1 / 0

The American Revolutionary Era, 1754-1789

The American Revolutionary Era, 1754-1789. The French and Indian War The Imperial Crisis and resistance to Britain The War for Independence. The French and Indian War.

tejana
Télécharger la présentation

The American Revolutionary Era, 1754-1789

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. The American Revolutionary Era, 1754-1789

    The French and Indian War The Imperial Crisis and resistance to Britain The War for Independence
  2. The French and Indian War The French and Indian War (1754-1763) refers to the American phase of a larger global struggle between Britain, France and other European powers for supremacy in Europe and domination of overseas empires. The British and French fought three major wars between 1689 and 1748 and again went to war in 1754, in America. Two years later the conflict erupted in Europe- The European phase is called the Seven Years’ War. The most important results of the conflict to American history are: the dispossession of the French of their North American colonies and claims, and the beginnings of the Anglo-American resistance to British rule that would eventually fester into revolution, war, and independence for the British colonies in North America
  3. The French and Indian War The name of the war comes from the British perspective (who they were fighting) rather than the combatants, i.e., British forces were fighting the French, and their Indian allies. The conflict began as the two nations’ attempted to exert dominance over competing land claims in the Ohio River Valley. The French built a series of forts from Lake Ontario to the Ohio River- which provided them an easy route from Canada to the Mississippi, and their southern realm of Louisiana. Meanwhile, British fur trappers and land speculators had also began to establish a presence in the Ohio River region. The British governor of Virginia, Robert Dinwiddie, ordered a fort built in western Pennsylvania to protect British claims. The French overwhelmed and seized the fort, renaming it Ft. Duquesne, setting the stage for open conflict. Dinwiddie then asked a young Virginia lieutenant, George Washington, to raise a force to expel the French from the fort. Washington was defeated by a much larger French force, but his valiant attempt to resist the French established him as something of a hero in the colonies- the first wide recognition of his long and heroic career. The following year, Britain sent a larger force of 1400 “regulars” under General Edward Braddock to secure the Ohio River Valley. Overconfident, Braddock was ambushed by the French and their Native American allies- Braddock was shot (dying soon after) and Washington averted total defeat by organizing a retreat. The next several years saw intermittent fighting along the frontier, with few decisive victories for either side- Finally, in 1757 the British sent an overwhelming force of infantry and warships to America to deliver the death knell. They finally seized the lands near Ft. Duquesne, (rebuilding Ft. Pitt, now Pittsburgh, on the site), and more importantly, in 1759, a British fleet sailed up the St. Lawrence River and successfully laid siege to Quebec. Fighting elsewhere in the conflict continued until 1763, but the defeat of the French at Quebec more or less ended the struggle in North America.
  4. Albany Plan of Union An important aspect of the French and Indian War was the call for inter-colonial cooperation. At the urging of the British, representatives from most of the colonies met in Albany, NY in 1754 to discuss options for their common defense against the French. A committee headed by Benjamin Franklin (delegate for Pennsylvania) suggested the colonies unite into a federal system to organize the war effort. Although the Albany Plan of Union was ultimately rejected, it was the first attempt to bring the British North American colonies into a formal cooperative agreement. The fact that it was rejected also pointed to the difficulties the colonies would face in the coming decade as they attempted to organize resistance to the British, on the road toward independence.
  5. 1763 Treaty of Paris The 1763 Treaty of Paris officially ended the conflict between Britain and France, and established the terms of the post-war agreement between the nations. Except for a few offshore islands, the treaty ended French power in North America. New France (Canada) became part of the British Empire, as well as all of the Louisiana claims east of the Mississippi River. Spain (an ally of Britain in the war) agreed to cede Florida to the British in exchange for the return of Cuba and the Philippines. In a separate treaty, France then ceded New Orleans, and all of Louisiana west of the Mississippi to Spain.
  6. The Imperial Crisis and resistance to Britain The French and Indian War, although clearly a great victory for the British Empire in America, was very expensive. The British Crown had borrowed heavily to finance the war effort, and in an attempt to recoup some of those funds initiated a series of new policies and taxes that were intended to help pay for the defense of Anglo-America. These policies and taxes angered the colonists in America, and the organized resistance to these British policies formed the basis for the American Revolution.
