More Related Content Similar to Chapter 6 Slideshow (20) Chapter 6 Slideshow1. Copyright ©2011, ©2008 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
THE AMERICAN JOURNEYTHE AMERICAN JOURNEY
A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATESA HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
Brief Sixth Edition
Chapter
The War for
Independence
1774-1783
6
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The War for IndependenceThe War for Independence
1774-17831774-1783
• From Rebellion to War
• The Continental Congress Becomes a National Gove
• The Combatants
• The War in the North, 1776–1777
• The War Widens, 1778–1781
• The War and Society, 1775–1783
• The American Victory, 1782–1783
• Conclusion
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
George Washington’s Tent.George Washington’s Tent.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Learning ObjectivesLearning Objectives
• Why did tensions between the colonies
and Britain escalate so rapidly between
1774 and 1776?
• What were the key differences between
the British and American forces?
• How did the American forces survive the
military setbacks of 1776?
• Why did the French enter the war on the
American side?
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Learning Objectives (cont'd)Learning Objectives (cont'd)
• What was the social impact of the War for
Independence?
• What were the key factors in the American
victory in the Revolutionary War?
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
From Rebellion to WarFrom Rebellion to War
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Contradictory British PoliciesContradictory British Policies
• In an effort to manage brewing colonial
tensions, Lord North and the British
parliament took alternating hard line and
conciliatory positions on taxation and
trade.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Contradictory British Policies (cont'd)Contradictory British Policies (cont'd)
Conciliatory Proposition
- Plan proposed by Lord North and adopted by the
House of Commons in February 1775 whereby
Parliament would “forbear” taxation of Americans
in colonies whose assemblies imposed taxes
considered satisfactory by the British government.
The Continental Congress rejected this plan on
July 31, 1775.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Mounting Tensions in AmericaMounting Tensions in America
• While the British were fortifying Boston
and dissolving the Massachusetts
legislature, the colonists were assembling
their own revolutionary government,
gathering arms and ammunition, and
organizing militia volunteers.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Mounting Tensions in America (cont'd)Mounting Tensions in America (cont'd)
Committee of Safety
- Any of the extralegal committees that directed the
Revolutionary movement and carried on the
functions of government at the local level in the
period between the breakdown of royal authority
and the establishment of regular governments
under the new state constitutions. Some
Committees of Safety continued to function
throughout the Revolutionary War.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Mounting Tensions in America (cont'd)Mounting Tensions in America (cont'd)
Minute Men
- Special companies of militia formed in
Massachusetts and elsewhere beginning in late
1744. These units were composed of men who
were to be ready to assemble with their arms at a
minute’s notice.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Battles of Lexington and ConcordThe Battles of Lexington and Concord
• The British attempt to seize weapons and
capture Adams and Hancock triggered a
series of events that led to the first military
engagements of the Revolution.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Battles of Lexington and ConcordThe Battles of Lexington and Concord
(cont’d)(cont’d)
• The shots fired on the morning of April 19,
1775 signaled the start of the American
Revolution.
Battles of Lexington and Concord
- The first two battles of the American Revolution
which resulted in a total of 273 British soldiers
dead, wounded, and missing and nearly 100
Americans dead, wounded, and missing.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
MAP 6–1 The Battles of Lexington and Concord,MAP 6–1 The Battles of Lexington and Concord,
April 19, 1775April 19, 1775
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Continental Congress Becomes aThe Continental Congress Becomes a
National GovernmentNational Government
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Second Continental CongressThe Second Continental Congress
ConvenesConvenes
• With an enormous task at hand, the
Second Continental Congress took
leadership of the rebellion and became, in
effect, a national government.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Second Continental CongressThe Second Continental Congress
Convenes (cont'd)Convenes (cont'd)
• One of its most momentous decisions was
choosing George Washington to lead the
Continental Army.
