1 / 22

Conflicts in the Colonies: Trouble on the Frontier and Consequences of the French and Indian War

This chapter explores the conflicts between colonists and American Indians, as well as the consequences of the French and Indian War. It covers topics such as King Philip's War, British-French rivalry, and the Treaty of Paris.

Télécharger la présentation

Conflicts in the Colonies: Trouble on the Frontier and Consequences of the French and Indian War

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 6 Conflicts in the Colonies (1675-1774)

  2. Chapter 6Conflicts in the Colonies(1675 – 1774) Section 1 Trouble on the Frontier

  3. Colonists’ Relations with American Indians • Metacomet nicknamed King Philip opposed the colonists’ efforts to take his people’s land • Colonists were afraid he wanted to destroy them • King Philip’s War • Colonial militia with the help American Indian trading partners fought American Indian warriors • Both sides attacked each other’s settlements • Approximately 3,000 Indians, 600 colonists killed • Some American Indians allied with colonists (based on trade) • Indian leaders wanted tools, weapons and other goods; colonists wanted furs • French traded with Algonquian and Huron; English traded with the Iroquois League • French trusted more than English • Smaller French settlements less threatening than rapidly growing English colonies

  4. Conflicts with France • Series of wars between England and France over who would dominate Europe and North America: • King William’s War • 1689 – 1697 • Did not change colonial boundaries in North America • Queen Anne’s War • 1702 – 1713 • England fighting both France and Spain • In the colonies, England and France had American Indian allies • English captured Port Royal (French Canada); burned St. Augustine (Spanish settlement) • Treaty that ended war gave England Hudson Bay, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia from France • King George’s War – 1740s – had little lasting effect on colonies

  5. Conflicts with France (continued) • Great Britain and France continued to compete for the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes • British wanted to settle region; French believed settlement would harm their fur trade • French built three forts in the Ohio Valley on land claimed by the colony of Virginia • British colonists felt that the French were keeping them from expanding west • 1753 Virginia demanded France give up forts • British colonists knew they were poorly organized; fighting French would be dangerous; needed a strong united colonial leadership • 1754 – seven delegates were sent to Albany, New York to make a treaty with the Iroquois League • Albany Plan of Union – called for all colonies except Georgia to unite – one of the authors was Benjamin Franklin • Colonies and parliament rejected the Albany Plan

  6. The French and Indian War • British began building a fort along the Ohio River while the delegates were meeting in Albany • French drove them off and built Fort Duquesne on the site • George Washington arrived with more soldiers and built a simple fort – Fort Necessity • French attacked Fort Necessity and forced Washington to surrender • His defeat in 1754 marked the start of the French and Indian War • Fighting began in Europe in 1756 (Seven Years’ War)

  7. The French and Indian War (continued) • General Edward Braddock sent to command British forces in North America – fought an alliance of French and American Indian troops • Knew little about frontier fighting – led to disaster when he attacked Fort Duquesne in 1755 • Turning point in the war = 1759 – General James Wolfe captured Quebec (capital of New France) • Fighting continued until 1763 – Britain won most of the important battles

  8. The Treaty of Paris • Signed by Great Britain and France in 1763 – officially ended the war • Redrew the political map of North America • Canada and all French lands east of the Mississippi River (except the city of New Orleans) given to the British • British received Florida from Spain (who had allied with the French) • Treaty of Paris changed the balance of power in North America – Britain had a claim to almost all land east of the Mississippi • Spain was the only other European nation with land in N. America

  9. Chapter 6Conflicts in the Colonies(1675 – 1774) Section 2 Consequences of the French and Indian War

  10. The Frontier • Settlers slowly moved in the Virginia and Carolina backcountry or frontier • Pioneers – first Europeans to settle the frontier • Risked attacks from American Indians who resisted settlement on their land • little colonial settlement in Kentucky and Tennessee until the 1770s • Pioneers crossed Appalachians farther to the north • Moved into forested lands along the Ohio River (1750s) • Soil in the Ohio River valley good for farming; full of wild game • Fear of native attacks kept settlements small and isolation • After the French and Indian War, more settlers began crossing the Appalachians

  11. Conflict in the Ohio River Valley • Great Britain replaced France as the European power in the Ohio River valley • British believed they were entitled to all land France had controlled – including all of American Indian lands in the Ohio River valley and Great Lakes region • Wanted to build settlements which led to problems between British and American Indian leaders • American Indian leaders had not signed treaties with the British and did not recognize the treaty between Britain and France • Pontiac’s Rebellion began May 1763 when American Indians attacked British forts on the frontier • Leader of rebellion = Pontiac • Destroyed or captured 7 forts at the beginning, but failures (unsuccessful attacks) led to surrender in 1766

  12. The Proclamation of 1763 • British leaders feared more fighting on the frontier • Conflicts would disrupt trade and force Britain to spend money on defense • King George III (Britain) issued the Proclamation of 1763 which banned the British from settling west of the Appalachians • Created a border between colonial and American Indian lands • Ordered colonists from upper Ohio River valley to leave • Proclamation was difficult to enforce • Most people who wanted to trade or settle in the valley ignored it; colonial settlement expanded west of the Appalachians • Disregard for the Proclamation showed their increasing unhappiness with British attempts to control them

