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You say you want a Revolution?
You know it’s gonna be…alright
Well, you know, we all want to change the world
Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763
Naval PatrolsThe Colonists and British respond to each other
Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763
Freedom from the “French Menace”
Distance from the Mother Country
Issue of Home Rule
Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763
Territorial DisputesThe End of Salutary Neglect
Freedom from the “French Menace”
The French no longer occupy the western borders
Distance from the Mother CountryOver 3000 miles away
Issue of Home RuleColonial Assemblies vs. the Governors
Strained relationships with Parliament and the Privy Council
Issue of Home Rule-2
Parliamentary Representation and Taxation
Territorial DisputesLand Across the AppalachiansBritish ConcernsColonial Response
The End of Salutary NeglectEnforcement of the Navigation ActsCustoms Officials
Naval PatrolsThe British patrolled the East Coast searching for smugglers
The Colonists and British respond to each other
Sugar ActStamp ActTownshend ActsBoston Massacre
The Colonists and British respond to each otherThe Gaspee AffairThe East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade
Sugar ActTax placed on all imported sugar
Sugar Act-Colonial Response
Objections by colonial slave traders
Stamp ActWhat it was
Stamp Act-Colonial Response
Stamp Act CongressMove Toward UnityBoycott of British Goods
Stamp Act-Colonial ResponseThe Sons of Liberty
Samuel Adams
NOT THIS SAM
This Samuel Adams
Stamp Act-Colonial Response
Parliament RepealsPasses Declaratory Act, Quebec Act
Townshend ActsIndirect Tax on imports designed to pay the governors’ salaries
Townshend Acts-Colonial Response
Boycott of British Goods“Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer”
Parliament repealsThe Tea Tax
Boston Massacre
Boston Massacre-Colonial Response
Anger and OutrageDemand for British Soldiers to stand trial
Boston Massacre-Colonial Response
British remove troops from Boston
Trial of SoldiersJohn Adams
The Gaspee AffairBritish search for the guilty
Threat of Trial in England
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade-Colonial ResponseResentment of a tax on tea
Fear of a monopolyBoston Tea Party
Edenton Tea Party
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade-Colonial ResponseOther Tea PartiesParliament Passes Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
Closes Boston HarborMilitary OccupationRevocation of Massachusetts’ Charter
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts-Colonial Response
The First Continental CongressRejection of the Galloway Plan
Decision to boycott British goods
First Continental Congress-Sept. 5 to Oct. 26, 1774
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts-Colonial Response
The First Continental CongressCall for a Second Continental Congress in May 1775