Phase I: The Northern Campaign [1775-1776] Trying to get Canada to support the American cause Ethan...

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Phase I: The Northern Campaign[1775-1776]

Trying to get Canada to support the American cause

Ethan Allen

Benedict Arnold

Henry Knox

Bunker Hill (June, 1775)

The British suffered over 40% casualties.

Loyalist

Strongholds

Washington’s Headaches

Only 1/3 of the colonists were in favor of a war for independence [the other third were Loyalists, and the final third were neutral].

State/colony loyalties.

Congress couldn’t tax to raise money for the Continental Army.

Poor training [until the arrival of Baron von Steuben.

Military Strategies

Attrition [the Brits had a long supply line].

Guerilla tactics [fight an insurgent war you don’t have to win a battle, just wear the British down]

Make an alliance with one of Britain’s enemies.

The American

s

The British

Break the colonies in half by getting between the No. & the So.

Blockade the ports to prevent the flow of goods and supplies from an ally.

“Divide and Conquer” use the Loyalists.

The Battle for New York

• August 1776

• Seek to Control the ports for trade

• Washington retreats to White Plains, NY

• British hold New York until end for war

New York City in Flames(1776)

Phase II:

NY & PA[1777-1778]

British Counterattack

a. September 1777 – Brandywine Creek and fall of Philadelphia

c. October 1777, Battle of Germantown

d. Retreat to Whitemarsh and then Valley Forge

Counterattack Continued• The Northern Campaign Plan –

Burgoyne on the move!

a. Plan is for Burgoyne and Col. Barry St. Leger to attack South from Canada while Howe attacks North from NY

b. American’s retreat slows Burgoyne

c. Burgoyne’s desperation and mistakes helps America

More Foreign Allies

a. Spain joined war as France’s ally

b. Netherlands (1780)

c. Prior to formal alliance – Marquis de Lafayette-France– Johann de Kalb-Prussia– Thaddeus Kosciusko-Poland– Friedrich Von Steuben-Prussia– Bernardo de Galvez-Spain

Washington’s Hardshipsduring War

• Horrible winter at Valley Forge• sheer determination of Americans to fight at all costs• Lack of financial support from Congress• British blockade – economic distress• Inflation hurt the American colonists’ ability to buy goods

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtb9W3mPVtE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3iu_-0DjIJc

Fighting Turns West

• Howe abandons Philadelphia, heads north, Battle of Monmouth– Heavy casualties– Major defeat for Howe

• American Colonel George Rogers Clark– Helps capture Brit. Posts in Indiana and IL– Feb. 1779, Clark gets Native American help to take

Fort Vicennes in Indiana– Victory strengthens claims to Ohio River Valley– American General Nathaniel Greene takes over

command in the South

Phase III: The Southern Strategy [beginning in 1779 and for the next 3 years]

Loyalist

Strongholds

Britain’s “Southern Strategy”

Britain thought that there were more Loyalists in the South.

British Royal Navy seize Savannah, GA, and Charleston, SC

Southern Phase vicious – Americans pitted against Americans

The “Swamp Fox”

“We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again”

Guerilla Warfare

Daniel Morgan

The Battle of Yorktown (1781)

Rochambeau

AdmiralDe Grasse

The Battle of Yorktown

• Washington and Rochambeau

• French Navy with Adm. De Grasse

• Early October 1781, Washington, Rochambeau, and Lafayette meet up, and besiege Cornwallis on October 2nd.

• De Grasse's naval forces turned back British ships coming to Cornwallis's rescue and thereby prevented Cornwallis's escape or his reinforcement.

Cornwallis’ Surrender at Yorktown

October 19, 1781

Painted by John Trumbull, 1797

“The World Turned Upside Down!”

The American Rattlesnake

An apartment to let for military gentlemen

Two Armies I’ve thus Burgoyn’d and room for more I’ve got behind

Britons within the Yankeean Plains , Mind how ye March and Trench, The Serpent in the Congress reigns, as well as in the French!

The Treaty of Paris1. England recognized American independence

2. Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River

3. Mississippi R. became western border b/w

4. Navigation on river was open to Americans and British citizens

5. Florida was returned to Spain and the border between Florida and America was set

6. Britain removed all troops from American territory

7. Congress pledged to recommend to states that rights/property of Loyalists be restored

North America After theTreaty of Paris, 1783

New Problemsto deal with

1. Washington resigned from the army and gave command over to Congress

2. Most Americans saw themselves as individual states, not a unified nation

* Federalist vs. Anti-federalist

3. Without a strong central government and no one left to handle the debt America was in

• 50 million in debt• States did not feel they had to pay off a

“national debt”

WholesalePriceIndex:1770-1789

Federalist vs. Anti-FederalistStrongholds at the End of the War

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