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Wednesday, October 17 th , 2012 You will need: Pencil Journal Ruler Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity Homework: None

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Page 1: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Wednesday, October 17th, 2012• You will need:

– Pencil – Journal

– Ruler

– Agenda:• Picture Day• Timeline Activity

– Homework:– None –

Page 2: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Causes and Events Leading to the

American Revolution

1763-1775

Page 3: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

PERSPECTIVE

• What is perspective? • If two people look at the same

thing but see it two different ways, how do we know which person is right and which one is wrong?

Page 4: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Here are some examples using pictures… but sometimes the way people “see” something doesn’t mean visually… it means in their opinion.

Page 5: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• When you first look at this, do you see an old man with ivy leaves around him, or do you see a couple kissing?

Page 6: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• A rabbit, looking right?

• Or a duck, looking left?

• Who is right and who is wrong?

Page 7: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Do you see the old man?

Do you see a woman with a baby?

Do you see the dog?

What else do you see?

Page 8: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –
Page 9: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Do you see the old woman?

OR

Do you see the young woman?

Page 10: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

PERSPECTIVE

• Here are 2 different points of view on what the

purpose of the American colonies.

• Who is right?

Page 11: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• "The Colonies were acquired with no other view than to be a convenience to us, and therefore it can never be imagined that we are to consult their interest."

Editorial• The London Chronicle, 1764

Page 12: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• “If our trade be taxed, why not our lands, or produce... in short, everything we possess? They tax us without having legal representation."

• Samuel Adams, 1765Founder of the Sons of Liberty

Page 13: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• There wasn’t just one single event that caused the American Revolution. And there wasn’t just one opinion on what the colonists should do. If there had been, then all colonists would have joined in the fight against the British. They didn’t. Many remained loyal to the king (loyalists) and opposed a revolution.

Page 14: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• The following events are just some of the things that led many to believe that theirs was a cause worthy of risking their lives.

Page 15: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• After viewing, you decide. Would you have remained loyal to the King – or would you have chosen to break away?

• Would you have risked your life for something you believed in?

• Many people died during the revolution. Was it a worthy cause?

Page 16: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Turn your spiral on it’s side and at the top, label the page “American Revolution Timeline”

• Make a timeline that looks like this on page 40 of your spiral.

Page 17: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

When you see a slide with the British Flag, record the date and event above the

line. 1763 Treaty of Paris

Page 18: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• When you see a slide with a minute man, record the date and event below the timeline.

1763 Treaty of Paris

1764 Beginning of

Colonial Opposition

Page 19: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Try to look at each event from the perspective of both the British and the Colonists.

Page 20: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• By the way, you won’t need to record something from every slide. Just the slides with either a British flag or a Minute man.

Page 21: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

The Events

Page 22: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1763 • British and French sign the

Treaty of Paris, ending The French and Indian War. The cost of the war left a huge national debt hanging over the government of Britain. 

Page 23: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Perspective

• The King felt that the colonists should bear the burden of the expense of maintaining the colonies.

Page 24: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• The Colonists felt they did enough already without adding additional taxes:– Colonies provided raw materials to

England. – They provided markets for goods

produced in Britain (in other words, it gave England customers to sell to).

All of this they did with little or no say in a government that passed laws without consulting them first.

Page 25: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1764 • Sugar Act. Parliament, desiring

revenue from its North American colonies, passed the first law specifically aimed at raising colonial money for the Crown. The act increased duties (tax) on non-British goods shipped to the colonies. In other words, anything that was sold by the British, cost the colonists more money.

Page 26: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Why would the cost of sugar affect the colonists? What did they need sugar for?

• Hint: You can drink it…..• Answer: To make and sell rum. • If sugar (a necessary ingredient in

making rum), cost them more it would cut into their profits. They would make less money on the rum.

Page 27: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1764 • Currency Act. This act prohibited American colonies from issuing their own currency, angering many American colonists.

Page 28: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• This meant that colonies must pay all taxes with gold or silver coins.

• The more taxes that were required, the more gold and silver went to England, making it more and more scarce in the colonies.

• Without currency of their own, forced to pay for everything with gold, silver, or bartering (trading one thing for another), it became increasingly difficult for colonists to buy the things they needed.

Page 29: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1764• Beginnings of Colonial Opposition.

American colonists responded to the Sugar Act and the Currency Act with protest. By the end of the year, many colonies were refusing to use imported English goods.

Page 30: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1765

• The Stamp Act was passed by Parliament

Page 31: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• The act levied a tax on all newspapers, legal documents, pamphlets, almanacs, playing cards and dice by requiring that they bear a stamp.  The money from the tax was to be used to pay for the defense of the colonies.

Page 32: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

This ignited a major cause of the American Revolution . With no representatives in parliament to plead their cause, the colonists grew increasingly angry at having no say in laws being passed that affected their lives. They protested against “taxation without representation.”