  13. Chapter 6Conflicts in the Colonies(1675 – 1774) Section 3 Trouble over Colonists’ Rights

  14. Raising Taxes • Had to pay for French and Indian War • Had to keep army in North America to protect colonists against American Indian attacks • Prime Minister George Grenville asked Parliament to tax colonists • Sugar Act – 1764 – set duties on molasses and sugar imported by colonists; first act passed specifically to raise money (rather than regulate trade) in the colonies • Colonies not allowed to print their own money • Vice-admiralty courts given greater powers to punish smugglers – no juries, treated guilty until proven innocent

  15. Taxation without Representation • James Otis – lawyer from Boston – one of the first colonists to protest taxation by Parliament • No one had asked colonists if they wanted to be taxed • Colonists had no direct representatives in Parliament; had little influence on their decisions • Samuel Adams – agreed with Otis; their ideas helped spread the slogan “Taxation without Representation” • Committees of Correspondence – (Samuel Adams helped start) – established contact between the colonies, shared information about new British laws and ways to challenge them • Boycott = popular protest method

  16. The Stamp Act • Grenville proposed the Stamp Act (1765 - British citizens paid similar tax) • Affected most colonists • Required colonists to pay for an official stamp, or seal, whenever they bought paper items • Legal documents, licenses, newspapers, pamphlets, even playing cards • First effort to raise money by taxing colonists directly • Sons of Liberty – secret societies formed in places such as New York and Massachusetts • Samuel Adams helped to organize in Boston • Sometimes used violence to scare tax collectors • Many colonial courts shut down because people refused to buy the stamps required for legal documents • Patrick Henry presented resolutions to the Virginia House of Burgesses that stated the Stamp Act violated the rights of the colonists as British citizens • Stamp act denied the accused trial by jury

  17. Repealing the Stamp Act • In Boston, members of the Massachusetts legislature called for a Stamp Act Congress after Virginia House of Burgesses supported some of Patrick Henry’s resolutions • October 1765 – delegates from 9 colonies met in New York • Issued a declaration that the Stamp Act violated their rights and liberties; asked Parliament to repeal the act • Benjamin Franklin spoke before Parliament asking for the act to be repealed • Act repealed in 1766 (supported by Parliament member William Pitt) • Parliament issued the Declaratory Act – stated Parliament had the power to make laws for the colonies in all cases

  18. Chapter 6Conflicts in the Colonies(1675 – 1774) Section 4 New Taxes and Tensions

  19. The Townshend Acts • Townshend Acts (June 1767) – placed duties on imported glass, lead, paint, paper, and tea • Money paid for military costs and salaries of colonial governors • Payments violated the guarantee of having no standing army in peacetime without colonists’ consent • British officials used writs of assistance to enforce – allowed tax collectors to search for smuggled goods • Colonists responded by boycotting British goods – method of protest supported by the Daughters of Liberty • In February 1768, tax collectors seized the Liberty (suspected of smuggling) owned by John Hancock who opposed the Townshend Acts • Sons of Liberty supported Hancock; began to attack houses of customs officials in protest • Governor Francis Bernard broke up the Massachusetts legislature; asked troops to restore order; British soldiers arrived October 1768

  20. The Boston Massacre • Many Bostonians believed troops were there to silence critics • March 5, 1770 – a British soldier standing guard got into a fight with a colonist • A crowd gathered around the soldier; threw snowballs, shouted insults • Small group of troops arrived and fired into the crowd killing several colonists (Crispus Attucks, James Calwell, Patrick Carr) • Samuel Adams and others used propaganda against the British – called the shootings the Boston Massacre • Soldiers and their officer charged with murder; lawyers Josiah Quincy and John Adams argued and a Boston jury agreed they acted in self-defense

  21. A Tax on Tea • Parliament repealed almost all Townshend Acts (to reduce tensions) but kept the tax on tea • Demand for tea was high in the colonies despite the boycott; colonies smuggling to avoid duties • British East India Company offered to sell its tea directly to colonies and charge less hoping to lead to less smuggling and more collection of taxes • Tea Act passed by Parliament in 1773 • Colonial merchants and smugglers feared cheap tea would put them out of business; others feared a British East India Company monopoly • Boston Tea Party – 3 ships carrying tea in Boston Harbor; Sons of Liberty demanded they leave; governor would not allow them to leave without paying duty; colonists dressed as American Indians dumped tea into the water

  22. The Intolerable Acts • Intolerable Acts (Coercive Acts) – passed in spring of 1774 to punish Massachusetts for Boston Tea Party • Several effects: • Boston Harbor closed until Boston paid for lost tea • Massachusetts charter canceled; governor decided if and when legislature could meet • Royal officials accused of crimes sent to Britain for trial; more friendly judge and jury • Quartering Act forced colonists to quarter, or house and supply, British soldier • General Thomas Gage became the new governor of Massachusetts • British hoped they would restore order; only made people more angry

More Related