British completely misread the situation and
    underestimated the animosity in the colonies
  • George III defended his government by claiming
    all people are represented virtual
    representation
  • Nine colonies sent delegates to the Stamp Act
    Congress in New York in 1765

8
  • The delegates created a set of Resolves to
    protest the constitutionality of the Stamp and
    Sugar Acts and objected to the vice-admiralty
    courts
  • The Congress drew little attention in the
    colonies and even less in Britain. But it was
    the first step toward unity
  • When the acts took effect several hundred
    colonial businesses started to boycott British
    goods and refused to pay the stamp tax
  • Mass protest against the Stamp Act prevented the
    tax from being effective
  • The colonists formed protest groups called Sons
    of Liberty or Daughters of Liberty
  • The goal of these protest groups was to ensure a
    complete boycott of British goods and to find
    alternatives

9
Non-importation Agreements
  • Opposition began in the coastal towns especially
    those involved with trade. Colonists signed
    non-importation agreements promising to boycott
    British goods
  • The boycott was enforced by patriots, often with
    the use of violence mobs sacked the houses of
    stamp agents and hung them in effigy
  • With the resignation of the stamp agents the
    British government was unable to enforce the tax
  • The British economy was devastated by the
    boycott. Manufacturers could not sell their
    products, businesses went bankrupt, thousands
    lost their jobs

10
Declaratory Act
  • Parliament was besieged by protestors who
    demanded an end to the Stamp Act
  • In 1766 the Stamp Act was repealed
  • The colonists celebrated their victory,
    especially in New York and Boston
  • Immediately Parliament passed the Declaratory Act
    The British Parliament had sovereign power in
    North America and it would not yield that power
  • But the colonists had tasted victory and believed
    they had a right to their own sovereignty

11
Townshend Acts
  • Charles Townshend became the new Chancellor of
    the Exchequer following the collapse of the
    government after repealing the Stamp Act
  • Townshend promised to make the colonies pay for
    their action
  • In 1767 he passed the Townshend Acts which taxed
    glass, paper, paint, and tea amongst other things
  • Townshend argued that his new legislation made
    any payment an indirect customs tax since it was
    payable at the ports

12
  • To the colonists it was still taxation without
    representation
  • The revenue from the new customs tax was
    designated to pay the salaries of royal governors
    and judges
  • Also in 1767 the British suspended the New York
    legislature for not complying with the Quartering
    Act
  • People once again resorted to non-importation
    agreements, but this time the colonists were not
    as successful
  • Many Americans had little inclination to protest
    the new taxes since they were relatively light
    and only affected a few people
  • Colonists also found that smuggling could easily
    supply most needs

13
  • In 1768 the British government sent two regiments
    to Massachusetts to help restore order and catch
    smugglers
  • The soldiers did little to make friends with the
    colonists, they were rude and often drunk
  • The colonists resented the lobster backs and
    tormented them at every opportunity

14
Boston Massacre
  • On March 5, 1770 a large crowd started to torment
    a small British patrol
  • As the situation deteriorated the British opened
    fire on the colonists. Several colonists died
    including Crispus Attucks, a runaway slave
  • The soldiers were put on trial and defended by
    future president John Adams
  • Two were found guilty of manslaughter and
    released after being branded on the hand

15
Committees of Correspondence
  • The Townshend Acts were a disaster for the
    British government they could not be enforced,
    nor did they bring in much revenue
  • Lord North persuaded the government to repeal the
    Acts except for a small token tax on tea
  • To the colonists a tax was still a tax,
    regardless of size
  • Samuel Adams, cousin of John Adams, formed
    committees of correspondence in Boston

16
  • The idea was to keep other colonies informed
    about the affairs in Massachusetts. Quickly,
    committees sprang up in other colonies
  • By the end of 1773 every colony had a committee,
    some had been approved by the colonial
    legislature
  • The committees became powerful weapons in
    spreading the ideas of rebellion throughout the
    colonies and keeping anti-British feeling alive

17
Boston Tea Party
  • In 1773, tea in the colonies was cheaper than tea
    in Britain, even with the tax
  • Fewer people were resisting and it seemed like
    the rebellion might pass, besides nothing had
    happened to seriously damage relations between
    the colonies and the Mother country
  • The British East India Company, close to
    bankruptcy, pressured the British government for
    financial help
  • The government could not afford for the company
    to collapse

18
  • The government responded by giving the company a
    monopoly on tea sold in the colonies
  • The result was cheaper tea for the colonists, but
    it was still taxed, and that upset some colonists
  • The British government supported the company and
    shipped the tea to the colonies
  • Not one crate of tea reached its destination
  • In ports all along the eastern seaboard
    demonstration forced the British ships to return
    to England with their cargoes
  • In Boston, the royal governor, Thomas Hutchinson
    was determined not submit to mob rule

19
  • Hutchinson had suffered at the hands of the
    demonstrators during the Stamp Act, now he was
    determined to enforce the law
  • Hutchinson refused to let the ships leave Boston
    without unloading their cargo
  • On December 16, 1773, a group of colonials,
    thinly disguised as Indians, boarded the ships
    and threw the tea into Boston Harbor
  • Reactions varied, not everyone approved of the
    needless destruction of property
  • Hutchinson left for Britain, never to return
  • The British determined to make the colonists pay

20
Intolerable Acts
  • The British responded with a series of acts
    intended to punish the colonies, especially
    Massachusetts
  • The Boston Port Act closed the port until
    someone paid for the tea
  • Restrictions were placed on town meeting to the
    colonists, violating their freedom even more
  • Any representative of the British government who
    killed a colonist in the line of duty would now
    be sent to Britain for trial

21
Quebec Act 1774
  • At the same time as the Intolerable Acts, the
    British passed the Quebec Act
  • The colonists believed the Quebec Act was aimed
    at them, it was not it was aimed the French
    settlers in Canada who were now part of the
    British Empirea) The Catholic religion was
    guaranteedb) French customs and practices were
    allowed, but not representative assembly or trial
    by jury in civil cases
  • The border was set at the Ohio River

22
  • The French approved of the Quebec Act, but the
    British colonies only became more suspicious
  • They saw the French as being better suited to
    claim the vast unpopulated land that was west of
    the Allegheny Mountains and they feared the
    spread of Catholicism

23
Continental Congress
  • Although not everyone agreed with the action
    taken by the Boston rebels there can be little
    doubt about the outpouring of sympathy from all
    the other colonies
  • In 1774 in response to the Intolerable Acts, the
    Continental Congress was summoned to meet in
    Philadelphia
  • The Congress was intended to find ways to settle
    the grievances with Britain
  • 12 colonies sent representatives (Georgia was
    missing)
  • The Congress assembled men like George
    Washington, John Adams, Patrick Henry, and Sam
    Adams

24
  • The Congress met for 7 weeks to discuss the
    situation
  • John Adams persuaded others to adopt a more
    rebellious approach and he warned against
    mediation and acceptance
  • The Congress drew up a Declaration of Rights,
    made an appeal to the king, and formed The
    Association
  • The Association wanted a complete boycott of all
    British goods
  • No one advocated revolution but if the British
    did not act the Congress would meet again in 1775

25
Lexington and Concord
  • The British ignored all appeals from the colonies
  • In early 1775 the British sent a detachment to
    Lexington and Concord to collect arms that had
    been hidden by the colonists
  • The British were met at Lexington by minutemen
    who refused to disperse and stood their ground
  • The British opened fire killing several before
    moving on to Concord
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