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The Declaration of Independence

The Declaration of Independence. Prelude to Separation. Jamestown and Plymouth Founded as…but eventually taken by the…because… This was important because it overturned the idea of limited government Navigation Acts of 1651

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The Declaration of Independence

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  1. The Declaration of Independence

  2. Prelude to Separation • Jamestown and Plymouth • Founded as…but eventually taken by the…because… • This was important because it overturned the idea of limited government • Navigation Acts of 1651 • These acts limited the colonists’…abilities and forced them to trade exclusively with… • This restricted business opportunities and stunted economic growth of the colonies • Created a dependency upon England

  3. Prelude to Separation • French and Indian War • This war nearly…Britain’s national… • Britain expected the…to pay the bill • The colonists refused and stated they would only pay…levied by their own legislatures • Britain’s government responded by creating and raising…to increase its… • Parliament was the body that made the new taxes • The king was the scapegoat

  4. Prelude to Separation • Prohibitory Act 1776 • Blockaded American ports • Declared American ships as enemy vessels • King hires Hessian mercenaries • Clear sign of aggression by the crown against the colonists

  5. Prelude to Separation • Common Sense by Thomas Paine • 1775-6 • Pamphlet that articulated: • Monarchal and aristocratic tyranny led to oppression of the common man • England violated its constitutional monarchy • Independence in necessary and inevitable • Wildly popular • Heavily influenced anti-British movement

  6. Resolving Independence • Second Continental Congress • Governing body of the colonies from 1775-81 • Composed of deleagates from each state to satisfy demands of the colonies • Lee Resolution • Richard Henry Lee proposed freedom from the crown • Met with resistance because some delegates were told not to support any actions of independence • Congress convenes • Committee of Five assigned to draft a formal statement of independence

  7. Resolving Independence • Members of the committee: • John Adams • Roger Sherman • Benjamin Franklin • Robert R. Livingston • Thomas Jefferson • Composed different drafts of statement • Written primarily by Jefferson with Franklin and Adams as advisors

  8. Resolving Independence • Jefferson presented a draft on July 1st • Revisions and debate on July 2nd and 3rd • Congress of the whole formally adopts the Declaration of Independence on July 4th, 1776

  9. Evaluating the Document • 5 parts: • Preamble • Statement of Beliefs • List of Complaints • Statement of Prior Attempt to Redress Government • Declaration of Independence

  10. Evaluating the Document • Preamble • Read from “When in the course…” to “impel them to separation”. • What is this section saying? • What reason(s) did the founding fathers give for their separation?

  11. Evaluating the Document • Statement of Belief • Read from “We hold these truths…” to “…tyranny over these states” • What are the main points of this section? • What are all men? • What beliefs did the founding fathers hold?

  12. Evaluating the Document • List of Complaints • Read from “To prove this…” to “…is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.” • What are some of the main complaints? • Is there a theme to the complaints? • Are any rooted in specific events?

  13. Evaluating the Document • Statement of Prior Attempts to Redress Grievances • Read from “Nor have we been wanting…” to “…Enemies in War, in Peace Friends”. • How had the founding fathers already tried to address the problems? • Why were they rejected?

  14. Evaluating the Document • Declaration of Independence • Read the rest of the document • What rights did the colonies declare? • What did they sacrifice? • What crime was this committing? • What was the punishment for such a crime?

  15. Recap • The need for separation began with abuses by greedy monarchs • There was a history of exploitation of the colonists and rejection of redress of grievances • The hiring of Hessian soldiers and publication of Common Sense created a need for independnece • The Declaration of Independence permanently separated us from Great Britain

  16. Journal Question • Was America justified in separating itself from Great Britain?

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