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Unit 3 Revolution to Constitution
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
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Jeffrey Amherst
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Pontiac
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Fort Detroit
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Pontiac’s War
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Proclamation of 1763 control angered
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
No taxation without representation!
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Sons of Liberty
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
boycott repealed
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Charles Townshend
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
writs of assistance tea
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Samuel Adams
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
printers
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George Washington Patrick Henry
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Crispus Attucks
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Boston Massacre
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John Adams
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England’s King George III
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Tea Act monopoly smugglers boycott
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Samuel Adams John Hancock
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Boston Tea Party (December 16, 1773) control rights
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Intolerable Acts (Coercive Acts) shut down the port of Boston Quartering Act
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Constitution Amendment 1
Freedoms of Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, and Petition Protects 5 basic rights Added because of Intolerable Acts passed by England for the colonies
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Constitution Amendment 3 Lodging Troops in Private Homes
Limits the government’s right to use private homes to house soldiers – must have consent of the owner Added because of Quartering Acts passed by England for the colonies
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Quebec Act
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
Philadelphia First Continental Congress stop exporting militia minutemen
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Thomas Gage
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Paul Revere
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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
“Now listen my children and you shall hear of the midnight ride of Paul Revere.”
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John Parker Statue in Lexington
Lexington skirmish
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Concord battleground
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Section 1 – Road to Revolution
sharpshooters
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Ralph Waldo Emerson “The shot heard round the world.”
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Example of a political cartoon about taxes in Italy.
Example of political cartoon about taxes in Italy. Example of a political cartoon about taxes in Italy.
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
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Patrick Henry “Give me liberty or give me death.”
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American Revolution began on April 19, 1775 at Lexington and Concord
England Colonies Weapons & supplies Had all they needed Next to none Armies Biggest in world Navy Largest in world None Money Richest in world (biggest country) Next to nothing Biggest advantage Americans had: fighting on their own soil, they knew the terrain.
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Green Mountain Boys led by Ethan Allen
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
Fort Ticonderoga (first big battle of the American Revolution) cannon Canada
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
Second Continental Congress Olive Branch Petition Continental Army George Washington
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Battle of Bunker Hill (Breed’s Hill)
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Colonel British General William Prescott William Howe
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
Battle of Bunker Hill (Breed’s Hill) “Don’t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes!”
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
gunpowder moral
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Battle of Bunker Hill (Breed’s Hill)
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
mistrusted loyalty
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
blockade Quebec
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Richard Montgomery Benedict Arnold
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
hunger and disease
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Thomas Paine wrote Common Sense
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
independence traitors
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John Adams Benjamin Franklin
Robert Livingston Roger Sherman
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Thomas Jefferson “Father” of the Declaration of Independence
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July 4, 1776 Independence Day
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John Hancock
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Declaration of Independence
3 main parts 1. Basic rights governments duty 2. British wrongs 3. An independent nation United States of America
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Declaration of Independence
United States of America ties with Britain were cut free alliances and trade
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
divided Patriots People who wanted colonists to win the revolution Loyalists People who wanted England to win the revolution
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
fled lost
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
middle states worst Battle of Long Island
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Section 2 – The American Revolution
Nathan Hale captured death
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Nathan Hale “I only regret that I have but one life to lose
for my country.”
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Thomas Paine wrote The Crisis
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Battle of Trenton
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Washington Crossing the Delaware River
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British General Charles Cornwallis
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Princeton
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