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The Run Up to the American Revolution

SS8H3a. Explain the immediate and long-term caused of the American Revolution and their impact on Georgia; include the … Proclamation of 1763, Stamp Act, Intolerable Acts, and the Declaration of Independence. The Run Up to the American Revolution. Proclamation of 1763.

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The Run Up to the American Revolution

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  1. SS8H3a. Explain the immediate and long-term caused of the American Revolution and their impact on Georgia; include the … Proclamation of 1763, Stamp Act, Intolerable Acts, and the Declaration of Independence. The Run Up to the American Revolution

  2. Proclamation of 1763 • Issued by King George III after the end of the French and Indian War. • Forbade the colonists to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains. • Moved Georgia’s southern boundary to the St. Marys River. • The Cherokee and Creek gave up all lands between the Ogeechee and Savannah rivers north to Augusta. • Also gave up the coastal land south of the Altamaha River.

  3. Proclamation of 1763 • When all this land came under Georgia’s control, settlers began to migrate to the colony. • The new boundaries were important to Georgia’s growth. • Not only did they provide water access for future shipping • But they also provided good farmland and dense forests with timber and naval stores resources.

  4. Stamp Act • In 1765, the British Parliament passed the stamp act in an attempt to raise money to pay for the French and Indian War. • This act placed a tax on newspapers, legal documents, and licenses. • Throughout the colonies, the reaction was swift and sometimes violent.

  5. Stamp Act • A Stamp Congress met in Boston, Massachusetts, to speak against the tax. • The Georgia colonial assembly was not in session at the time, so it did not send a representative to the Stamp Act congress. • On the day before it went into effect, a few Georgia citizens showed their dislike for the Stamp Act by burning and effigy of the stamp master in the streets of Savannah.

  6. Stamp Act • 11/6/1765 a group of Georgians came together to oppose the Stamp Act. • They called themselves the Liberty Boys. • The Liberty Boys were part of a larger group, the Sons of Liberty, whose daring acts come to represent the spirit of the Revolution

  7. Stamp Act • Although the taxes did not bother the average Georgian very much, the colony felt their effect • Georgia was the only colony that ever sold the stamps. • Only a few were sold, but Georgia’s neighbors in South Carolina, who were more directly affected, spoke out with anger against it. • The Georgia Gazette had to stop printing until the Stamp Act was repealed.

  8. Intolerable Acts • To punish the colonists of Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party, Parliament enacted four laws, which because of their harshness became known as the Intolerable Acts. • One law closed the port of Boston until the citizens of Massachusetts paid for the tea. • Under another law Massachusetts colonists could not have a town meeting without the agreement of the governor, who was also the commander of British troops.

  9. Intolerable Acts • The operation of the court system was changed so that any British officials who committed capital crimes would be tried in Great Britain rather than by a colonial court. • Finally, the Quartering Act required that the citizens of all colonies house and feed British soldiers at their own expense.

  10. Intolerable Acts • Although the laws were aimed at Massachusetts, representatives of all the colonies except Georgia gathered in Philadelphia to protest them. • 9/5/1774, the delegates organized a Continental Congress. • That Congress agreed to stop all trade with Great Britain and urged each colony to set up committees of safety. • These committees would enforce the boycott.

  11. Intolerable Acts • Anti-British sentiment was growing in Georgia • Because the colony still depended on Great Britain, the assembly chose not to send a delegate to the Continental Congress. • However, in August 1774, a group of Georgians met to discuss their reaction to the Intolerable Acts. • After much discussion they decided to send a resolution to Parliament demanding that colonial citizens have the same rights as British Citizens living in Great Britain.

  12. Intolerable Acts • The assembly also decided to have a meeting in Georgia to talk about the growing unhappiness over their ties with Great Britain. • The meeting, called the Provincial Congress, was held in Savannah in January 1775. • Less that half of Georgia’s parishes were represented, and the meeting ended without much being done.

  13. The Declaration of Independence • In January of 1776, Thomas Paine’s pamphlet Common Sense appeared. • Paine urged the colonists to separate fro Great Britain • Paine quickly followed Common Sense with a series of pamphlets • He had a great deal of influence on the actions of the Second Continental Congress. • John Adams said, “Without the pen of Paine, the sword of Washington would have been wielded in vain.”

  14. The Declaration of Independence • On July 4, 1776, over a year after the battles of Lexington and Concord, the Second Continental Congress approved the Declaration of Independence. • It was written primarily by Thomas Jefferson • It can be divided into 3 parts: • The preamble – state how the colonists felt about democracy • The body – listed 27 grievances against King George III and his government • The conclusion – declared the colonies to be an independent nation for all future times.

  15. The Declaration of Independence • The Declaration meant that the colonies were one nation • When it was read in Georgia it produced great excitement • Some colonists decided to return to Great Britain • Georgians began to prepare for war • The sent food and ammunition to the Continental Army and began to strengthen the home militia

  16. http://www.cleanvideosearch.com/media/action/yt/watch?videoId=uZfRaWAtBVghttp://www.cleanvideosearch.com/media/action/yt/watch?videoId=uZfRaWAtBVg • http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories/story/liberty_boys • http://www.gpb.org/georgiastories/story/big_question

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