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Campaign Year of 1775 - 1776
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American Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Fighting for a cause Familiar with the territory Familiar with guns Privateers Eventually got foreign help
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American Advantages and Disadvantages Disadvantages Untrained army Few war materials No navy
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English ( British ) Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages Large well trained army and well disciplined Navy Most powerful country in the world
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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
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Definitions Tories or Loyalists – colonists who remain loyal to England Rebels or Patriots – colonists who revolt against England
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Campaign Year of 1775
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Night of April 18 th – 19 th “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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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
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The Shot Heard ‘Round the World
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By the end of the day the British were bottled up in Boston
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May 10 th – Ethan Allen ( A ) and Benedict Arnold ( A ) capture Ft. Ticonderoga
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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
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July, 1775 Continental Congress appoints George Washington ( A ) commander – in – chief of the Continental Army
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July, 1775 – Battle of Bunker Hill ( B )
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Winter of 1775 - 1776 Henry Knox ( A ) moves cannon from Crown Point and Ft. Ticonderoga to Boston
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Benedict Arnold ( A ) and Richard Montgomery ( A ) invade Canada unsuccessfully
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Campaign Year of 1776
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Boston - 1776 George Washington ( A ) puts Henry Knox’s ( A ) cannon on Dorchester Heights and the British have to evacuate Boston.
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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
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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
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Nathan Hale – “ I regret that I have but one life to lose for my country”
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Battle of Long Island ( Brooklyn Heights )
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Battle of White Plains
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Continental Congress Philadelphia John Hancock - President
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Thomas Paine Common Sense –”tis time to part” Sold over 500,000 copies
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Richard Henry Lee June – introduces a resolution to separate from England
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Committee appointed to write a formal declaration of independence John Adams Thomas Jefferson Ben Franklin Roger Sherman Robert Livingston
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July 4, 1776 – Declaration of Independence Signed
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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
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Battle of Valcour Island ( B ) Benedict Arnold ( A ) vs Sir Guy Carleton ( B )
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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
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Thomas Paine The Crisis – “these are the times that try men’s souls”
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Battle of Trenton December, 1776
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Battle of Princeton January, 1777
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Trenton and Princeton were key American victories at the end of the Campaign Year of 1776
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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
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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” – 1778 - Battle of Monmouth
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Women in the Revolution Deborah Sampson – fought Betsy Ross Martha Washington Abigail Adams Mary Katherine Goddard - printer
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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
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Foreign Help Marquis de Lafayette France Washington’s Staff
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Foreign Help Baron Frederick von Steuben – Prussia – trained army during the winter at Valley Forge
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Foreign Help Thaddeus Kosciusko – Poland – engineer – designed fortifications
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Foreign Help Casimir Pulaski – Poland - cavalry
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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”
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