  7. Proclamation of 1763 In the same year as the Treaty of Paris (1763) a series of skirmishes erupted on the frontier between the British and various Native American groups led by a Delaware chief, Pontiac. “Pontiac’s War” frightened the British because they did not have the resources to fight yet another war in America. In an effort to appease the Native Americans and help prevent further clashes with the rapidly expanding settlements in the colonies, the British issued the Proclamation of 1763, which set the boundary for British settlement along the spine of the Appalachian Mountains. This enraged many American colonists who had expected access to the newly acquired trans-Appalachian lands.
  8. Stamp Act Crisis Following the Proclamation of 1763, a new British Prime Minister, George Grenville, attempted to solve the Anglo-American financial problems by clamping down on smuggling, and by strictly enforcing customs duties (taxes on imports and exports). Grenville arranged for smugglers to be tried in vice-admiralty (naval) courts, instead of the usual colonial courts. This led to widespread protests that the American colonists were being denied their basic civil rights as British citizens, such as the right to trial by jury, (which was not required in naval courts) and the right to a speedy trial- (because the court was held at Nova Scotia). The following year Grenville issued the Revenue Act (Sugar Act) which significantly raised the duties (tariffs, or import taxes) on foreign sugar, along with several other key commodities. Again the merchants and colonists in America protested that their rights were being trampled. To add to the growing discontent, Grenville also outlawed paper money in the colonies- alienating many farmers and artisans who depended on the inflationary tendency of paper money to pay back loans. In 1765, the British went a step further, initiating a much broader tax that angered nearly everyone in the colonies. The Stamp Act of 1765 required a stamp (representing a tax paid) to be placed on almost all printed materials- including newspapers, pamphlets, posters, deeds, licenses, wills, etc. This was the first direct tax on the colonies (as opposed to the indirect customs duties like the Sugar Act)- and the colonists went absolutely bonkers. In the furor that ensued, colonists began to assert the idea that became central to the impending revolution: the lawful taxation of British citizens are dependent upon representation in Parliament, and since the colonies had no such representation , they could not be held to the taxes passed in Parliament. In other words, “NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION”
  9. Organized Resistance Widespread discontent over the Stamp Act produced the first organized, large-scale resistance to British policies in America. In the summer of 1765 mass meetings and demonstrations were being held across the colonies. The Sons of Liberty was a group that formed to help resist the Stamp Act and organize protests, and chapters quickly sprung up in cities throughout the colonies, (including Savannah where the local chapter met at Tondee’s tavern, then on the corner of Broughton and Barnard). Some members terrorized the tax collectors with effigy hangings and burnings, as well as actual violence visited upon the dwellings of a few. Also of note, representatives from nine of the American colonies met for what became known as the Stamp Act Congress. They issued a document- the Declaration of Rights and Grievances- which attempted to spell out to the British the reasons for their resistance to the Stamp Act. Throughout much of the colonies, resistance to the Stamp Act tax turned into a general boycott of all British goods. Many colonists refused to buy British tea, cloth, and many other goods. The boycott had a powerful effect on the British economy, and Parliament was forced to repeal the Stamp Act in 1766. However, the British soon issued yet another series of customs duties known as the Townsend Acts- and the boycotts (along with some official non-importation laws) continued. Women’s groups, like the Daughters of Liberty, also arose to support the boycott by making and wearing “homespun” – instead of using British-made cloth.
  10. Boston Massacre In the climate of protest and resistance following the Stamp Act, Townsend Acts and the resulting boycotts, the British sent troops to America to help maintain order. Nearly 1,000 British “redcoats” (or “lobster-backs” as they were derisively called), were stationed in Boston, and on March 5, 1770, violence erupted between colonists and troops that left five colonists dead and six more wounded. As news of the “massacre” spread, full-scale revolution seemed imminent, but the British repealed all of the Townsend duties- except for the tax on tea- which was kept as a symbol of Parliament’s ultimate right to tax the British colonies.
