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Ch 4 The American Revolution
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Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Ch 4The American Revolution

Page 2: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

First Continental Congress

• 56 delegates• Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia• Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners

• Intense debates whether to fight of seek peace

Page 3: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• Encouraged peaceful boycotts of British goods

• Began preparing for war• Drafted a Declaration of

Rights

Page 4: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Battles of Lexington and Concord

• More British troops arrive in Boston

• More American Militia are being organized

Page 5: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 6: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Battles of Lexington and Concord

• Gage learned of a military arsenal in Concord

• Sent troops to capture the weapons

• Spies were aware of Gage’s plan

Page 7: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 8: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• Revere and others got the lantern signal from the Old North Church

• They rode through the countryside yelling “the regulars are coming!”

• Revere was captured by British troops and later released

Page 9: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 10: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 11: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• Seventy armed minutemen waited for the British at Lexington

• A British officer yelled “fire!” and the shooting started

• Militia ran• Redcoats continued their last six

miles to Concord

Page 12: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• Alarm bells rang in Concord• British soldiers took what they could find and tried to burn the rest

• British were getting surrounded and had to retreat back to Boston

Page 13: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Second Continental Congress

Major contributions

of Second

ContinentalCongress

Organized an army and

Appointed George Washington

Commander of Continental Army

Offered Olive BranchPetition

Decided to issue Paper money to pay

conflicts

Enlisted service ofExperienced European

Military officers

Introduced theArticles of

Confederation

Page 14: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• After the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the two armies faced off in Boston

• "Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes.“

• Battle of Bunker Hill was fought on Breed’s Hill

Page 15: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 16: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Battle of Bunker Hill• Two attacks of the hill were turned

back• Americans were soon running out of

ammunition • On third attack the British succeeded

in overrunning them • Most of the Americans were able to

withdraw• Thirty were caught and killed by the

British

Page 17: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Battle of Bunker Hill

• British casualties were 1000

• American casualties were 450

Page 18: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 19: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 20: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 21: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Dorchester Heights

• Washington had the guns from Fort Ticonderoga brought in.

• Henry Knox brought 59 guns 300 miles.

• Washington took Dorchester Heights and the British left Boston.

Page 22: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 23: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 24: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 25: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Common Sense• Common Sense

was the most influential political pamphlet ever written.

• Common Sense was written for the ‘common man’; men who would shed their blood in the rebellion.

Page 26: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

Declaring Independence• Common Sense - huge impact

on hearts and minds of Americans.

• On July 2, 1776, the Second Continental Congress declared independence from Great Britain.

Page 27: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• A 5 member committee prepared the Declaration

• The Declaration was written by Thomas Jefferson

Page 28: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.
Page 29: Ch 4 The American Revolution. First Continental Congress 56 delegates Carpenter’s Hall, Philadelphia Middle-aged, well-educated, property owners Intense.

• The Declaration was adopted on July 4, 1776.