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Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

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Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3
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Page 1: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Building Colonial Unity

Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3

Page 2: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

British Troops• As more taxes were being enacted by the King, more enforcement was

needed.• British troops were sent to the colonies to enforce the new tax laws.• Larger cities meant more British troops.

Page 3: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Troubles in Boston• Colonists felt that military soldiers stationed in Boston violated

their rights and freedom.• On March 5, 1770 the tension between colonists and the

British soldiers (redcoats) erupted.• Angry townspeople began throwing snowballs, stones, oyster

shells and wood at the soldiers on duty. The colonists also came armed with sticks, shovels and clubs.

Page 4: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

FIRE!!!

• When one British soldier was knocked down by a stone, the soldiers became nervous and fired on the colonists.

Page 5: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Crispus Attucks

• After several shots were fired, five colonists lay dead. One victim was an African free man named Crispus Attucks

Page 6: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Boston MASSACRE

• Colonial leaders used news of the killings as propaganda (information designed to influence opinion) against the British.• Samuel Adams placed posters all over Boston that

described the incident as a slaughter of innocent Americans by bloodthirsty redcoats.• The Boston Massacre led colonists to boycott

against British goods.

Page 7: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

• Paul Revere’s propaganda poster

Page 8: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Crises Over Tea

• Due to colonists boycotting British goods the King of England removed all of the taxes on the colonists… except for one…• TEA

Page 9: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Time for a Party

• The tax on tea was an insult to the colonists. The king had missed the point!• The Sons of Liberty organized the Boston Tea Party

because they objected to paying a tax on tea.

Page 10: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Boston Tea Party• On December 16th, 1773 the Sons of Liberty disguised

themselves as Mohawk Indians. Armed with hatchets they marched to Boston harbor, boarded the ships, and dumped 342 chests of tea into the water.• $2.3 million worth in today’s money!

Page 11: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The King is Furious!• To punish Massachusetts

for the Boston Tea Party, the king and parliament passed the Coercive Acts. • Many colonists called

these acts the “Intolerable Acts” because they were so harsh and could not be ignored.

Page 12: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

INTOLERABLE ACTS

• 1. It closed Boston Harbor until the ruined tea was paid for.• 2. It banned all town meetings• 3. Crimes committed by colonists were to be tried in Britain.• 4. The Quartering Act forced citizens of Boston to let

soldiers stay in their homes.

Page 13: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Continental Congress • In September 1774, 55 men arrived in the city of

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. • Their purpose was to establish a political body to

represent American interests and challenge British control. • They called this new organization the Continental

Congress.

Page 14: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Congressmen

• Members of the Continental Congress included: Samuel Adams, John Adams, Patrick Henry and George Washington.

Page 15: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Continental Congress

• First, the Continental Congress drafted a statement of grievances against the king.• Second, they voted to boycott all British products.• Thirdly, they called for the formation of militias

(citizen soldiers) to defend colonists against the British.

Page 16: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

War is Near

• When the colonists began forming militias, both colonists and British redcoats knew that war was near.• Many colonists referred to themselves as minutemen

because they said they were prepared to fight on a minutes notice.• Britain knew that the colonies were forming militias and

were stockpiling weapons and ammunition.

Page 17: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

British on the Move

• The British soldiers (700) in Boston were ordered to march to Concord (a town 20 miles west of Boston) and destroy artillery and ammunition.

Page 18: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The First Battles of the War

• On April 18, 1775 a man by the name of Paul Revere received word that the British were marching towards Lexington and Concord. He rode along the moonlit countryside yelling “the regulars are out!”

Page 19: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

• Paul Revere was joined by Samuel Prescott and William Dawes on the ride to alert men in Lexington and Concord.

Page 20: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Lexington

• 700 British troops were sent to Lexington in order to capture John Hancock and Samuel Adams. • When they reached Lexington, Hancock and Adams had

already evacuated. • In Lexington, British soldiers were greeted by 70

minutemen.

Page 21: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Shot Heard ‘round the World• No one knows who fired the first shot at Lexington.

By the time the smoke cleared eight minutemen lay dead.• Lexington was the first battle of the American

Revolution. It was known as “the shot heard around the world.”• The 700 British troops left Lexington and headed to

Concord.

Page 22: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Attack at North Bridge• When the 700 British troops reached Concord they found that

the gunpowder they were looking for had already been removed.• On their march back to Boston the British forces came under

heavy fire by minutemen. • The attacks began at Concord’s North Bridge and would last

for a 20 mile march all the way back to Boston!

Page 23: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

The Retreat from Concord• Farmers, blacksmiths, saddle makers and clerks hid

behind trees, rocks, fences and picked the British troops off one by one.• By the time the British troops made it back to Boston

174 were wounded and 73 were dead.

Page 24: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Choosing Sides • As American colonists heard about these battles

taking place, they faced a major decision. Should they join the rebels or remain loyal to Britain?

Page 25: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Loyalists

• Those who remained true to Britain and the king were known as Loyalists.

Page 26: Building Colonial Unity Chapter 5, Sections 2 and 3.

Patriots

• Those who took the side of the rebels for independence were known as Patriots.


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