  11. Committees of Correspondence The repeal of the Townsend duties placated the colonists temporarily, but in 1772, Britain sent several customs ships to patrol the coast for smugglers. Irate colonists in Rhode Island seized and burned one of these ships, the Gaspee, after it had run aground off the coast. This, in turn, enraged the British who began forcing accused smugglers to face trial in England. In response to the climate of increasing violence and uncertainty, Thomas Jefferson, among others, suggested that each colony create a Committee of Correspondence- which they hoped would keep one another apprised of news and events related to the developing crisis. Like the Stamp Act Congress, these committees represented an attempt to get some “official” cooperation and organization between colonial governments.
  12. Boston Tea Party and the “Intolerable” Acts As mentioned, the tax on imported tea was the only of the Townsend duties to remain in effect, and in 1773 the British reorganized its global tea trade, which cut out some American merchants, and upset the already tense situation in the colonies. Committees of Correspondence kept each other informed of when British tea was en route. Some colonies refused to receive shipments. In Charleston they refused to distribute the tea. And in Boston, a group of colonists, dressed as Indians, boarded the ship and dumped the tea into the harbor. From the British perspective, this was the last straw. To prove their point, they passed a series of punitive measures that came to be known as the Coercive Acts, intended to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party, and to bring the colonies under control once and for all. The Coercive Acts included: 1) shutting down Boston Harbor until the tea was paid for. 2) a ban on town meetings, and a provision to make key government posts (judges, sheriffs, council members, etc.) appointed by the Royal governor, not elected, as they had been. 3) a provision to transfer British soldiers to trial in England. 4) a law allowing British soldiers to quarter in private homes. The British sent 2000 troops to New England to enforce the Coercive Acts. From the colonial perspective, the Coercive Acts were (literally) the Intolerable Acts. It appeared that Britain was attempting to not only denying the colonists their basic rights as British subjects, but were prohibiting representative forms of government that the colonies had enjoyed all along. This was “intolerable.” From the inter-colonial associations formed through the Committees of Correspondence, and other organized resistance to the British, twelve of thirteen colonies formed the First Continental Congress in the summer of 1774, agreeing to meet again the following year if the crisis had not been resolved. The Congress was fairly equally split between those that were ready to fight (patriots) and those that wanted to remain loyal to the British Crown (loyalists). But in the meantime….
  13. Lexington and Concord The first skirmishes of the American Revolution were near Lexington and Concord, two small Massachusetts towns, when a British regiment was ordered to march on a patriot supply depot. Paul Revere and William Dawes raised the alarm on horseback, and the British soldiers happened upon a forming militia. Someone, (not sure who) fired the “shot heard ‘round the world,” (as later described by the great American writer and thinker Ralph Waldo Emerson) The British killed eight American militia men- war had begun. News of the fray spread like wildfire and patriot militias from all over New England raced to the area. By May of 1775, the patriot militias had surrounded the British forces in Boston.
  14. Second Continental Congress As agreed, the Continental Congress that had formed in 1774 reconvened the following summer. They named the patriot militias near Boston as the Continental Army and appointed George Washington as general. Before Washington could reach his post, more fighting erupted in Boston- the Battle of Bunker Hill- where the patriot forces inflicted massive casualties on an ill-advised British advance. The British ultimately regained the position (although they later abandoned Boston altogether), but Bunker Hill was a moral victory for the upstart American forces, inspiring confidence that the colonists had potential to succeed against the fearsome British regulars. Isolated fighting spread to other regions of the colonies as well. But through this early phase of fighting, many American colonists were still clinging to hope of reconciliation, while others were arguing a full fledged fight for independence.
