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Chapter 8: “The Road to War”
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Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Jan 12, 2016

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Page 1: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Chapter 8: “The Road to War”

Page 2: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes• King George wanted to tax the colonies to

pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists .

Page 3: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Stamp Act of 1765• Placed a tax on all printed materials such as

legal documents, newspapers, and even playing cards.

• King George III and Parliament agreed this would be a fair way to pay for the soldiers’ protection from Indians and French invasions.

Page 4: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Stamp Act

King George III and Parliament• Believe the act is fair• Think the colonists should pay

for the costs of keeping the soldiers

• The colonists will benefit from the army’s help

Colonists• Already had a long traditions of

self-government• Never voted for Parliament

and disagreed with them making the decisions for them

• Wanted to send a representative from the colonies to reperesent them in Parliament

• Thought a representative would make better decisions for colonies.

• Protested “No taxation without representation!”

Page 5: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Patrick Henry• Spoke out against the Stamp Act to the House of

Burgesses.• Warned King George III that Britain had no right

to tax the colonies• His speeches inspired other colonists to protest

the Stamp Act

Page 6: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Stamp Act Congress• Was created of colonial leaders to urge

Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act

Page 7: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Popular Protest Cry:– “No taxation without representation!”

Page 8: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Samuel Adams• From Massachusetts

• Organized the Sons of Liberty—a group that led protests against the new tax– They burned stamps and threatened stamp

agents– The stamp agents were too afraid to sell

stamps

Page 9: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

End of Stamp Act• After determining they would get no money from

the Stamp Act, it was repealed in 1766.• Colonists celebrated with fireworks and parades.

• But….Britain still needed the money, and King George III insisted that Britain had the right to tax the colonies.

Page 10: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Townshend Acts• Britain still believes they have the right to tax the

colonies• As treasurer of the British government, Charles

Townshend agrees.• He calls for a new tax called the Townshend

Acts which placed a tariff (tax) on imported goods

• The British government hoped to show the colonists who was in charge.

• The Townshend Acts caused new protests in the colonies.

Page 11: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Protest– Boycott—refuse to buy goods– They refused to buy British goods

• They boycotted British tea and began making their own “liberty tea”

Page 12: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Daughters of Liberty• Women joined the protest and were called Daughters of Liberty

– They made “liberty tea” of berries and herbs– They began weaving cloth to use instead of British wool.

Page 13: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Britain’s businesses were hurting because of the boycott.

• In 1768, British warships arrived in the Boston Harbor.

• They hoped this show of force would stop the protesting.

Page 14: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Benjamin Franklin warned that this would only increase tension and lead to more violence.

• He was right.

Page 15: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Lesson 2: The Colonists Rebel

Page 16: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

The Boston Massacre• Soldiers and colonists were seen fist fighting in the

streets all the time.• March 5, 1770 angry colonists surrounded a group of

soldiers.• The soldiers panicked.• They fired in the crowd killing 5 people.• A massacre is the killing of people who cannot defend

themselves.

Page 17: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Crispus Attucks• Born into slavery and escaped at 27

• Worked as a sailor

• One of the victims of the Boston Massacre

Page 18: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• The British soldiers were put on trial for murder in Boston.

Page 19: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

John Adams

• Lawyer brother of Samuel Adams

• Disliked having British soldiers

• Defended the British soldiers in court

• Felt the soldiers deserved a fair trial

• Court ruled the soldiers were not guilty of murder

Page 20: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Townshend Acts Repealed• The boycott was hurting British

businesses.• The British government repealed all taxes

except the ones on tea.• The goal was to show the colonists they

still had the right to tax

Page 21: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Committees of Correspondence• Committee—organized group of people

• Correspondence—communicate

The Committees of Correspondence were formed by Samuel Adams to speed communication between colonies concerning what was happening with the British. Letters were sent from one committee to another by way of “express riders” on fast horses. One was a silversmith named Paul Revere.

Page 22: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Express Riders• Paul Revere and other express riders

could make it from Boston to New York in about a week.

Page 23: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Tea Act• The Tea Act passed by Parliament stated that the

colonists could only buy tea from one British company.• If you owned a store in the colonies, you would have to

buy tea from this company and STILL pay the tax on tea.• It had 2 goals

– 1. to help the struggling tea company– 2. get the colonists to pay taxes

Page 24: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• The colonists did not like being forced to buy tea from one company.

• They declared that ships bringing British tea would not be allowed to unload in any colonial port.

Page 25: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Boston Tea Party• On the night of December 16, 1773, 3 ships sailed into

Boston’s Harbor• The Sons of Liberty disguised themselves as Mohawk

Indians.• They rowed shouting “Boston Harbor, a teapot tonight!”• They boarded the boats, opened the chests of tea with axes,

and dumped the tea into the harbor.• This was known as the Boston Tea Party• British leaders found out and were furious…….

