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THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION • “The Shot Heard Round the World” – January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control colonies – April, British troops moved to seize arms the Patriots had stored at Concord – group of Minute Men met British at Lexington; exchange of gunfire left eight Americans dead – British moved on to Concord and destroyed provisions stored there – colonies rallied quickly to support Massachusetts

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

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Page 1: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

• “The Shot Heard Round the World” – January 1775, actions of First Continental

Congress led British government to use force to control colonies

– April, British troops moved to seize arms the Patriots had stored at Concord

– group of Minute Men met British at Lexington; exchange of gunfire left eight Americans dead

– British moved on to Concord and destroyed provisions stored there

– colonies rallied quickly to support Massachusetts

Page 2: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The Second Continental Congress

– met in Philadelphia on May 10

– more radical than First Congress

– organized forces gathering around

Boston into a Continental Army and

appointed George Washington

commander in chief

Page 3: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The Battle of Bunker Hill – Patriots set up defenses on Bunker

Hill and Breed’s Hill– two assaults by Redcoats failed to

dislodge colonists from Breed’s Hill; British carried hill on third try

– battle cost British more than twice the number of colonial casualties

– George III proclaimed the colonies to be “in open rebellion”

Page 4: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– Continental Congress appeased

moderates by offering one last plea to

king and then adopted “Declaration of

the Causes and Necessity of Taking

Up Arms”

– Congress also proceeded to order an

attack on Canada and set up

committees to seek foreign aid and to

buy munitions abroad

Page 5: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The Great Declaration – two events in January 1776 pushed the

colonies toward final break: British decision to use Hessian mercenaries and publication of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense

– Paine called for complete independence and attacked idea of monarchy

– Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a resolution declaring independence from England on June 7, 1776

Page 6: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– Congress did not act at once; it appointed committee to draft justification for Lee’s resolution

– Congress adopted justification, written largely by Thomas Jefferson, on July 4

– first part of Jefferson’s Declaration described theory on which Americans based revolt and creation of a republican government

– second part consisted of indictment of George III’s treatment of colonies

Page 7: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• 1776: The Balance of Forces – Americans had several advantages in fight

for independence: familiar terrain; England had to bring forces across Atlantic; England’s highly professional army was ill-directed; and public opinion in England was divided

– Britain, however, possessed superior resources: much larger population, large stocks of war materials, industrial capacity, mastery of the seas, a trained and experienced army, and a highly centralized government

Page 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– moreover, Congress had to create new political institutions during a war

• Loyalists – America was far from united

– Loyalists, or Tories, constituted a significant segment of colonial population

Page 9: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Early British Victories

– General Howe defeated an inexperienced

American army at Battle of Long Island and

again Manhattan Island

– Washington surprised Hessian mercenaries

by crossing Delaware River on Christmas

night, 1776, and attacking at daybreak

– second victory at Princeton on January 3,

1777, further bolstered American morale

Page 10: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Saratoga and the French Alliance – British planned elaborate three-pronged

attack to crush colonial resistance

– Howe defeated Washington at the Battle of Brandywine and moved unopposed into Philadelphia

– Howe’s adventures doomed the British campaign

– American forces dealt General Burgoyne a devastating defeat at Saratoga

Page 11: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– France had been giving aid to the Americans,

– United States and France negotiated a commercial treaty and a treaty of alliance

– recognizing danger of that alliance, Lord North proposed giving in on all issues that had roused colonies to opposition

– Parliament delayed until after Congress ratified treaties with France

– war broke out between France and Britain – Washington settled army at Valley Forge for

winter; army’s supply system collapsed, and men endured a winter of incredible hardship

Page 12: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The War Moves South – May 1778, British replaced General

Howe with General Clinton

– Washington and Clinton fought at Monmouth Court House; Americans held the field and could claim victory

– British focused their attention on South

– hoped sea power and supposed presence of a large number of Tories would bring them victory

Page 13: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– British took Savannah and Charleston