  15. Common Sense and independence One of the most important turning points for the move towards declaring independence was a pamphlet written by Thomas Paine. In Common Sense, Paine made a powerfully persuasive argument that the tyranny of the British King (George III)subverted the natural order and progression of society- of which he saw American at the vanguard- and that independence was the only way to end the tyranny. Selling more than 100,000 copies through the first half of 1776, Common Sense convinced many colonists that independence was the only choice. Soon, all of the provincial congresses had authorized their Continental delegates to vote for independence, and a committee composed of John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, Robert Livingston, and Thomas Jefferson submitted a document written largely by Jefferson: The Declaration of Independence. On July 4, 1776 the Continental Congress issued the Declaration- the birth of the United States of America. The fighting was no longer about resisting what was seen as unjust rule, but about throwing off that rule entirely.
  16. Declaration of Independence The Declaration of Independence is comprised of four sections: 1) the Preamble, 2) a Declaration of Natural Rights, 3) List of Grievances, 4) Resolution of Independence The Preamble explains and introduces the basic reasons (and political philosophy) underlying the decision for declaring independence from Britain. The Declaration of Natural Rights expands on the political philosophy mentioned in the preamble. Both of these sections draw heavily from the Enlightenment-era political theories of John Locke- an English writer/philosopher of the late 17th/early 18th century. Locke’s Two Treatises on Government (1690) introduced ideas about the “natural” rights of man to life, liberty and property. Locke also laid the foundation for the Social Contract theory of government later espoused by Rousseau. (Social Contract theory is also sometimes known as “Compact” Theory) In its essence the idea of the Social Contract is that any government ultimately rules only with the consent of the people being ruled. The implication then, is that when a government fails to meet the needs of its people-the government gets overthrown- and the people have the right to overthrow tyrannical governments. The List of Grievances portion of the Declaration is just that: an item-by-item account of how Jefferson (speaking for the Congress) feels King George the III has wronged the American colonies. The Resolution of Independence asserts that the colonies were free from all political ties and allegiance to the British Crown- and that they could do all the things (prosecute war, conclude peace, make alliances, conduct commerce) that free and independent states do.
  17. Securing French aid Once the Declaration had been issued, one of the primary objectives of the Congress was to secure diplomatic recognition from other nations- most importantly, France. France had been secretly aiding the American military effort early on, but they were unwilling at first to risk war with Britain by formally recognizing, aiding, and allying with the United States. The Continental Congress sent Benjamin Franklin to the Court of Louis XVI to work at diplomatic recognition and direct military aid. The major turning point for the French followed news of the American victory at Saratoga, NY. Only when the French saw that the Americans had a chance to defeat the British were they willing to formally enter the war. In February 1778 the United States negotiated its first two treaties with France- one extending formal recognition to the U.S., and one offering direct military aid with land and sea forces. The French contributions to the war effort gave the Americans the staying power they needed to wear the British down and eventually win the conflict.
  18. The War for Independence Prior to Saratoga and official French support, the Patriot forces had little to be excited about. They were vastly outnumbered, ill- clad, ill-fed and under-equipped. Desertion rates were very high, and conditions among the Continental regulars were deplorable. Washington’s forces lost New York the previous year, and had narrowly escaped destruction before gaining a morale-boosting victory in the Christmas surprise attack at Trenton in late 1776. Victories elsewhere were hard to come by. Washington was defeated in battles near Philadelphia and endured a bitter winter at Valley Forge. When the French navy and troops began arriving in 1778, the British altered their strategy, abandoning Philadelphia to fortify their position in New York. From that base they successfully launched the capture the main ports of the two southernmost colonies- Savannah, Georgia in 1778-9 followed by Charleston, South Carolina the next year. The British ultimately had plans to cut off the entire southern tier with the capture of Virginia. The plan to Isolate Virginia and the South backfired horribly when a large British force under Lord Cornwallis became trapped at Yorktown, VA. Continental and French regiments blocked a landward retreat, while a French fleet encircled British positions at sea. Although sporadic battles occurred afterwards, Cornwallis’ surrender at Yorktown effectively signaled the end of major fighting. A formal treaty was negotiated in 1783. The Treaty of Paris formally ended the conflict between Great Britain and its former colonies, now officially recognized as the United States of America. John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, and John Jay negotiated on behalf of the U.S. Other terms included the return of Florida to the Spanish, and the return of several former French colonies in the Caribbean taken after the French and Indian War (Seven Years’ War).
More Related