chapter 6 - the road to revolution chapter 6.4 – declaring independence after the fighting at...

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Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts gathered around Boston General Gage moved his men to Boston, which was nearly surrounded by water On May 10, 1775, Americans attacked Fort Ticonderoga on the New York side of Lake Champlain – Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys captured the fort and its artillery On the same day in Philadelphia, John and Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Ben Franklin, Patrick Henry and George Washington, and the Second Continental Congress met and agreed to form a Continental Army George Washington was chosen as its commanding general Acting like a government, congress also authorized the printing of paper money to pay the troops The Continental Army is Formed

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Page 1: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• After the fighting at Lexington and

Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts gathered around Boston

• General Gage moved his men to Boston, which was nearly surrounded by water

• On May 10, 1775, Americans attacked Fort Ticonderoga on the New York side of Lake Champlain – Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys captured the fort and its artillery

• On the same day in Philadelphia, John and Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Ben Franklin, Patrick Henry and George Washington, and the Second Continental Congress met and agreed to form a Continental Army

• George Washington was chosen as its commanding general

• Acting like a government, congress also authorized the printing of paper money to pay the troops

The Continental Army is Formed

Page 2: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• Boston – June, 1775, tensions were mounting

as Americans seized Bunker Hill and Breed’s Hill behind Charlestown

• Fortifications were built on Breed’s Hill alarming the British who decided to attack the Americans

• General William Howe and 2,200 troops crossed the bay and marched up Breed’s Hill

• On top of the hill, the militia waited – according to legend, Colonel William Prescott ordered his men not to fire until “you see the whites of their eyes”

• When the British were close enough, the militia opened fire on the British, forcing them to retreat – the British regrouped and charged again

• After running out of ammunition, the militia were forced off the hill

• The British won, but at a terrible price – more than 1,000 redcoats were killed or wounded compared to the 400 militia casualties

• An inexperienced militia had just held its own against the most powerful army in the world

The Battle of Bunker Hill

Page 3: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• Even as the smoke from Bunker Hill

cleared, most colonists still hoped for peace

• Even some Patriot leaders thought themselves as loyal subjects of the king and blamed Parliament for the conflict

• July, 1775 - In an effort to restore peace, moderates in congress sent the Olive Branch Petition to King George III in London

• King George rejected the petition and announced new measures to punish the colonies;– He used the British navy to block American ports– He sent thousands of hired German mercenaries called Hessians

• While the militia felt they were equal to the British troops, Washington knew better

• The British were professionals and well equipped

A Last Attempt at Peace

Page 4: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• The militia had little training and

had barely enough powder to fight one battle

• During the summer of 1775, Washington arrived in Boston and began gathering supplies for his poorly equipped militia

• In the fall, he approved a daring plan to invade and capture Quebec – hoping to draw the Canadians into the fight against the British

• Benedict Arnold led his men across Maine and into Canada – arriving in November 1775

• Despite harsh winter conditions, the Americans attacked Quebec but failed to capture it

• After several months they returned home defeated

A Last Attempt at Peace

Page 5: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• In Massachusetts, the Continental Army

had surrounded the British in Boston• Neither side was willing to back down – but

help for Washington was on the way• Cannon captured from Fort

Ticonderoga were being hauled over the snow-covered mountains – after two long months, the cannon arrived in Boston in January, 1776

• Washington moved his troops and the cannons to Dorchester Heights overlooking Boston

• On March 17, 1776, fearing a bombardment, General Howe loaded his 9,000 troops onto 100 ships and withdrew from Boston

• Fearing for their safety, more than 1,000 loyalists left Boston with the British troops

• Some Patriots were calling for loyalists to be hanged as traitors – many loyalist’s lost their homes and property

The British Retreat from Boston

Page 6: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• Early in 1776, most Americans were

still reluctant to make a final break with England

• A new immigrant from England named Thomas Paine wrote a pamphlet called Common Sense to help convince Americans that a complete break with Britain was necessary

• Common Sense sold more than 100,000 copies in three months making a strong case for American independence;

• - Paine ridiculed the idea that kings ruled by divine will – he argued all monarchies were corrupt

• - He also disagreed with the idea that the American economy needed Britain arguing that “our corn will fetch its price in any market in Europe”

• Paine’s Common Sense was one of the most influential political documents in history

Common Sense is Published

Page 7: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• A majority of the delegates still did

not support independence• Even so, in May, 1776 Congress

adopted a resolution - authorized each of the 13 colonies to establish its own government

• On June 7, 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia introduced a key resolution:

• - called the colonies “free and independent states”

• - declared “all political connection between them and the state of Great Britain . . . is totally dissolved”

• Unwilling to vote on the resolution to dissolve political ties, Congress appointed a committee to draft a Declaration of Independence

A Time for Decision

Page 8: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• The committee included; Ben

Franklin, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Roger Sherman, and Robert Livingston

• Jefferson was chosen to write the Declaration for two reasons;– He was an excellent writer– He was a Virginian, and they

would need Virginia’s support for the independence movement to succeed

• Within two weeks Jefferson had most of the Declaration written

• On July, 2, 1776, despite strong opposition, Lee’s resolution passed and the colonies considered themselves independent

A Time for Decision

Page 9: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• Two days later on July 4, 1776,

Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence

• As the president of the Congress, John Hancock was the first to sign the Declaration

• The core idea of the Declaration was based on John Locke’s philosophy that people have unalienable rights – rights the government cannot take away

• Jefferson argued that governments that disregard these rights lose their right to govern

• People have the right to abolish these governments by force if necessary and form new governments– “People” meant only whites though

– women and enslaved persons were not included

The Declaration is Adopted

Page 10: Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence After the fighting at Lexington and Concord, 20,000 militiamen from Massachusetts

Chapter 6 - The Road to Revolution

Chapter 6.4 – Declaring Independence• The Declaration gave reasons for

breaking with Britain and declared the colonies to be free and independent from Britain

• Realizing they were committing treason, the delegates were urged to stand together in mutual defense

• The Declaration closed with this pledge: “And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred Honor”

• All they had to do now was win their freedom on the battlefield

The Declaration is Adopted