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Colonial Resistance & Rebellion Chapter 2 Section 1
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Resistance begins King George III tries to lower the British debt (from war) by taxing the colonists To crack down on smuggling Parliament passed the Sugar Act Cut duties on molasses, put duties on other products, tried smugglers in different courts Merchants & trades cry foul; Parliament has no right to tax Colonists didn’t elect the reps.
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Boycotts In 1765 the Stamp Act was passed; tax on documents & printed items (wills, newspapers, playing cards) All colonists effected Colonists unite in Sons of Liberty to protest tax Merchants agree to boycott British goods until act is repealed Works, tax repealed 1766
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More taxes Parliament continues to pass taxes Townshend Acts in 1767; taxes imported goods Lead, glass, paint & paper. Also tax on tea Samuel Adams & Sons of Liberty lead another boycott
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Violence in Boston 1770 a mob of colonists taunt British troops outside customs office. British fire on mob, 5 colonists killed; incident labeled as Boston Massacre Townshend Acts prove too expensive to enforce & are repealed (except tea)
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Rebellion & reaction Colonies begin to communicate w/ one another, form a network of leaders To save British East India Co. the Tea Act was passed; cut out middle man Instead of being happy about cheap tea, the colonists revolt Dressed as Native Americans, a group of Bostonians dumped 18,000 lbs. of tea into the harbor- the Boston Tea Party
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The Intolerable Acts King George furious about rebellion, passed the Intolerable Acts Shut down Boston harbor Quartering Act allowed British soldiers to house themselves in private homes Placed Boston under martial law Response to the acts was the 1 st Continental Congress Wrote a declaration of colonial rights
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“The British are coming” Colonists begin to step up military preparations; minutemen begin stockpiling weapons British General Gage finds out, orders troops to seize illegal weapons Paul Revere & others ride out to warn of the British coming
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The fighting begins “Redcoats” stop in Lexington where they encountered 70 minutemen lined up to fight A shot is fired and the war begins Enter Concord, don’t find weapons Begin marching back, encounter 3,000- 4,000 mm; begin firing & dozens of British soldiers die The line had been drawn; now enemies
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Leaders emerge Colonial leaders call the 2 nd Continental Congress Debate within leaders; some want independence, others reconciliation Agree to make militia the Continental Army & George Washington is commander
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Bunker Hill British advanced against mm on Breed’s Hill; 2,400 British soldiers charge Colonists fire and mow down troops; 450 colonists, +1,000 British are killed Deadliest battle of the war (misnamed) Most of the 2 nd Congress are still loyal to the King; send Olive Branch Petition, urging peace King rejects petition, urges blockade
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Democratic Ideas John Locke- philosopher of the Enlightenment Pushes idea of natural rights to life, liberty & property People have “agreement” with govt. – obey if govt. protects rights Magna Carta brings due process, trial by jury, speedy trial Pull pieces from many sources
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Spreading the message Thomas Paine writes Common Sense; attacking King George & monarchy Discusses the benefits of freedom in America Better social & economic opportunity, free trade and freedom from tyranny Sold almost ½ million copies
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Declaring Independence Summer 1776, Continental congress decide that to form own govt. Thomas Jefferson elected to write a Declaration of Independence Jefferson uses Locke, declaring rights to “Life, Liberty & the pursuit of Happiness” these are unalienable rights All men are created equal July 4, 1776 colonies all agree & declare freedom from Britain
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