the imperial crisis 1763 - 1775. developing crisis the colonies remained loyal englishmen, though...
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The Imperial Crisis
1763 - 1775
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Developing Crisis
The colonies remained loyal Englishmen, though they continued to be unruly: they are seen on the home island as bordering on disloyal if not out right disloyal.
The colonists began to lobby for representation.
They did not want representation in Parliament.
They knew they would be outnumbered and ineffective as representatives in Parliament.
The colonists wanted the king to consult with their representative assemblies as he did with Parliament putting their assemblies on a equal basis with Parliament.
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The New Imperial System
Three goals:
1. Provide for colonies’ security
2. Reassert crown’s authority over colonies
3. Shift financial burden of war debt and colonial defense to colonies
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Proclamation of 1763
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The New Imperial SystemOpening Moves
Sugar Act 1764 – taxes sugar, coffee and other importsCurrency Act of 1764 – prohibited use of colonial money: only the
British pound was permissibleQuartering Act of 1765 – required the garrisoning of British soldiers at
colonial expenseStamp Act – Required a stamp on newspapers, pamphlets, cards, death
certificates, etc. Problems: tax with the sole purpose of raising revenue for England not
colonies Results VA (led by Patrick Henry [laudanum head]) declared only it had the right
to tax Virginians Mob activity (burning the tax collectors in effigy; liberty poles) tar and
feather Repealed in 1766
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George Grenville and his Stamps
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The Stamp Act Crisis
Colonial Responses Political Actions Popular Actions
British Responses British Merchants seek relief Parliament Repeals the act in 1766 Parliament passes the Declaratory Act Parliament passes Revenue Act
Lessons Learned
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The Townshend Crisis
Townshend Revenue Act of 1766- Duty on lead, glass, paint, paper and tea
Provocative moves- Seeks confrontation
Colonial responses- Sons of Liberty- Circular letter
Parliament’s response- Dissolve Assemblies- Increase British troops strength
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The Boston Massacre
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The Last Imperial Crisis
Tea Act (1773)
Boston Tea Party (1774)
The Coercive Acts (1774)
The First Continental Congress (1774)
Lexington & Concord (1775)
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The Boston Tea Party
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Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
Closed port of Boston
Powers of Mass. Assembly & town meetings curtailed
Permitted quartering of troops in private houses
Imperial officers exempted from trial
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The Opening Salvos
September 1774 - Congress recommends that the colonies begin military preparations
December 1774 - George III declares the New England colonies to be in a state of rebellion
In early 1775 Gen. Gage ordered to restore royal rule in Mass by:
1. Closing Massachusetts Assembly2. Arrest its leading members3. Capturing arms stockpiled by militia
By spring 1775, colonial leaders and the British commander both expected fighting to break out.
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19 April 1775
General Thomas Gage
Commander-in-Chief, North America
Governor, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Order British column to Lexington and Concord searching for John Hancock, Sam Adams and munitions stores.
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The midnight ride of Paul Revere & William Dawes
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Opening Moves
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“The shot heard ‘round the world”
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Colonial Response to the New Imperial System
Benjamin Franklin - “Repeal the laws, Renounce the Right, Recall the troops, Refund the money, and return to the old methods”