Second Continental Congress
- An assemblage of delegates from all the colonies
that convened in May 1775 after the outbreak of
fighting in Massachusetts between British and
American forces. It became the national
government that eventually declared
independence and conducted the Revolutionary
War.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Second Continental CongressThe Second Continental Congress
Convenes (cont'd)Convenes (cont'd)
Continental Army
- The regular or professional army authorized by
the Second Continental Congress and
commanded by General George Washington
during the Revolutionary War. Better training and
longer service distinguished its soldiers from the
state militiamen.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Second Continental CongressThe Second Continental Congress
Convenes (cont'd)Convenes (cont'd)
Olive Branch Petition
- Petition, written largely by John Dickinson and
adopted by the Second Continental Congress on
July 5, 1775, as a last effort of peace that avowed
America’s loyalty to George III and requested that
he protect it from further aggressions. Congress
continued military preparations, and the king
never responded to the petition.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Second Continental CongressThe Second Continental Congress
Convenes (cont'd)Convenes (cont'd)
Declaration of the Causes and Necessity
of Taking Up Arms
- Document, written mainly by John Dickinson of
Pennsylvania and adopted on July 6, 1775, by
which the Second Continental Congress justified
its armed resistance against British measures.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
MAP 6–2 Early Fighting, 1775–1776MAP 6–2 Early Fighting, 1775–1776
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
This fine portrait of GeorgeThis fine portrait of George
Washington appears in multipleWashington appears in multiple
versions depicting theversions depicting the
victorious general againstvictorious general against
different backgrounds,different backgrounds,
including the battles ofincluding the battles of
Princeton and Yorktown.Princeton and Yorktown.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Early Fighting: Massachusetts,Early Fighting: Massachusetts,
Virginia, the Carolinas, and CanadaVirginia, the Carolinas, and Canada
• Early American military successes in New
England and the South were offset by
failures in Canada.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
IndependenceIndependence
• The American forces’ early successes
bolstered their confidence, while the
British continued to lose colonial support.
• Independence from Britain—not
reconciliation—was increasingly seen as
the necessary outcome of American
efforts.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Independence (cont’d)Independence (cont’d)
• Movement toward formal separation from
the British culminated in the adoption of
the Declaration of Independence on July
4, 1776.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Independence (cont’d)Independence (cont’d)
Declaration of Independence
- The document by which the Second Continental
Congress announced and justified its decision
(reached July 2, 1776) to renounce the colonies’
allegiance to the British government. Drafted
mainly by Thomas Jefferson and adopted by
Congress on July 4, the declaration’s indictment
of the king provides a remarkably full catalog of
the colonists’ grievances, and Jefferson’s
eloquent and inspiring statement of the contract
theory of government makes the document one
of the world’s great state papers.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Independence (cont’d)Independence (cont’d)
Contract theory of government
- The belief that government is established by
human beings to protect certain rights—such as
life, liberty, and property— that are theirs by
natural, divinely sanctioned law and that when
government protects these rights, people are
obligated to obey it. But when government
violates its part of the bargain (or contract)
between the rulers and the ruled, the people are
no longer required to obey it and may establish a
new government that will do a better job of
protecting them.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Independence (cont’d)Independence (cont’d)
Contract theory of government (cont’d)
- Elements of this theory date back to the ancient
Greeks; John Locke used it in his Second
Treatise on Government (1682), and Thomas
Jefferson gave it memorable expression in the
Declaration of Independence, where it provides
the rationale for renouncing allegiance to King
George III.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration ofThomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of
Independence and future president of the UnitedIndependence and future president of the United
States.States.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The LoyalistsThe Loyalists
• The Declaration of Independence made
the position of Tories—those who
professed loyalty to Britain—untenable, as
they suddenly became enemies of the
American people.
• An estimated 20 percent of the free
population sided with Britain, and many
either fought with the British or became
refugees.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The CombatantsThe Combatants
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Professional SoldiersProfessional Soldiers
• Washington worked to develop a
professional, disciplined army that could
defeat British soldiers in large
engagements.
