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Moving toward War 1770-1775

Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

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Page 1: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Moving toward War

1770-1775

Page 2: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain

At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental congress with executive.

• Britain tried to get colonists to pay a greater share by – raising taxes– enforcing mercantilist laws.

• No more “salutary neglect” from Mom!– Colonists resent direct orders from

Parliament

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Page 3: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Colonial Resistance

• Despite differences among colonies, opposition to taxes and regulations brought unity.

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Page 4: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Leaders Arise

• Patrick Henry (VA): against Parliament’s power to impose Stamp Act QuickTime™ and a

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Page 5: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Leaders Arise• John Dickinson

(PA): wrote Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania - Parliament had no right to ax commerce just to raise revenue.

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Page 6: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Leaders Arise

• John Hancock (MA): Parliament is hurting trade; gave aid to “Sons of Liberty” who protested Br policies.

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Page 7: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Leaders Arise

• Samuel Adams (MA): helped form committees of correspondence to keep other colonies informed about unfair Br actions.

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Page 8: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Result: Most Taxes Repealed

• By 1770, most taxes were repealed.

• Only one left: small tax on tea.

• But that was one tax too many for the strained relations.

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Page 9: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Objections to Troops

• 1768 Br sent troops to Boston to protect Br officials.– Bostonians protested!– Standing armies are “tyranny”!

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Page 10: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Boston Massacre• March 5, 1770: Minor

disturbance outside customs house turned into violent confrontation.– Crowd couldn’t be

restrained.– Troops fired back at crowed;

five killed (Crispus Attucks)– Sam Adams played it up as

a “massacre” of defenseless citizens.

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Page 11: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Boston Tea Party

• Protest of Tea tax!

• December 1773 group of colonists dressed up as Indians and threw cargo of tea off British ships.

• The British got REALLY angry…

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Page 12: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Result of Tea Party: Intolerable

Acts

• Prime Minister Lord North imposed Boston Port Bill: port closed until tea was paid for.

• Also, new Quartering Act: troops demanded housing on private property.

• ALSO, governor had new powers and town meetings were limited.

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Page 13: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

First Continental Congress• 12 of 13 colonies met in

Philadelphia in fall 1774.– Most wanted to make up

with GB.– Unhappy, but still loyal.– Still the majority

supported Boston and wanted Intolerable Acts to go.

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Page 14: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Declaration of Rights and Grievances

• Congress demanded rights:– To assemble (get in a

group)– To petition (ask for help)– To be tried by peers (trial

by jury of fellow citizens)– To be free of a standing

army.– Also NO TAX to regulate

external commerce.

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Page 15: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Dear King George III,

• Parliament is the problem, not you. We LIKE you. Bad Parliament, naughty Parliament.

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Page 16: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

What to do?

• Boycott British goods!– Don’t import.– Don’t consume.– Don’t export.

• If the British merchants feel it in the pocket, they’ll convince Parliament to stop!

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Page 17: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Outbreak of Fighting• April 1775 General

Thomas Gage was supposed to arrest troublemakers in Boston.– But he couldn’t catch

them.– Instead, he set off to seize

weapons at Concord.– On their way, they went to

Lexington and then Concord--few weapons!

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Page 18: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Concord / Lexington• Colonists thought the

British were burning down the town!– Minutemen arrived on the

scene.– They harrassed the British

on the 16-mile trek to Boston

• British lost hundreds of men in enemy fire.

• Colonists had sense of success: ability to pull off an armed conflict.

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Page 19: Moving toward War 1770-1775. Changes in Colonial Relations with Great Britain At Albany Congress (1754) during the Fr-Indian War, some argued for continental

Battle of Bunker (really Breed’s) Hill

• June 1775 British defeated the colonists.

• BUT, British suffered 1000 casualties to 100 Patriot casualties.

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