Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRosamond Berniece Baldwin Modified over 9 years ago
1
You say you want a Revolution? You know it’s gonna be…alright
2
Well, you know, we all want to change the world Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763 Naval Patrols The Colonists and British respond to each other
3
Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763 Freedom from the “French Menace” Distance from the Mother Country Issue of Home Rule
4
Political Problems with Great Britain after 1763 Territorial Disputes The End of Salutary Neglect
5
Freedom from the “French Menace” The French no longer occupy the western borders
6
Distance from the Mother Country Over 3000 miles away
7
Issue of Home Rule Colonial Assemblies vs. the Governors Strained relationships with Parliament and the Privy Council
8
Issue of Home Rule-2 Parliamentary Representation and Taxation
9
Territorial Disputes Land Across the Appalachians British Concerns Colonial Response
10
The End of Salutary Neglect Enforcement of the Navigation Acts Customs Officials
11
Naval Patrols The British patrolled the East Coast searching for smugglers
12
The Colonists and British respond to each other Sugar Act Stamp Act Townshend Acts Boston Massacre
13
The Colonists and British respond to each other The Gaspee Affair The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade
14
Sugar Act Tax placed on all imported sugar
15
Sugar Act -Colonial Response Objections by colonial slave traders
16
Stamp Act What it was
18
Stamp Act- Colonial Response Stamp Act Congress Move Toward Unity Boycott of British Goods
19
Stamp Act- Colonial Response The Sons of Liberty Samuel Adams
21
NOT THIS SAM
22
This Samuel Adams
23
Stamp Act- Colonial Response Parliament Repeals Passes Declaratory Act, Quebec Act
24
Townshend Acts Indirect Tax on imports designed to pay the governors’ salaries
25
Townshend Acts- Colonial Response Boycott of British Goods “Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer” Parliament repeals The Tea Tax
26
Boston Massacre
27
Boston Massacre- Colonial Response Anger and Outrage Demand for British Soldiers to stand trial
28
Boston Massacre- Colonial Response British remove troops from Boston Trial of Soldiers John Adams
29
The Gaspee Affair British search for the guilty Threat of Trial in England
30
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade
31
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade-Colonial Response Resentment of a tax on tea Fear of a monopoly Boston Tea Party
33
Edenton Tea Party
34
The East India Company’s Monopoly on the Tea Trade- Colonial Response Other Tea Parties Parliament Passes Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
35
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts Closes Boston Harbor Military Occupation Revocation of Massachusetts’ Charter
36
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts-Colonial Response The First Continental Congress Rejection of the Galloway Plan Decision to boycott British goods
37
First Continental Congress- Sept. 5 to Oct. 26, 1774
38
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts-Colonial Response The First Continental Congress Call for a Second Continental Congress in May 1775
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.