• Many foreign soldiers of fortune and
idealists offered their services to the
United States. The British hired German
mercenaries.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Professional Soldiers (cont'd)Professional Soldiers (cont'd)
• Living a tough life under harsh conditions,
the Continental Army felt they were
outcasts from an uncaring society and
formed their community. At times, the
soldiers let their dissatisfaction get out of
hand. Distinguished General Benedict
Arnold became a traitor and at Newburgh,
New York in 1783, some officers
threatened an armed uprising.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Posters like this one appeared in many cities andPosters like this one appeared in many cities and
towns to recruit soldiers to join the Continentaltowns to recruit soldiers to join the Continental
Army.Army.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Anthony Benezet (1713–1784), a notedAnthony Benezet (1713–1784), a noted
Pennsylvania Quaker, educator, and abolitionist,Pennsylvania Quaker, educator, and abolitionist,
identified himself in his will, as in this picture, as “aidentified himself in his will, as in this picture, as “a
leader of the Free School for the Black People inleader of the Free School for the Black People in
Philadelphia.”Philadelphia.”
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
George F. RegasGeorge F. Regas
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Women in the Contending ArmiesWomen in the Contending Armies
Women accompanied military forces on both
sides performing important services.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
African-American ParticipationAfrican-American Participation
in the Warin the War
Both sides employed African Americans.
Approximately 5000 fought against the
British.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Native Americans and the WarNative Americans and the War
• Both sides sought Native American allies,
but more groups backed the British. The
war promoted greater unity among Native
Americans.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The War in the NorthThe War in the North
1776–17771776–1777
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Britain Hesitates: Crucial Battles inBritain Hesitates: Crucial Battles in
New York and New JerseyNew York and New Jersey
• With the British army and navy
headquartered in New York, Washington
moved his troops there in spring 1776 but
was defeated by the British in a series of
battles. The Americans retreated to
Pennsylvania.
• The British commanders, Sir William and
Richard Howe attempted to negotiate
peace terms with Congress but failed.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Britain Hesitates: Crucial Battles inBritain Hesitates: Crucial Battles in
New York and New Jersey (cont'd)New York and New Jersey (cont'd)
• The American war effort seemed lost after
several setbacks. Washington launched a
bold attack at Trenton, New Jersey and
then followed up that victory with another
at Princeton, New Jersey boosting morale
and saving the American cause.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
MAP 6–3 The War in the North, 1776–1777MAP 6–3 The War in the North, 1776–1777
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Year of the Hangman: Victory at SaratogaThe Year of the Hangman: Victory at Saratoga
and Winter at Valley Forgeand Winter at Valley Forge
• In 1777, the British mounted an effort to
end the rebellion by sending a force south
from Canada to join the Howes in New
York, separating New England from the
rest of the states. The effort failed when
American forces defeated the British at
Saratoga, New York.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Year of the Hangman: Victory at SaratogaThe Year of the Hangman: Victory at Saratoga
and Winter at Valley Forge (cont’d)and Winter at Valley Forge (cont’d)
• The defeat at Saratoga made foreign
observers raise their opinions of the
United States, especially in France.
• General Howe moved toward Philadelphia
hoping to defeat Washington’s army. The
American defeat at Brandywine Creek led
to Howe’s capture of Philadelphia.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Year of the Hangman: Victory at SaratogaThe Year of the Hangman: Victory at Saratoga
and Winter at Valley Forge (cont’d)and Winter at Valley Forge (cont’d)
• The Continental Army suffered through a
harsh winter at Valley Forge yet emerged
as a disciplined professional army.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The War in the North, 1776–1777The War in the North, 1776–1777
(cont'd)(cont'd)
Valley Forge
- Area of Pennsylvania approximately twenty miles
northwest of Philadelphia where General George
Washington’s continental troops were quartered
from December 1777 to June 1778 while British
forces occupied Philadelphia during the
Revolutionary War. Approximately 2,500 men,
about a quarter of those encamped there, died of
hardship and disease.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
George Washington viewing troops at Valley ForgeGeorge Washington viewing troops at Valley Forge
during the winter of 1777–78.during the winter of 1777–78.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The War WidensThe War Widens
1778–17811778–1781
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The United States Gains an AllyThe United States Gains an Ally
• The French had been providing secret aid
to the United States but after the
American victory at Saratoga and defeat
at Brandywine Creek, the French signed a
commercial treaty and a military alliance
with United States.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The United States Gains an AllyThe United States Gains an Ally
(cont'd)(cont'd)
• Other European nations also combined to
hamper British efforts. Spain declared war
on Britain. A league of European nations
formed a League of Armed Neutrality to
protect their trade with the United States
and other warring nations against British
interference.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The United States Gains an AllyThe United States Gains an Ally
(cont'd)(cont'd)
• Britain changed commanders and an
inconclusive battle at Monmouth proved to
be the last major engagement in the
North.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Fighting on the Frontier and at SeaFighting on the Frontier and at Sea
• The British post at Detroit was the
headquarters for coordinating attacks on
American frontier settlements in Kentucky,
Pennsylvania, and upstate New York.
