Top Banner
CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “America Secedes from the Empire
44

CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

May 11, 2018

Download

Documents

vuongthien
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “America Secedes from the Empire

Page 2: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

George Washington   Selected by the 2nd Continental Congress   Never risen above the rank of colonel   Would lose more battles than he would win   So…Why George?

 1. Powers of leadership and strength of character  2. Patience, courage, self-discipline

Page 3: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

 3. Would be a symbol and a rallying point- great moral force

 His selection also political  From Virginia (largest colony) and part of aristocracy  Would not be accused of being a fortune seeker

Page 4: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Bunker Hill and the Hessians   May 1775

 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun powder and artillery to use in Boston)

Page 5: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  June 1775  Colonists seize Bunker Hill  Colonists eventually abandon the hill (lack of

gunpowder)  More British casualties than American

Page 6: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  July 1775  Olive Branch Petition

 Congress professed Am. Loyalty to the crown and begged King George III to prevent more aggression

 King George III- “Battle of Bunker Hill = no hope for reconciliation”

Page 7: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  August 1775  King George III announces- “Colonies in rebellion”

Page 8: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  Sept. 1775  George III hired thousands of German troops to crush

rebellion  Most German troops from German principality of

Hesse = Hessians  Hessian soldiers shock the colonists

 Reputation for butchery

Page 9: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

The Conquest of Canada   Late 1775

 American leaders- “a successful assault on Canada would add a 14th colony and would deprive Britain of a valuable base for striking at the colonies”

 Contradiction that we are fighting a defensive war

Page 10: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Conquest of Canada   Outcome of Canada

 General Richard Montgomery captured Montreal, but is later killed in Quebec

 B. Arnold is wounded, his army retreats  Canadians do not welcome colonists- “no desire for

anti-Catholic invaders”

Page 11: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  March 1776-  British evacuate Boston, head to New York.

Page 12: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Thomas Paine   Paine- “not only independence, but also the creation

of a republic”  Power from the people, not a monarch   Individuals in a republic needed to sacrifice their

personal self-interest to the public good.

Page 13: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  Not all agreed…  Some favored a republic led by “natural aristocracy”  Lower class thought it was a way to “level” the social

classes

Page 14: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Jefferson and his “Explanation”   Richard Henry Lee of Va. Spoke to Congress about

declaring their independence   Congress decided to have a group draft the

declaration- Jefferson in charge of writing.

Page 15: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Reasons for Independence   1. Colonists outraged by British military conduct and by

use of Hessian troops   2. Thomas Paine’s Common Sense   Am. Forces had fared well against the British- Bunker

Hill   Colonial leaders believed independence would help the

colonies receive assistance from European powers

Page 16: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Basic Ideas of the Dec. of Ind.   1. Jefferson based many ideas on those of English

philosopher John Locke   Philosophy of government

  “All men created equal” and unalienable rights- “Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness”

  To secure these rights, “governments are started by men, deriving their powers from the consent of the governed”

Page 17: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

List of Grievances   “injuries and usurpations” committed by King

George against the colonists

Page 18: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Conclusion of Dec.   “These united colonies are, and of right ought to be,

free and independent states.”

Page 19: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Wartime Problems Facing the Colonies

  1. Providing a government   2nd Continental Congress acted as a central gov.   1775-1781: one objective- win the war  Congress was handicapped in several ways

  Lacked gov. powers- could only “request” men, money, and cooperation of the colonies

  Inexperienced and inefficient procedures  Some members fought each other over politics

Page 20: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Achievements of the 2nd Cont. Congress

  1. Held all 13 colonies together   2. Authorized an army and appointed Washington   3. Created a navy   4. Issued Dec. of Ind.   5. Arranged military alliance with France   6. Raised funds for the war effort

Page 21: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Raising Funds   Congress issued paper $ called “Continentals”

worth 250 million  Money became worthless as British victories early in

war.

Page 22: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Raising Funds   Congress requested funds from the colonies- FAILED-

colonies would not send $   Congress floated loans- Netherlands, Spain, and

France   Patriotic Americans

 Robert Morris- signer of Dec., superintendent of finance, guaranteed govt loans w/his personal credit

Page 23: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Raising an Army   During most of the war, Continental Army did not

number more than several thousand men  Volunteers usually signed up for short-term enlistments  Most troops not properly trained/equipped

Page 24: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Dealing w/the Loyalists   Population of 13 colonies were divided:

 1/3- organized Patriots  1/3- undecided, waited to see how the war developed  1/3- Tories/Loyalists- completely loyal to Britain and

king  Tories consisted of more prosperous and conservative group

(landowners & officeholders)

