Campaign Year of
American Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Fighting for a cause Familiar with the territory Familiar with guns Privateers Eventually got foreign help
American Advantages and Disadvantages Disadvantages Untrained army Few war materials No navy
English ( British ) Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Large well trained army and well disciplined Navy Most powerful country in the world
English ( British ) Advantages and Disadvantages Disadvantages Fighting 3,000 miles from home Communication Supply Who was your enemy? Unfamiliar with the territory War became expensive and unpopular at home
Definitions Tories or Loyalists – colonists who remain loyal to England Rebels or Patriots – colonists who revolt against England
Campaign Year of 1775
Night of April 18 th – 19 th “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Battles of Lexington and Concord Minutemen ( militia ) – citizen soldiers April 19 th – fighting at Lexington Green, Concord Bridge and all the way back to Boston
The Shot Heard ‘Round the World
By the end of the day the British were bottled up in Boston
May 10 th – Ethan Allen ( A ) and Benedict Arnold ( A ) capture Ft. Ticonderoga
May, 1775 Second Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia Sends Olive Branch Petition to England King George III orders 20,000 more troops to the colonies
July, 1775 Continental Congress appoints George Washington ( A ) commander – in – chief of the Continental Army
July, 1775 – Battle of Bunker Hill ( B )
Winter of Henry Knox ( A ) moves cannon from Crown Point and Ft. Ticonderoga to Boston
Benedict Arnold ( A ) and Richard Montgomery ( A ) invade Canada unsuccessfully
Campaign Year of 1776
Boston George Washington ( A ) puts Henry Knox’s ( A ) cannon on Dorchester Heights and the British have to evacuate Boston.
In 1776, the British have a plan to win the war - gain control of the waterways of New York and divide the colonies. Crush the revolution in New England and it will fall apart in the rest of the colonies
Battles for New York City George Washington ( A ) vs Sir William Howe ( B ) Battle of Long Island ( Brooklyn Heights ) Battle of Harlem Heights Battle of White Plains British control New York City for the rest of the war
Nathan Hale – “ I regret that I have but one life to lose for my country”
Battle of Long Island ( Brooklyn Heights )
Battle of White Plains
Continental Congress Philadelphia John Hancock - President
Thomas Paine Common Sense –”tis time to part” Sold over 500,000 copies
Richard Henry Lee June – introduces a resolution to separate from England
Committee appointed to write a formal declaration of independence John Adams Thomas Jefferson Ben Franklin Roger Sherman Robert Livingston
July 4, 1776 – Declaration of Independence Signed
Declaration of Independence Three Main Parts 1.Preamble 2.Listing of the wrong that led Americans to break away from England 3.Announcement that the colonies are now the United States of America
Battle of Valcour Island ( B ) Benedict Arnold ( A ) vs Sir Guy Carleton ( B )
Valcour Island American navy defeated but it gained us time because the British were not able to continue their invasion because of the lateness of the season
Thomas Paine The Crisis – “these are the times that try men’s souls”
Battle of Trenton December, 1776
Battle of Princeton January, 1777
Trenton and Princeton were key American victories at the end of the Campaign Year of 1776
How did the war effect other people? Blacks in the Revolution Crispus Attucks – Boston Massacre Blacks fought on both sides / promise of freedom – “Samuel’s Choice” All Black Unit – 1 st Rhode Island 1 in 20 soldiers in the Continental army were black after 1778
How did the war effect other people? Women in the Revolution “camp followers” – wives and children Home front Nurses Mercy Otis Warren – playwright Phillis Wheatly – poetess Mary Ludwig Hays – “Molly Pitcher” – Battle of Monmouth
Women in the Revolution Deborah Sampson – fought Betsy Ross Martha Washington Abigail Adams Mary Katherine Goddard - printer
How did the war effect other people? – Loyalists/Tories 100,000 forced to leave the country after the war 30,000 in New York Went to England, West Indies and Canada Many Loyalists in the South
Foreign Help Marquis de Lafayette France Washington’s Staff
Foreign Help Baron Frederick von Steuben – Prussia – trained army during the winter at Valley Forge
Foreign Help Thaddeus Kosciusko – Poland – engineer – designed fortifications
Foreign Help Casimir Pulaski – Poland - cavalry
Naval Warfare “Turtle” – submarine – NYC – 1776 Privateers- legal pirates – letters of marque and reprisal – after 1777 privateers could use French ports John Paul Jones – “Bonhomme Richard” – 1779 – “I have not yet begun to fight”