• American responses included capturing
three key British settlements in the
Mississippi Valley and an expedition
against the Iroquois.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
Fighting on the Frontier and at SeaFighting on the Frontier and at Sea
(cont'd)(cont'd)
• Facing a much stronger British navy,
American naval officers engaged in a
guerilla war at sea. The United State Navy
was supplemented by the commissioning
of privateers.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
MAP 6–4 The War on the Frontier, 1778–1779MAP 6–4 The War on the Frontier, 1778–1779
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Land War Moves SouthThe Land War Moves South
• In 1778, the British sought to mobilize
what they considered to be strong loyalist
support in the South and capture the
territory from Virginia to Georgia.
• The worst American defeat of the war took
place at Charleston in 1780.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The Land War Moves South (cont'd)The Land War Moves South (cont'd)
• Having won several victories, the British
prepared to sweep through the South but
British atrocities inflamed anti-British
feelings.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
MAP 6–5 The War in theMAP 6–5 The War in the
South, 1778–1781South, 1778–1781
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
American CounterattacksAmerican Counterattacks
• An American defeat led to Nathanael
Greene assuming command of American
force. Greene’s strategy was to fight,
retreat if pressed by the British and then
advance when the British withdrew. Patriot
guerilla forces aided the American cause.
• The British hold on the South weakened.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
American Counterattacks (cont’d)American Counterattacks (cont’d)
• General Cornwallis moved north to
Virginia and encamped at Yorktown.
Washington moved his army, supported
by French troops to encircle Cornwallis. A
French naval force left Cornwallis
surrounded. The British army surrendered
ending the war.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
Goldfield • Abbott • Argersinger • DeJohn Anderson • Barney • Weir • Argersinger
The surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown onThe surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown on
October 19, 1781, led to the British decision toOctober 19, 1781, led to the British decision to
withdraw from the war.withdraw from the war.
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The American Journey: A History of the United States, Brief Sixth Edition
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War and SocietyWar and Society
1775–17831775–1783
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The Women’s WarThe Women’s War
• Women assumed new private and public
roles during the war. They had greater
financial and other responsibilities at
home. Women nursed the wounded, wove
cloth for uniforms, and formed
organizations to raise money.
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Effect of the War on AfricanEffect of the War on African
AmericansAmericans
• The war helped end slavery in the North
but ultimately strengthened the institution
in the South.
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Important Battles of theImportant Battles of the
Revolutionary WarRevolutionary War
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Important Battles of theImportant Battles of the
Revolutionary WarRevolutionary War
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Important Battles of theImportant Battles of the
Revolutionary WarRevolutionary War
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John Laurens, who hoped to raiseJohn Laurens, who hoped to raise
black troops in South Carolina as ablack troops in South Carolina as a
prelude to the general abolition ofprelude to the general abolition of
slavery, was the only member ofslavery, was the only member of
George Washington’s staff to beGeorge Washington’s staff to be
killed in battle.killed in battle.
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The War’s Impact on Native AmericansThe War’s Impact on Native Americans
• The war was disastrous for most Native
Americans, who suffered heavy casualties
and faced an onslaught of white settlers
encroaching on their land.
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Ki-On-Twog-Ky, also known as Corn PlanterKi-On-Twog-Ky, also known as Corn Planter
(1732/40–1836), was a Seneca Indian Chief who(1732/40–1836), was a Seneca Indian Chief who
raided American settlements for the Britishraided American settlements for the British
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Economic DisruptionEconomic Disruption
The war demand for supplies on both sides
disrupted the normal distribution of goods and
raised real prices drastically. As paper
currency depreciated in value, severe
inflation occurred.