Page 26: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Colonists were singing a new song:– “Rally Mohawks! Bring your axes and tell King

George, we’ll pay no taxes!”

• King George and Parliament believed the colonists should be punished.

Page 27: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Punishment for the Colonists1. British soldiers who had been removed after the Boston

Massacre would come back and the colonists would quarter (feed and house) them.

2. British general, Thomas Gage, was put in charge of the colony of Massachusetts.

3. Port of Boston was closed—no ships could come or go until the tea was paid for by the colonists

COLONISTS CALLED THESE “THE INTOLERABLE ACTS”

Page 28: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• The closing of the port hurt Boston badly because their economy depended on trade.

• It also forced many colonists to choose sides in the conflict between Boston and Britain.

Page 29: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Patriots

• Colonists who oppose British rule

Page 30: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Loyalists• Colonists who remain loyal to King George

and the British government

Page 31: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

The First Continental Congress• Leaders from 12 colonies

agreed to meet in Philadelphia to discuss the Intolerable Acts in September, 1774.

• Virginia representative was George Washington.– They voted to stop all trade

with Britain until the Intolerable Acts were repealed.

– They also agreed to start militias (volunteer armies).

• Some called themselves minutemen (they could be ready to fight in a minute)

– They also agreed to meet in a year if things had not changed.

Page 32: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Liberty or Death• Patrick Henry made his most famous speech in

a church in Richmond, Virginia. • He warned the militia to prepare to fight.• “I know not what course others may take; but

as for me, give me liberty or give me death!”• King George was also ready to fight.

Page 33: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Lesson 3: The Revolution Begins

Page 34: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Paul Revere• April 18, 1775—British began their march from

Boston to Concord to seize weapons the colonists had been storing.

• It was also rumored that the soldiers had orders to arrest Samuel Adams and John Hancock.

• They were staying in Lexington, a town between Boston and Concord.

• The British hoped the attack would be a secret and would not allow colonists to leave Boston that night to warn anyone.

• Paul Revere snuck out to warn the militias in Lexington and Concord.

• He rode through the night yelling that the British were coming.

• He warned Adams and Hancock who escaped.• He rode with William Dawes and Samuel

Prescott.• Revere was captured.• Dawes jumped and escaped.• Prescott escaped and rode on to warn the militia

at Concord.

Page 35: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Shot Hear Round the World• April 19—Militia in Lexington gather• British soldiers march in and surround the

minutemen• British major demanded that militia put down

their arms• A fire rang out. (No one knew which one fired first.)

Page 36: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Lexington and Concord• A shot rangThe first shot at Lexington came to be known

as the “shot heard around the world.”• Wounded minutemen—17 • Wounded British soldiers—1 • British victory• On to Concord—Upon arrival, the British found no

weapons because the women had already moved them.• Battle at Concord led to a retreat of the British soldiers

Page 37: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

The Battle of Bunker Hill

• William Prescott– Patriot colonel– Led about 1,200

men up the hills of Charlestown

– His men worked all night to build a fort out of earth and logs on Breed’s Hill

Page 38: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

•Notice how close Bunker Hill and Breed’s Hill are to Boston•Patriot leaders knew if they could control these hills, they could bring up cannons and fire them down on the British in Boston.

Page 39: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

•When the British woke the next morning, they were shocked to see the fort.•British generals decided it was time to take the hill back before it was too late.•More than 2,000 British soldiers prepared to attack.

Page 40: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

•Tired and hungry after a long night’s work, the Patriots prepared to fight.

Page 41: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Colonel Prescott gave his men some last minute advice:– “Don’t fire until you see the whites of their

eyes.”

Page 42: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

The Battle Begins• After British ships fired on the fort, British

soldiers marched up Breed’s Hill.– “The enemy advanced and fired very hotly on the

fort,” Prescott said.

• But the Patriots just waited.

Page 43: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Wait for it…• When the British got within a hundred feet of the fort, the

Patriot guns exploded with a blast of deadly fire, driving the British back.

• British soldiers attacked again and were driven back again.

Page 44: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Now Prescott’s men were nearly out of ammunition.• Yelling, “Push on!” the British attacked a third time and

captured the hill.• The battle was over.

Page 45: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

• Though the fighting took place on Breed’s Hill, this battle is known as the Battle of Bunker Hill for a nearby hill.

Page 46: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

Cost of the Battle

• Though the British had won, it was a costly victory.

• More than 1,000 British soldiers were killed or wounded.

• About 400 Patriots were killed or wounded.

• Although they had lost, the Patriots were proud of the way they had fought.

Page 47: Chapter 8: “The Road to War”. Lesson 1: Trouble over Taxes King George wanted to tax the colonies to pay for the expenses of soldiers to protect the colonists.

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR HAS OFFICIALLY BEGUN!