– American forces won victories at King’s Mountain, Cowpens, and Guilford Court House

– Cornwallis withdrew to Wilmington, North Carolina, where he could rely on the British fleet for support

Page 14: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Victory at Yorktown – Clinton ordered Cornwallis to

establish a base at Yorktown

– French fleet cut off Cornwallis’s supply and escape routes

– Cornwallis asked for terms on October 17, 1781

Page 15: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The Peace of Paris – despite promise to France not to make a

separate treaty, American negotiators successfully played off competing European interests and obtained a highly favorable treaty with Britain

– Britain recognized American independence, established generous boundaries, withdrew its troops from American soil, and granted fishing rights

– Britain preferred a weak English-speaking nation control Mississippi Valley

Page 16: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Forming a National Government – Congress was a legislative body, not a

complete government

– Various rivalries, particularly over claims to western lands, delayed the adoption of the Articles of Confederation

– Articles created a loose union

– each state retained sovereignty, and the central government lacked the authority to impose taxes or to enforce the powers it possessed

Page 17: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Financing the War – Congress and states shared financial

burden of war– Congress supported Continental Army,

while states raised militias– states $5.8 million in cash and more in

supplies – Congress also raised large sums by

borrowing – Congress and states issued paper money,

which caused currency to fall in value– Robert Morris became superintendent of

finance and restored stability to currency

Page 18: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• State Republican Governments – most states framed new constitutions even

before Declaration of Independence

– new charters provided for elected legislature, an executive, and a system of courts

– generally, power of executive and courts was limited; power resided in the legislature

– various systems of government explicitly rejected British concept of virtual representation

Page 19: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– majority of state constitutions contained

bills of rights protecting civil liberties

against all branches of government

– idea of drafting written structures of

government derived from dissatisfaction

with vagueness of unwritten British

constitution and represented one of the

most important innovations of

Revolutionary era

Page 20: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Social Reform – many states used the occasion of

constitution making to introduce social and political reforms, such as legislative reapportionment and the abolition of primogeniture, entail, and quitrents

– Jefferson’s Statute of Religious Liberty was enacted in 1786 to separated church and state in Virginia

Page 21: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– number of states moved tentatively against slavery and all northern states provided for gradual abolition of slavery

– most southern states removed restrictions on manumission

– Americans were hostile to granting of titles and other privileges based on birth

– more people of middling wealth won election to legislatures than in colonial times

Page 22: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Effects of the Revolution on Women– late 18th century saw trend toward

increasing legal rights for women

– for example, it became somewhat less difficult for women to obtain divorces

– war did increase the influence of women

– with many men in army, women managed farms, shops, and businesses

Page 23: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

– revolutionary rhetoric stressed equality and liberty, and some women applied it to their own condition

– revolution also provided greater educational opportunities for women

– republican experiment required educated women, because women were responsible for raising well-educated citizens

Page 24: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• Growth of a National Spirit – nationalist sentiment came from variety

of sources: – common sacrifices in war– common experiences during war– service in Continental Army– exposure to soldiers from other colonies – legislators traveling to different parts of

country and listening to people – maintaining 13 separate postal systems

or 13 sets of diplomatic representatives was simply not practical

Page 25: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• The Great Land Ordinances

– Land Ordinance of 1785 provided for

surveying western territories

– Northwest Ordinance of 1787

established governments for west and

provided mechanism for admission of

territories as states

Page 26: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• National Heroes – Revolution provided Americans with

their first national heroes

– Benjamin Franklin was well known before Revolution, and his support of Patriot cause added to his fame

– George Washington became “chief human symbol” of Revolution and of a common Americanism

Page 27: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “The Shot Heard Round the World” –January 1775, actions of First Continental Congress led British government to use force to control

• A National Culture – political break with Britain accentuated

an already developing trend toward social and intellectual independence

– Anglican church in America became the Protestant Episcopal church

– Dutch and German Reformed churches severed ties with Europe

– American Catholics gained their own bishop

– textbooks of Noah Webster emphasized American forms and usage