The economic conditions proved
demoralizing and divisive, stimulating
speculation and unscrupulous profiteering.
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The American VictoryThe American Victory
1782–17831782–1783
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The Peace of ParisThe Peace of Paris
• The United States peace negotiators
ignored instruction from Congress and
worked out an arrangement with the
British.
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The Peace of Paris (cont'd)The Peace of Paris (cont'd)
• In the Peace of Paris, the British
acknowledged United States
independence, extended United States
territory to the Mississippi and established
the northern borders with Canada. British
forces were to leave American property,
including slaves, behind when they left.
American fishermen gained access to
waters off eastern Canada.
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The Peace of Paris (cont'd)The Peace of Paris (cont'd)
• Spain received the British provinces of
East and West Florida. But the United
States was not provided with access to the
Gulf of Mexico.
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The Peace of Paris (cont'd)The Peace of Paris (cont'd)
Peace of Paris
- Treaties signed in 1783 by Great Britain, the
United States, France, Spain, and the
Netherlands that ended the Revolutionary War.
First in a preliminary agreement and then in the
final treaty with the United States, Britain
recognized the independence of the United
States, agreed that the Mississippi River would be
its western boundary, and permitted it to fish in
some Canadian waters.
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The Peace of Paris (cont'd)The Peace of Paris (cont'd)
Peace of Paris (cont’d)
- Prewar debts owed by the inhabitants of one
country to those of the other were to remain
collectible, and Congress was to urge the states
to return property confiscated from Loyalists.
British troops were to evacuate United States
territory without removing slaves or other
property. In a separate agreement, Britain
relinquished its claim to East and West Florida to
Spain.
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MAP 6–6 North America after the Peace of Paris,MAP 6–6 North America after the Peace of Paris,
17831783
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This British political cartoon from 1779 shows theThis British political cartoon from 1779 shows the
horse “America” throwing its British master.horse “America” throwing its British master.
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The Components of SuccessThe Components of Success
• Washington’s leadership was just one of
the reasons the Americans won the
Revolutionary War. French assistance
played a crucial role, and the British
contributed heavily to their own downfall.
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This etching, based on a contemporary painting,This etching, based on a contemporary painting,
shows British and American diplomats in Parisshows British and American diplomats in Paris
signing a preliminary version of the peace treaty thatsigning a preliminary version of the peace treaty that
ended the War for Independence.ended the War for Independence.
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American soldiers at Yorktown in 1781 as drawn byAmerican soldiers at Yorktown in 1781 as drawn by
a young officer in the French army,a young officer in the French army,
Jean-Baptiste-Antoine de VergerJean-Baptiste-Antoine de Verger
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ConclusionConclusion
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ConclusionConclusion
• The American Revolution had tremendous
repercussions.
• It sowed the seeds for future revolutions.
France suffered a severe financial crisis in
the 1780s that created a political crisis
culminating in the French Revolution.
• The North American continent became the
site of a grand experiment in
republicanism.
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Conclusion (cont'd)Conclusion (cont'd)
Republicanism
- A complex, changing body of ideas, values, and
assumptions, closely related to country ideology,
that influenced American political behavior during
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Derived
from the political ideas of classical antiquity,
Renaissance Europe, and early modern England,
republicanism held that self-government by the
citizens of a country, or their representatives,
provided a more reliable foundation for the good
society and individual freedom than rule by kings.
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Conclusion (cont'd)Conclusion (cont'd)
Republicanism (cont’d)
- The benefits of monarchy depended on the
variable abilities of monarchs; the character of
republican government depended on the virtue of
the people. Republicanism therefore helped give
the American Revolution a moral dimension. But
the nature of republican virtue and the conditions
favorable to it became sources of debate that
influenced the writing of the state and federal
constitutions as well as the development of
political parties.
