Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBritney Stevenson Modified over 9 years ago
1
U.S. HISTORY CHAPTER 2 REVOLUTION AND EARLY REPUBLIC
2
THE COLONIES ORGANIZE AND RESIST BRITAIN Britain had borrowed so much money in defeating the French it had doubled it’s national debt Britain needed the money somehow, and thought it would tax the colonists
3
THE STAMP ACT Imposed a tax on documents such as wills, newspapers, and playing cards Lawyers worked mostly with legal documents, also served in colonial legislature British goods were boycotted
4
Boston Massacre In 1770 a mob started taunting a group of British soldiers in Boston The mob threw snowballs, possible rocks The Soldiers fired into the crowd, and 5 colonists were killed.
5
The Boston Tea Party
6
1773 – The Tea act devised to save the British E. India Tea company, allowing them to sell tea tax free. This hurt colonial merchants Boston rebels dressed up as native Americans and dumped 18,000 pounds of tea into the harbor
7
THE INTOLERABLE ACTS King George tightened control over Massachusetts by closing Boston harbor and quartering troops. Committees of correspondence formed The intolerable acts resulted in the first continental congress.
8
After the first continental congress was formed, New Englanders stepped up military preparations. Minutemen – Civilian solders who pledged to be ready to fight against the British at a minutes notice.
9
LEXINGTON AND CONCORD British General Gage sent troops from Boston to Concord to seize illegal weapons Boston Colonists were watching – Paul Revere rode out to warn the minutemen. At Lexington they ran into Minutemen. The first shot was fired by the Colonials but the British won the battle. This first battle of the war was only 15 minutes
10
CONCORD – MINUTEMEN MASSACRED THE BRITISH 3-4000 Minutemen surround the 700 British
11
SECOND CONTINENTAL CONGRESS Called to debate the next move Some called for reconciliation, others for independence Ended up as the first national government, ran the army, funded the war and signed the peace treaty
12
BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL To break out of Boston, Gage attacked!
13
BUNKER HILL Gage attacked Breeds hill Colonists waited until the last possible moment, and attacked as the Redcoats came up the hill. Colonists lost the hill, but the British had 1,000 men killed to only 450 Minutemen. The deadliest battle of the war
14
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE Thomas Jefferson Taken from the ideas of Locke All men are created equal Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.
15
CHAPTER 2 SECTION 2 THE WAR As they took on the mighty British Empire, colonists took on losses in the middle states Loyalist – Opposed Independence Patriot – Supported independence – Saw economic opportunity in independent America
16
OPENING BATTLE Britain opens with an attack on New York harbor, carrying 32,000 men on ships German Mercenaries know as Hessians employed by the British Desperate for an early victory, Washington leads his troops across the Delaware, defeating a Garrison of Hessians.
17
WASHINGTON CROSSES THE DELAWARE
18
BRITISH VS COLONIALS Strong, well trained Loyalist support Far away from home On enemy ground Home ground Leadership of George Washington Inspiring Cause Untrained No food or ammunition
19
Saratoga and Valley Forge British sought to isolate New England by meeting up with troops in NY Colonials surrounded them at Saratoga and ambushed the British This convinced the French the Colonies could win the war and they formed an alliance
20
Winning the War The raw continental army soon became an effective fighting force 17,000 French and American troops surround the British at Yorktown and begin bombarding the city day and night General Cornwallis surrenders less than a month later
21
TREATY OF PARIS – John Jay, Ben Franklin and John Adams
22
SECTION 2.3 Fighting the British gave the states a common goal but they remained reluctant to unite under a central government Instead, the colonies agreed to a form of government under THE ARTICLES OF CONFEDERATION
23
THE ARTICLES Set up by the 2 nd continental congress Confederation between 13 states Each state would have 1 vote to pass laws Govt. could declare war, make treaties and borrow money Could not tax 9/13 of state needed to pass laws No executive branch to enforce laws No national court system
24
“We are one nation today and 13 tomorrow”
25
More Problems Each state functioned independently by pursuing its own interests rather than the nation as a whole Government had no means of raising money or enforcing laws Shay’s Rebellion – Caused the country to realize the weaknesses of the Articles
26
Creating a new government #1 priority – to strengthen the central government Virginia plan – called for a 2 house legislature based on population New Jersey plan – One vote per state The great compromise – Our current senate and house of representatives
27
What is Federalism? Federalism is power divided between a state and national government Those powers not granted to the federal government are granted to the states
28
Separation of powers 3 branches of government Legislative Executive Judicial Enforces Laws Writes Laws Interprets laws
29
Ratification Federalists v Anti-federalists Anti-federalists ask for a bill of rights The Federalist papers argue the case for ratification
30
Check for understanding Give one reason the Articles of Confederation didn’t work What are the 3 branches of government?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.