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Block 1

HistoryHistoryHistoryHistory

SocietySocietySocietySociety

ArchitectureArchitectureArchitectureArchitecture

LiteratureLiteratureLiteratureLiterature

ArtArtArtArt

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

IndependenceIndependenceIndependenceIndependence

FlagsFlags

Events leading up to the Revolution:

Navigation Acts Restricting colonial trade with other nations.

Currency Act. The Colonies could not print their own currency

Quartering Act The Colonies had to provide lodging and supplies for British soldiers.

Stamp Act The first direct levy on the Colonies

The Boston Tea Party

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

FlagsFlags

Britain responded to the Boston Tea Party in 1774:

The Intolerable Acts:

Boston Harbor closed until Bostonians paid for the destroyed tea.

activities of the Massachusetts legislature restricted.

More power to the governor of Massachusetts making him a dictator.

Answer of the colonists:

a convention of delegates from the colonies to organize resistance to the Intolerable Acts:The Continental Congress.

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

FlagsFlags

Question:

Imagine you had set up a prosperous farm or a good business in one of the American colonies and the British government forced you to pay taxes but did not allow you to have a say in governmental decisions.

What would you do?

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

Get together!Get together!Get together!Get together!

FlagsFlags

1st & 2nd Continental Congresses: the colonies unite!

�cut off colonial trade with Great Britain

� Parliament abolish the Intolerable Acts

� advise colonies to begin training for war

� define America's rights

� place limits on Parliament's power

� resist aggressive acts of the English Government

�On July 4, 1776: the Second Continental Congress voted to accept the Declaration of Independence.

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

Get together!Get together!Get together!Get together!

FlagsFlags

>

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

FlagsFlags

>

The signing of the Declaration of IndependenceIndependence Hall, Philadelphia, July 4, 1776.

The committee:John Adams,Robert Sherman,Thomas JeffersonBenjamin FranklinJohn Hancock, the President of the Continental Congress.

The Declaration of Independence Road Trip Video

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

FlagsFlags

PaulRevere

Boston Massacre engraving

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

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>

Listen my children and you shall hear Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere

On the eighteenth of April in Seventy-five Hardly a man is now alive

Who remembers that famous day and year."

Henry Wadsworth LongfellowPaul Revere's Ride

PaulRevere1775

Boston TeaBoston Tea

LexingtonLexington

declarationdeclaration

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Battle of LexingtonBattle of LexingtonBattle of LexingtonBattle of Lexington

FlagsFlagsThe Battle of LexingtonApril 19, 1775.70 colonial minutemen and 700 British soldiers near: Concord, Massachusetts.American militia warned by Paul Revere.The words of the American commander:"Stand your ground; don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here,"

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Minute menMinute men

declarationdeclaration

UnionUnion

Militia MenMilitia MenMilitia MenMilitia Men

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Minutemen were paid

for their training

Boston TeaBoston Tea

Paul ReverePaul Revere

DeclarationDeclaration

UnionUnion

Guess the right orderGuess the right orderGuess the right orderGuess the right order

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>A B

C

Paul Revere &the Raiders

Betsy Ross showing the United States flag to George Washington

New NationNew Nation

Nation buildingNation buildingNation buildingNation building

New NationNew Nation

Nation buildingNation buildingNation buildingNation building

What the English were used to . . .

New NationNew Nation

Nation buildingNation buildingNation buildingNation building

What America chose to adopt . . .

New NationNew Nation

Nation buildingNation buildingNation buildingNation building TriasPolitica

New NationNew Nation

Bottom upBottom up

Nation buildingNation buildingNation buildingNation building

Town meetings

Jury

Sheriffs

Chosen Mayor

“No big government”

Volunteers during elections

RealReal

In schoolsIn schools

THE ENDTHE END

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