proclamation of 1763

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Proclamation of 1763. Sugar Act. Stamp Act. Causes for American Revolution. Townshend Act. Boston Massacre. Boston Tea Party. Intolerable Acts. Quiz. Bell-work 9/22/14. Update Notebooks EQ: How did British rule lead to conflict? TSWBAT evaluate British policies and taxes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Proclamation of 1763
Page 2: Proclamation of 1763

Proclamation of 1763

Townshend Act

Stamp Act

Boston Massacre

Boston Tea Party

Intolerable Acts

Causes for American

Revolution

Sugar Act

Quiz

Page 3: Proclamation of 1763

Bell-work 9/22/14Update Notebooks

EQ: How did British rule lead to conflict? TSWBAT evaluate British policies and taxes

What is the connection?

Page 4: Proclamation of 1763

Bell-work 9/23/14• DOK Level 3 (Draw conclusions/cite evidence)

• Conclude how and WHY(use evidence) British actions/taxes led to dissatisfaction in the American colonies• EQ: How did British rule lead to conflict? • TSWBAT evaluate British policies and taxes• HW: Review Cornell notes, summarize content

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Objective and Scales:

• The student will be able to evaluate British policies and taxes that led to anger and conflict including the Sugar, Stamp, and Townshend Acts as evidenced by completed Cornell notes and quiz with 80% accuracy

• According to the objective above, what goal from the Unit Learning Goal are we tackling today? • Yes, C• How do you reach mastery? • Update TOC to include page 22: Causes of the American Revolution

Page 6: Proclamation of 1763

Proclamation of 1763

Townshend Act

Stamp Act

Boston Massacre

Boston Tea Party

Intolerable Acts

Causes for American

Revolution

Sugar Act

Quiz

Page 7: Proclamation of 1763

While you are taking Cornell Notes for this PowerPoint, only write down the words that are highlighted in green. Doing this will speed up your note taking and highlight the CRITICAL information

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Proclamation of 1763

• The Proclamation of 1763, signed by King George III of England, prohibited any English settlement west of the Appalachian mountains.• It required people already settled

in those regions to return east in an attempt to ease tensions with Native Americans.

ColonistResponse

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RESPONSE to Proclamation of 1763

• Colonists resented not being able to settle west of the Proclamation line, especially in places like the Ohio Valley• With the French

removed, they believed it their right to stay. • They felt betrayed and

started to feel separate from the King

Click picture to read the Real Proclamation!! Watch out it’s wordy!

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Sugar Act of 1764•The Sugar Act (law) was passed by Parliament to pay for the war debt brought on by the French and Indian War and to help pay for the expenses of running the colonies and newly acquired territories.

•This is outrageous, they won the war for him now he says they must pay for it!

•This act increased the duties (taxes) on imported sugar and other items such as textiles, coffee, wines and indigo (dye).

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Stamp Act of 1764

• In March, the Stamp Act was passed by Parliament imposing the first direct tax on the American colonies, to pay for the high costs of the British military (King was now sending troops to America) • Next Page.

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Stamp Act of 1764

• Under the Stamp Act, all printed materials were taxed, including:• newspapers• pamphlets• bills• legal documents• licenses • almanacs• dice and playing cards.

ColonistResponse

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RESPONSE to the Stamp Act

• The American colonists quickly united in opposition in the Stamp Act Congress, led by the 27 delegates from 9 colonies. • They created the Declaration of

Rights and Grievances in response to taxation without representation• The Stamp Act was repealed in

1776 Click the

picture

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Townshend Acts

• In 1767, The English Parliament passed the Townshend Revenue Acts, imposing a new series of taxes on the colonists to pay for the costs of administering and protecting the American colonies. Items taxed included imports such as paper, tea, glass, lead and paints. • This was smart, colonists could not make these items themselves

ColonistResponse

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Response to the Townshend Acts

• Boycottstop buying goods!

• If the colonists don’t buy the goods, the King doesn’t get his tax money

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Boston Massacre (March 5, 1770)The Boston Massacre occurred

when a mob harassed British soldiers who then fired their muskets pointblank into the crowd, killing three instantly, wounding two others and injuring six.

ColonistResponse

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Boston Massacre RESPONSE

• The Boston Massacre was, of course, not a “massacre,” in the classic sense. Colonialist responded through propaganda (newspapers) and immediately capitalized on this incident, using the incident to fan colonial passions of seeing the British unjustly governing the colonies. They used the incident to incite anti-British feelings.

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Boston Tea PartyOn the evening of December 16, 1773, a group of men calling themselves the "Sons of Liberty" went to the Boston Harbor. The men were dressed as Mohawk Indians. They boarded three British ships, the Beaver, the Eleanor and the Dartmouth, and dumped forty-five tons of tea into the Boston Harbor.

ColonistResponse

Page 19: Proclamation of 1763

What caused the Boston Tea Party to happen?

• The Boston Tea Party was a direct response from the Tea Act (1773)• The Act did NOT

increase the tax on tea, it created a monopoly on tea• Colonists could only

buy tea from England

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Intolerable Acts• The Intolerable Acts (or Coercive Acts) were a

series of laws sponsored by British Prime Minister Lord North and passed in 1774 in response to the Boston Tea Party. The laws were these:• Boston Port Act• Quartering Act• Quebec Act• Massachusetts Bay Regulating Act• Impartial Administration of Justice Act

ColonistResponse

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1st Intolerable Act: Boston Port Act

• Closed the port of Boston in 1774 until the price of the dumped tea was recovered, moved the capital of Massachusetts to Salem, and made Marblehead the official port of entry for the Massachusetts colony

Intolerable Acts

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Quartering Act

• Allowed royal troops to stay in the homes of any colonist or empty buildings if barracks were not available

Intolerable Acts

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Quebec Act

• Granted civil government and religious freedom to Catholics living in Quebec

Intolerable Acts

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Massachusetts Regulating Act

• Made all law officers subject to appointment by the royal governor and banned all town meetings that didn't have approval of the royal governor

Intolerable Acts

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Impartial Administration of Justice Act

• Allowed the royal governor of a colony to move trials to other colonies or even to England if he feared that juries in those colonies wouldn't judge a case fairly

Intolerable Acts

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RESPONSE to the Intolerable Acts

• These were by far the harshest of the acts passed. Those living in Boston and Massachusetts would lose money from the Boston Port Act, be forced to provide housing to soldiers through the Quartering Act, and be denied some of the same freedoms other colonists received through the Quebec Act. • The colonists called for a convention in response…the FIRST

CONTINETNAL CONGRESS