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Do Now. 1. Read pages 152 & 153 and answer questions 1 & 2. Sept 1774, 55 men (delegates) from all of the colonies except Georgia met to create a political body to represent Americans. Decisions of the Congress. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Do Now
Page 2: Do Now

Do Now

1. Read pages 152 & 153 and answer questions 1 & 2

Page 3: Do Now

Sept 1774, 55 men (delegates) from all of the

colonies except Georgia met to create a political body to represent Americans

Page 4: Do Now

1st they drafted a statement of

grievances calling for the repeal of 13 acts of Parliament passed since 1763 These laws violated the colonists’

rights Their rights were based on the “laws

of nature, the principles of the English constitution, and the several charters” of the colonies.

Decisions of the Congress

Page 5: Do Now

They voted to boycott all British goods and

trade No British products could be brought

into or consumed in the colonies No colonial goods could be shipped to

Britain• Endorsed the Suffolk Resolves,

resolutions prepared by Bostonians and others who lived in Suffolk County Massachusetts that called on the people to arm themselves against the British

Militia- Groups of citizen soldiers

Page 6: Do Now

“Let’s Get Ready to Rumble”

Page 7: Do Now

April 1775, British general Sir Thomas

Gage had several thousand soldiers under his command in and around Boston

They were instructed to take away the weapons of the Massachusetts militia and arrest the leaders General Gage learned that the militia

was storing weapons at Concord, MA He ordered 700 troops under

Lieutenant-Col. Francis Smith to seize the weapons

Britain Sends Troops

Page 8: Do Now

“The regulars are

out”

Page 9: Do Now

On April 18, 1775, Dr. Joseph Warren

alerted leaders of the Sons of Liberty, Paul Revere and William Dawes that he saw the British army preparing for war

Revere and Dawes rode to Lexington, a town east of Concord, to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock that the British were coming

Alerting the Colonist!

Page 10: Do Now

April 19, 1775 Lexington and Concord,

Massachusetts Redcoats approach Lexington at

dawn and discover a group of 700 minutemen who had been alerted by Dawes and Revere

After the 1st shot was fired, both sides began to shoot and when it was over 8 minutemen were dead

Shot Heard Around the Word!

Page 11: Do Now

The British continued to march to Concord

and when they arrived to seize their weapons, at the North Bridge of the town, minutemen were waiting for them As they kept marching, the minutemen

began to fire By the time the redcoats reached

Boston, at least 174 were wounded and 73 were dead

Shot cont…

Page 12: Do Now

Tactics used by the

Americans Americans out witted the British because they

used “hit and run” tactics during battles The proper term for this style is guerilla tactics

Page 13: Do Now

You’re a Benedict

Arnold!

Page 14: Do Now

Benedict Arnold

Benedict he was first a captain in the Connecticut militia who helped defeat the British in May 1775

However, later during the war, he teamed with the British to surrender the key fort of West Point to the British and led British raids against the Americans in Virginia and Connecticut.

He became a general in the British Army He was known at a TRAITOR

Page 15: Do Now

Battle of Bunker Hill

June 16, 1775 there were 1,200 militiamen under the command of Col. William Prescott set up fortifications at Bunker Hill across from Boston Harbor

Americans opened fire, forcing the British to retreat at first

The British charged back two more times and at the end Americans ran out of gunpowder and withdrew.

British victory but they learned beating the Americans wouldn’t be easy

Page 16: Do Now

Loyalist v. Patriots

Loyalist where colonist who chose to stay with Britain.

They believed the taxes were unfair but not a good reason to rebel

Some stayed loyal because they did not want to loose their powerful positions

Others were loyal because they lived isolated and had not been affected by any of the events

Some stayed because they expected Britain to win

Page 17: Do Now

Cont.

Patriots were the people who were determined to fight Britain until Americans won independence.

Page 18: Do Now

Second Continental

Congress Assembled on May 10, 1775 for the first time The Congress began to govern the colonies. Authorized the printing of money and set up a

post office with Ben Franklin in charge The established committees to communicate

with Native Americans and with other countries (foreign affairs)

They created the Continental Army headed by George Washington to fight against Britain in a more organizes way

Page 19: Do Now

Olive Branch Petition

An olive branch is seen as a symbol of peace. Delegates offered Britain one last chance to avoid all-out war through the Olive Branch Petition. The petition asked the king to protect the

colonists’ rights, which Parliament seemed determined to destroy.

Unfortunately George III refused to sign it.

Page 20: Do Now

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense

In late 1775 and early 1776 some Americans still hoped to avoid a complete break with Britain.

In January 1776, Thomas Paine published a pamphlet called Common Sense that captures the attention of the American colonists that called for COMPLETE INDEPENDENCE FROM BRITAIN!

He said it was simply”common sense” to stop following the “royal brute,” King George III.

He said it was not just a fight over taxes, but for freedom- “in great measure the cause of all mankind”

Page 21: Do Now

Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence

In Philidelphia of 1776, the Second Continental Congress questioned should the colonies declare themselves independent.

June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee proposed that the colonies should be free and independent states.

While the Congress debated Lee’s proposal, they chose a committee to draft a declaration.

Thomas Jefferson was selected to write the Declaration of Independence

Page 22: Do Now

Declaration of Independence

Jefferson used the ideas of thinkers such as John Locke to set out the colonies’ reason for declaring their freedom

Locke wrote that people were born with certain natural rights to life, liberty, and property; that people formed governments to protects these rights; and that government interfering with these

rights might rightfully be overthrown.

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Cont.

On July 2, 1776 Congress voted on Lee’s resolution for independence.

12 colonies voted for it. ( NY did not vote but later supported)

The delegates then took Jefferson’s draft and made somes changes and approved the document on July 4, 1776.

Page 24: Do Now

John Hancock

Hancock was the president of the Second Continental Congress

He was the first person to sign the Declaration of Independence

He said that he signed his name large enough for KGIII to read it without his glasses.

Hancock is also a familiar name because many people still use it today in reference to his very large signature when they are asking people for their “John Hancock” it means= Can I have your signature?