Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Give Me Liberty! AN AMERICAN HISTORY FOURTH EDITION.

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Presentation transcript:

Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Norton Lecture Slides by Eric Foner Give Me Liberty! AN AMERICAN HISTORY FOURTH EDITION

Lecture Preview Democratizing Freedom Toward Religious Toleration Defining Economic Freedom The Limits of Liberty Slavery and the Revolution Daughters of Liberty

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Liberty Displaying the Arts and Sciences

Democratizing Freedom  Focus Question: How did equality become a stronger component of American freedom after the Revolution?  Focus Question: How did equality become a stronger component of American freedom after the Revolution?

Democratizing Freedom: Equality The Dream of Equality

Democratizing Freedom: Expansion Expanding the Political Nation

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Abigail Adams, a portrait by Gilbert Stuart

Democratizing Freedom: Revolution The Revolution in Pennsylvania

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Americans have frequently defined the idea of freedom in relation to its opposite.

Democratizing Freedom: Constitutions The New Constitutions

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company John Dickinson’s copy of the Pennsylvania constitution of 1776

Democratizing Freedom: Voting The Right to Vote Democratizing Government

Toward Religious Toleration  Focus Question: How did the expansion of religious liberty after the Revolution reflect the new American ideal of freedom?  Focus Question: How did the expansion of religious liberty after the Revolution reflect the new American ideal of freedom?

Toward Religious Toleration: Catholics Catholic Americans

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A 1771 image of New York City

Toward Religious Toleration: Church and State The Founders and Religion Separating Church and State

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2013 W.W. Norton & Company Watertown, Connecticut, 1836

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A draft of Thomas Jefferson’s Virginia Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom

Toward Religious Toleration: Jefferson Jefferson and Religious Liberty

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company In Side of the Old Lutheran Church in 1800, York, Pa.

Toward Religious Toleration: Revolution The Revolution and the Churches Christian Republicanism

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Ezra Stiles, the president of Yale College, drew this sketch of a flag in his diary on April 24, 1783.

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Circle of the Social and Benevolent Affections

Defining Economic Freedom  Focus Question: How did the definition of economic freedom change after the Revolution, and who benefited from the changes?  Focus Question: How did the definition of economic freedom change after the Revolution, and who benefited from the changes?

Defining Economic Freedom: Free Labor Toward Free Labor The Soul of a Republic

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company View from Bushongo Tavern

Defining Economic Freedom: Free Trade The Politics of Inflation The Debate over Free Trade

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2013 W.W. Norton & Company Discontent with Rising Prices, 1777

The Limits of Liberty  Focus Question: How did the Revolution diminish the freedoms of both Loyalists and Native Americans?  Focus Question: How did the Revolution diminish the freedoms of both Loyalists and Native Americans?

The Limits of Liberty: Loyalists Colonial Loyalists The Loyalists’ Plight

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 6.1 Loyalism in the American Revolution

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A 1780 British cartoon commenting on the “cruel fate” of American Loyalists.

The Limits of Liberty: Indians The Indians’ Revolution White Freedom, Indian Freedom

Slavery and the Revolution  Focus Question: What was the impact of the Revolution on slavery?  Focus Question: What was the impact of the Revolution on slavery?

Slavery and the Revolution: Abolition The Language of Slavery and Freedom Obstacles to Abolition

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Advertisement for newly arrived slaves, in a Savannah newspaper, 1774.

Slavery and the Revolution: Freedom The Cause of General Liberty Petitions for Freedom

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A 1775 notice in The Massachusetts Spy reporting a resolution of the Committees of Correspondence of Worcester County that advocated the abolition of slavery.

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A portrait of the poet Phillis Wheatley (1753–1784)

Slavery and the Revolution: Emancipation British Emancipators Voluntary Emancipations

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company The Book of Negroes

Slavery and the Revolution: The North Abolition in the North Free Black Communities

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2013 W.W. Norton & Company Caesar, 1851

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company A tray painted by an unknown artist in the nineteenth century portrays Lemuel Haynes.

Daughters of Liberty  Focus Question: How did the Revolution affect the status of women?  Focus Question: How did the Revolution affect the status of women?

Daughters of Liberty: Women Revolutionary Women Gender and Politics

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2013 W.W. Norton & Company Hannah Snell

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company The 1781 cipher book (a notebook for mathematics exercises) of Martha Ryan

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Keep Within Compass

Daughters of Liberty: Republican motherhood Republican Motherhood The Arduous Struggle for Liberty

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Portrait of John and Elizabeth Lloyd Cadwalader and their Daughter Anne

Give Me Liberty!: An American History, 4th Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company America Triumphant and Britannia in Distress

Review Democratizing Freedom Focus Question: How did equality become a stronger component of American freedom after the Revolution? Toward Religious Toleration Focus Question: How did the expansion of religious liberty after the Revolution reflect the new American ideal of freedom? Defining Economic Freedom Focus Question: How did the definition of economic freedom change after the Revolution, and who benefited from the changes?

Review Continued The Limits of Liberty Focus Question: How did the Revolution diminish the freedoms of both Loyalists and Native Americans? Slavery and the Revolution Focus Question: What was the impact of the Revolution on slavery? Daughters of Liberty Focus Question: How did the Revolution affect the status of women?

MEDIA LINKS —— Chapter 6 —— TitleMedia link Eric Foner on the Revolution's impact on American freedom, pt 1 /mp4/&f=question040 Eric Foner on limits to equality during the American Revolution /mp4/&f=question041 Eric Foner on the Revolution's impact on American freedom, pt 3 /mp4/&f=question042 Eric Foner on the Bill of Rights, pt 1http://wwnorton.com/common/mplay/6.7/?p=/college/history/foner4 /&f=writing_the_constitution Eric Foner on the Alien and Sedition Acts /mp4/&f=question044

Next Lecture PREVIEW: —— Chapter 7 —— Founding a Nation, 1783–1789 America under the Confederation A New Constitution The Ratification Debate and the Origin of the Bill of Rights "We the People"

Norton Lecture Slides Independent and Employee-Owned by Eric Foner Norton Lecture Slides Independent and Employee-Owned by Eric Foner This concludes the Norton Lecture Slides Slide Set for Chapter 6 Give Me Liberty! AN AMERICAN HISTORY FOURTH EDITION