Page 33: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1765 The Stamp Act Congress

Meeting in New York City, this group of colonists sent petitions to King George III and to Parliament, saying Parliament had no right to tax the colonies. Parliament and the king ignored the petitions.

Page 34: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Becoming increasingly frustrated at not being heard, American opposition was intense. Merchants refused to buy British goods, stamp agents were threatened and official stamps were destroyed. 

Page 35: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

Tarring and feathering

• After the enactment of the Stamp Act, it was common to threaten or attack British government employees in the colonies. One way was by tar and feathering.

Page 36: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Applying the burning hot tar to bare skin usually caused painful blistering and efforts to remove it often made the condition worse. The adding of feathers which stuck to the tar added to the humiliation and made the victim a comical figure.

Page 37: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Tar could easily be found in the shipyards and everyone had feathers in their pillows. With the materials at hand, tarring and feathering was a common threat and punishment. Though the tarring was not usually fatal, it was extremely unpleasant.

Page 38: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• By November 1, 1765, the day the Stamp Act tax went into effect, there were no stamp commissioners left in the colonies to collect it.

Page 39: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1765

• Quartering Act. The British further angered American colonists with the Quartering Act, which required the colonies to provide barracks and supplies to British troops.

Page 40: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

1767• Townshend Acts. To help pay

the expenses involved in governing the American colonies, Parliament passed the Townshend Acts, which initiated taxes on glass, lead, paint, paper, and tea.

Page 41: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

October 1, 1768

• British troops arrive in Boston to quell the growing unrest in the American colonies

Page 42: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

March 5 1770

• Boston Massacre. The arrival of troops in Boston provoked conflict between citizens and soldiers. A group of soldiers surrounded by an unfriendly crowd opened fire, killing five Americans.

Page 43: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –
Page 44: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

May 10 1773

• The Tea Act. Passed in Parliament to save the East Indian Company - a British company- from bankruptcy. No new tax was imposed but what this act did was take the tea from the East Indian Company and ship it directly to the colonies to be sold at a bargain price. Because the act did away with the tax on British tea but kept the tax on the colonist’s tea, the company was able to undersell the colonial merchant’s tea. The British company's unfair advantage led to the near destruction of the American tea merchants trade.

Page 45: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

December 16 1773

• In protest over the Tea Act, members of the Sons of Liberty dressed as Indians boarded three British ships in Boston harbor and threw the valuable tea overboard.

Boston Tea Party

Page 46: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

May 13, 1774

• Thomas Gage

(a British General) replaced the colonial Governor of Boston.

Page 47: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

September 5 - October 25 1774 • Twelve colonies, all but Georgia, sent 56

delegates to Philadelphia to participate in the First Continental Congress.  The purpose of the First Continental Congress was to debate and plan a unified response to British policy and actions.  It was the first time many of these influential men had met face to face. 

Page 48: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

September 1774• General Gage, the Governor

of Boston, responded to increased threats of violence from the American colonists by fortifying Boston Neck, the thin spit of land connecting Boston to the mainland.  This move effectively cut the city of Boston off from the rest of Massachusetts, placing the city under siege.

Page 49: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

October 1774

• General Gage dissolved the Massachusetts General Court in an attempt to lessen the power of the colonists and increase the power of the king in Massachusetts. 

Page 50: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Members of the court reconvened as the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and voted to recruit 12,000 men for a militia (composed of American minutemen -- colonists prepared to fight the British on a minute's notice) and purchase 5,000 muskets and bayonets.

Page 51: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

March 25 1775 • Patrick Henry

delivered his "give me liberty or give me death" speech to the Virginia Assembly in Richmond. 

Page 52: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

March 30 - April 5 1770

• General Gage ordered his troops on a practice march around Boston.  The Massachusetts Provincial Congress at Concord viewed the British march as an act of open hostility. They issued formal grievances against the British government and adopted fifty-three articles of war against the British army. 

Page 53: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

April 18 1775

• General Gage planned a secret night march on Concord to seize the colonists' store of weapons.

Page 54: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Paul Revere immediately rode out over Boston Neck towards Lexington to warn John Hancock and Samuel Adams, fellow members of the Sons of Liberty.  After Revere reached Lexington, he went to Concord where he was caught and questioned by six British officers.  The officers left Revere horseless and stranded near Lexington. 

Page 55: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

April 19 1775• In Lexington, 130

minuteman met the British troops in attempt to stop the army from reaching Concord.  The American patriots were outnumbered and began to disperse.  However, a shot was fired and the British troops killed eight colonists and wounded ten. 

Page 56: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• And so began the American Revolution.

Page 57: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

After looking at some of the causes and events that led to the American Revolution, you must now decide if you would have joined the struggle for independence or if you would have remained loyal to the king.

Page 58: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• List reasons

for independence against independence

Page 59: Wednesday, October 17 th, 2012 You will need: –Pencil –Journal –Ruler –Agenda: Picture Day Timeline Activity –Homework: –None –

• Your decision?• Are you a patriot? Or a loyalist?