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The American Revolution 4.2 ~ Declaring Independence
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The American Revolution

Dec 30, 2015

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Yolanda Russell

The American Revolution. 4.2 ~ Declaring Independence. FOCUS QUESTION. What events led the colonists to declare their independence from Britain?. Boston Patriots respond to the Intolerable Acts. John Hancock and Samuel Adams organized a Provincial Congress to run Massachusetts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The American Revolution

The American Revolution

4.2 ~ Declaring Independence

Page 2: The American Revolution

FOCUS QUESTION

What events led the colonists to declare their independence from Britain?

Page 3: The American Revolution

Boston Patriots respond to the Intolerable Acts

• John Hancock and Samuel Adams organized a Provincial Congress to run Massachusetts.

• The Patriots began to stockpile weapons and ammunition in towns outside of Boston.

• Colonial militia calling themselves minutemen began to organize.

Page 4: The American Revolution

The Revolution began on April 19, 1775The Revolution officially began in two country towns, Lexington and

Concord (west of Boston)

Under the order of British General Thomas Gage, Redcoats marched toward Concord to seize weapons and ammunition.

Paul Revere rode into the countryside warning the local Patriots that the British were coming.

Continued on next slide

Page 5: The American Revolution

Marching on to Concord, the British were stunned when they met hundreds of armed Patriots in a skirmish.

The Patriot militia (known as Minutemen) fired at the British from behind trees and walls.

As the Redcoats marched back to Boston, the Patriots killed or wounded 200 of them.

Page 6: The American Revolution

• The British were stunned and exhausted

• They retreated to Boston along with many Loyalists (colonists still loyal to England)

• Thousands of Patriots surrounded the British in Boston.

Page 7: The American Revolution

• Provincial assemblies seized control in the other New England colonies while colonial militia pinned down British troops in Boston.

• In May 1775 the Second Continental Congress met in Philadelphia to take control of the fighting.

• As volunteers arrived in Boston, George Washington was chosen to commandthe new Continental Army.

Page 8: The American Revolution

Congress made one final attempt atreconciliation in July 1775.

The Olive Branch Petition was sent to Britain reaffirming allegiance to King George, but

not Parliament.

The petition was rejected. Britain responded by sending more

troops.

Page 9: The American Revolution

Not all colonists favored independence!

• About one-fifth remained British Loyalists.

• Some believed Britain was too powerful to beat.

• Some feared a loss of business and income.

• Some feared abuse from lawless Patriots.

• Some resented Patriot taxes and militia demands.

• Native Americans feared settlers moving westward.

• Many slaves hoped for freedom under the British.

Page 10: The American Revolution

Thomas Paine’s pamphlet

Common Sense crystallized

colonial ideas in early 1776.

• Paine depicted the king as an enemy of liberty.

• He called for a republic where opportunity is based on merit not on inherited privilege.

• He said the government should be elected by the common people.

• Paine reinforced the Enlightenment idea that all men have natural rights.

Page 11: The American Revolution

In the spring of 1776, Congress selected a committee to declare, and explain reasons for, independence.

So Thomas Jefferson drafted the Declaration of Independence.

Congress approved it on July 4, 1776.

It stated that America was FREE and “All men are created equal.”

Congressed embraced the Enlightenment ideas that all men are born with natural rights that cannot be taken away by the government.

Page 12: The American Revolution

The Declaration was organized into four sections:

– 1) The Preamble stated the reasons for writing the Declaration.

– 2) The second paragraph stated the purpose of government − to protect people’s rights.

– 3) Then came a long list of grievances against the King.

– 4) The final paragraph actually declared independence.

Page 13: The American Revolution

• The signers pledged, “our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.”

• Just as Patriots tore

down this statue of the king for bullets, the signers of the Declaration knew there was no turning back.

Page 14: The American Revolution

• Declaring independence on paper was one thing, achievening it was another.

• The colonists will face many challenges before they can become an independent nation.

• Fighting the British would pit the poorly organized colonists against the greatest military power on Earth!

Page 15: The American Revolution

FOCUS QUESTIONWhat events led the colonists to declare

their independence from Britain?

1. The Battles of Lexington & Concord2. The king’s rejection of the Olive Branch

Petetion3. More troops were sent to Boston4. The printing of Thomas Paine’s Common

Sense