Editor's Notes George Washington’s Tent. George Washington’s Tent. Plunkett Fleeson, a well-known Philadelphia upholsterer, made a set of three tents for Washington in 1776. One was for sleeping, one for dining, and one for baggage. This one, which measures 18 by 28 feet, could have served multiple purposes. MAP 6–1 The Battles of Lexington and Concord, April 19, 1775 This map shows the area around Boston, where in April 1775 British and American forces fought the first military engagements of the Revolution. MAP 6–2 Early Fighting, 1775–1776 As this map clearly reveals, even the earliest fighting occurred in widely scattered areas, thereby complicating Britain’s efforts to subdue the Americans. This fine portrait of George Washington appears in multiple versions depicting the victorious general against different backgrounds, including the battles of Princeton and Yorktown. The painter, Charles Wilson Peale, served under Washington at Princeton, and the French commander at Yorktown, the Count de Rochambeau, took an appropriate version home with him in 1783. Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence and future president of the United States. Mather Brown, an American artist living in England, painted this picture of Jefferson for John Adams while the two men were in London on diplomatic missions in 1786. A companion portrait of Adams that Jefferson ordered for himself also survives. Brown’s sensitive portrait of a thoughtful Jefferson is the earliest known likeness of him. Posters like this one appeared in many cities and towns to recruit soldiers to join the Continental Army. Washington hoped to be able to turn inexperienced young men into a disciplined, professional fighting force. Anthony Benezet (1713–1784), a noted Pennsylvania Quaker, educator, and abolitionist, identified himself in his will, as in this picture, as “a leader of the Free School for the Black People in Philadelphia.” George F. Regas’ controversial sermon before the 2004 presidential election prompted the Internal Revenue Service to question the tax-exempt status of one of the largest Episcopal churches in the country, All Saints Church in Pasadena, California. He had been rector for twenty-eight years. MAP 6–3 The War in the North, 1776–1777 Most of the fighting between the British and Americans during the first part of the war occurred in the North, partly because the British commanders assumed that the New England colonies were the most rebellious. George Washington viewing troops at Valley Forge during the winter of 1777–78. This modern depiction is somewhat romanticized. While making a similar tour on foot, Washington once saw a soldier who was literally clothed in nothing but a blanket. MAP 6–4 The War on the Frontier, 1778–1779 Significant battles in the Mississippi Valley and the frontiers of the seaboard states added to the ferocity of the fighting and strengthened some American claims to western lands. MAP 6–5 The War in the South, 1778–1781 During the latter part of the war, most of the major engagements occurred in the South. British forces won most of the early ones but could not control the immense territory involved and eventually surrendered at Yorktown. The surrender of Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown on October 19, 1781, led to the British decision to withdraw from the war. Cornwallis, who claimed to be ill, absented himself from the ceremony and is not in the picture. Washington, who is astride the horse under the American flag, designated General Benjamin Lincoln (on the white horse in the center) as the one to accept the submission of a subordinate British officer. John Trumbull, who painted The Battle of Bunker Hill and some 300 other scenes from the Revolutionary War, finished this painting while he was in London about fifteen years after the events depicted. A large copy of the work now hangs in the rotunda of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C. John Laurens, who hoped to raise black troops in South Carolina as a prelude to the general abolition of slavery, was the only member of George Washington’s staff to be killed in battle. This commemorative portrait by Charles Willson Peale bears the Latin inscription “Sweet and proper it is to die for one’s country.” Ki-On-Twog-Ky, also known as Corn Planter (1732/40–1836),was a Seneca Indian Chief who raided American settlements for the British, while he observed that “war is war, death is death, a fight is hard business.” He later presided over the surrender of much land to the United States. MAP 6–6 North America after the Peace of Paris, 1783 The results of the American Revolution redrew the map of North America, confining Britain to Canada and giving the United States most of the area east of the Mississippi River, though Spain controlled its mouth for most of the next 20 years. This British political cartoon from 1779 shows the horse “America” throwing its British master. The figure in the distance on the right is a French soldier; his depiction suggests that the cartoonist thought the French alliance would enable America to win the war. This etching, based on a contemporary painting, shows British and American diplomats in Paris signing a preliminary version of the peace treaty that ended the War for Independence. American soldiers at Yorktown in 1781 as drawn by a young officer in the French army, Jean-Baptiste-Antoine de Verger. The African American on the left is an infantryman of the First Rhode Island Regiment; the next, a musketeer; the third, with the fringed jacket, a rifleman. The man on the right is a Continental artilleryman, holding a lighted match used to fire cannons.