Page 25: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  As war progressed, total of 80,000 Tories fled to Canada/England

  Patriots confiscated Tory estates, sold to pay for war

  Civil war between Patriots and Tories (2nd aspect of Am. Rev. War)- represented a struggle for a greater democracy

Page 26: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

1776   July 1776- Patriots leave Boston- focus major

efforts in New York  500 ships  35,000 soldiers

Page 27: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Late Summer/Fall 1776   Washington outgeneraled and outmaneuvered, lost

Battle of Long Island   Washington barely escapes to Manhattan (fog)   Would continue to New Jersey, taunted by British-

fox-hunting calls

Page 28: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Late Summer/Early Fall   British General Wm. Howe not hunting Washington

w/speed  Leader at Bunker Hill (does not want to get slaughtered

again  Winter approaching   In need of supplies/troops  Comfy w/his mistress (wife of one of his officers)

Page 29: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Dec. 1776   Washington in Trenton, NJ   Decides to cross Delaware R. on Christmas Day to

fight Hessians   Take 1,000 Hessians by surprise   1 week later- defeats small British detachment at

Princeton  These victories motivate American cause

Page 30: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Saratoga   Upstate NY, Americans (Horatio Gates) defeated

and captured Gen. Johnny Burgoyne and his entire army (where is Howe?)

  British trying to sever New England from the rest of the colonies- paralyze American cause

Page 31: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Importance of Saratoga   Saratoga is major turning point of the war

 Convinced French gov. that America had a chance at winning the war

 B. Franklin convinces French to sign military treaty in 1778

Page 32: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Valley Forge: Winter 1777-1778   British take control of Philadelphia   Washington retreats 20 miles NW of Philadelphia

to Valley Forge- strong, hilly position for the winter   Troops- little food, no clothes, frostbite   Arrival of Prussian drillmaster Baron von Steuben

Page 33: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Colonial War Becomes a World War   Aid to American cause for independence:

 France, Spain, Holland

 War fought in:  N.A., S.A., Europe, Asia, Caribbean   IMPOSSIBLE for America to gain independence w/o aid of

European powers

Page 34: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  Addition of France in war forced G.B. to change strategy  Leave Philly for NY

 Britain’s blockade and supply lines now in jeopardy

Page 35: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

War in the South   Part of British forces led by Gen. Charles Cornwallis

moved southward  Numerous Loyalists in the South (Charleston)  British win several battles and took seaports of

Savannah and Charleston  Cannot crush Am. Forces led by Gen. Nathanael

Greene- “Fighting Quaker”

Page 36: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

War in the South   Early 1781- British suffer losses in the interior of

Carolinas, Cornwallis withdrew to Virginia

Page 37: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

American Victory in the NW Territory   George Rogers Clark

 Led a force of less than 200 frontiersmen down the Ohio R.

 Capture British forts in Kaskaskia, Cahokia, and Vincennes

 This ends British control of the NW territory and established Am. Claims to the area

Page 38: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

John Paul Jones   Most famous sea commander of America’s infant

navy   US Navy- little contribution in war- attack British

merchant ships   Main contribution from privateers- legalized pirates

 Raised American morale w/victories, captured gold

Page 39: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Yorktown (1781)   Cornwallis fallen back to Yorktown, Va. To await

supplies/reinforcements   French Admiral de Grasse moves Northward from

W. Indies   Washington marches 300 miles from NY to VA

Page 40: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Yorktown   Cornwallis cut off by land and sea   Surrenders his entire forces of 7,000 men   King George III not convinced war is over, orders

fighting to continue for 2 more years

Page 41: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Reasons for American Victory   Am. Fighting on own soil, for their own homes, and

their own freedom   Americans were superior wilderness fighters   Led by courage, determination, and ability

 Washington, Rogers Clark, Greene, J.P. Jones

Page 42: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

  Foreign volunteers  Marquis de Lafayette (Washington’s staff)  Baron de Kalb (French Army)  Baron von Steuben (Prussia)  Casmir Pulaski (Poland)

Page 43: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Treaty of Paris   American negotiators- B. Franklin, J. Adams, J. Jay   Britain recognized the 13 American states as

independent  North- Canada and Great Lakes  South- Spanish owned Florida  East- Atlantic Ocean  West- Mississippi R.

Page 44: CHAPTER 8: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 8 PowerPoint.pdf · Bunker Hill and the Hessians May 1775 Tiny Am. Force led by E. Allen and B. Arnold captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point (gun

Treaty of Paris   Americans retained their rights to fish on the banks

off Newfoundland   US agreed to “recommend” to the various states the

restoration of confiscated Loyalist properties and the payment of debts owed to British merchants (state govt. paid little attention)