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From Protest to Revolution

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From Protest to Revolution Chapter 5 Section 3 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: From Protest to Revolution


1
From Protest to Revolution
  • Chapter 5
  • Section 3

2
A Dispute Over Tea
  • Tea was very popular among the colonies. By 1770,
    at least one million Americans brewed tea twice a
    day. People loved tea so much that theyd rather
    go without dinner than not have their tea.

3
A Dispute Over Tea
  • Think back. What taxes were repealed? What tax
    remained?
  • Most tea was purchased in the colonies was from
    the British East India Company. Where did this
    tea come from?
  • In the 1770s, the British East India Company
    faced financial trouble. Parliament as we
    mentioned kept a tax on tea in order to keep its
    right to tax the colonies.

4
A Dispute Over Tea
  • The tax was small, but the colonies eventually
    began to resent it.
  • What did many colonists do? What happened?
  • In order to help the British East India Company
    Parliament passed the Tea Act of 1773. What did
    the act do?

5
A Dispute Over Tea
  • In short Parliament cut out the middle man and
    the colonists would still have to pay the tax but
    they did not have to pay the merchants higher
    prices.
  • What did Parliament want to happen? What happened
    instead?

6
A Dispute Over Tea
  • American merchants were upset because they now
    could not trade tea. They also believed that
    forcing Americans to buy tea through the British
    East India Company violated the American right to
    conduct free enterprise.

7
A Dispute Over Tea
  • What did the colonist do again to this act? Who
    lead the boycott?
  • What was made instead? What did the Sons of
    Liberty do?

8
Boston Tea Party
  • Three ship loaded with tea reached Boston harbor
    on the night of November 1773. The Massachusetts
    colonial governor called for the cargo to be
    unloaded as usual.
  • Sam Adams and the Sons of Liberty had other plans.

9
Boston Tea Party
  • On the night of December 16, 1773, Sam Adams and
    the Sons of Liberty met in the Old South Meeting
    house. They sent a message to the governor,
    demanding that the ships leave the harbor.
  • When the governor rejected the demand Adams stood
    up and declared what?

10
Boston Tea Party
  • A group of men disguised as Indians burst into
    the meetinghouse. A voice came from among them,
    Boston harbor a teapot tonight!
  • The disguised group left the meetinghouse and
    headed for the harbor. Other colonists joined
    them along the way.

11
Boston Tea Party
  • Under a near full moon the men boarded the ship
    and split the chests of tea open and dumped the
    tea into the harbor.
  • By 10 p.m., the Boston Tea Party was over.
  • By the end 342 chess of tea were floating in the
    harbor.

12
Parliament Strikes Back
  • Colonists were split some were happy others were
    not too comfortable with the lawlessness.
  • The British of course were outraged with the
    Boston Tea Party. As a punishment Parliament
    passed four laws which the colonists called the
    Intolerable Acts because they were so harsh.

13
Parliament Strikes Back
  • First, Parliament shut down the port of Boston.
    No ship could come in or leave. The harbor would
    remain closed until the colonists paid the cost
    of the tea lost at the Boston Tea Party and
    repaid British officials for damage to personal
    property like Thomas Hutchinson.

14
Parliament Strikes Back
  • Second, Parliament forbade Massachusetts
    colonists from having town meetings more than
    once a year without the governors permission.
    How were the meetings before?
  • In addition, all the juries would now be picked
    by the king as opposed to colonists. Parliament
    Strikes Back

15
Parliament Strikes Back
  • Third, Parliament allowed for any British
    official or customs official to be tried in
    Canada or Britain as opposed to the colonies. The
    colonists argued that dishonest officials could
    break the law in the colonies and avoid
    punishment by being tried by British jury.

16
Parliament Strikes Back
  • Fourth, Parliament passed a new Quartering Act.
    Colonists would have to house the British
    soldiers.
  • Quebec Act- set up a government for Canada and
    gave complete religious freedom to French
    Catholics. The act also extended the borders of
    Quebec to include land between the Ohio and
    Missouri rivers. The act pleased the French
    Canadians. But it angered American colonists
    because some of the colonies claimed ownership of
    these lands.

17
Parliament Strikes Back
  • Who spread the news of the Intolerable Acts?
  • They warned how the people of Massachusetts faced
    hunger as the ports remained closed. In response
    other colonies sent food from where?
  • What did Thomas Jefferson say should be done?

18
Parliament Strikes Back
  • On June 1, 1774, church bells tolled slowly.
    Merchants closed their shops and many colonists
    prayed and fasted all day.
  • On September 1774, colonial leaders called a
    meeting in Philadelphia. Delegates from 12
    colonies gathered in what? Who did not send a
    delegate?

19
Parliament Strikes Back
  • After some debate the delegates passed a
    resolution backing Massachusetts in its struggle.
    What did they agree? What did they urge each
    colony to do? What is a militia?
  • Before leaving Philadelphia the delegates agreed
    to meet again in May 1775.

20
Lexington and Concord
  • What did Massachusetts newspapers call for? What
    are minutemen? How did they get their name?
  • In Massachusetts minutemen collected weapons and
    gunpowder. On the other hand the British built up
    their forces.
  • Troops arrived in Boston equaling to 4,000.

21
Lexington and Concord
  • Early in 1775, General Thomas Gage sent scouts to
    towns near Boston. What did they report back?
    What did Gage plan?
  • On April 18, about 700 British troops quietly
    left Boston. What was their goal? Who was
    watching? What did they do and what did this
    signal mean?

22
Lexington and Concord
  • Colonists on the other side of the river saw the
    signal. Messengers mounted their horses and rode
    through toward Concord. Who was one of the
    riders? What did he shout?

23
Lexington and Concord
  • On day break on April 19, the redcoats reached
    Lexington. How many minutemen were waiting under
    whose command?
  • What did the British order the minutemen to do?

24
Lexington and Concord
  • Outnumbered the colonist began to leave.
    Suddenly, a shot rang out. No one knows who shot
    it but in the brief struggle 8 colonists lay
    dead.
  • The British pushed towards Concord. What made
    them turn back towards Boston?
  • On a bridge outside of Concord they were met by
    300 minutemen. Fighting broke out. Who was forced
    to retreat?

25
Lexington and Concord
  • As the British retreated colonist sharpshooters
    shot at them.
  • Local women also fired at the British from their
    windows.
  • By the time the British reached Boston they had
    lost 73 men and another 300 were missing or
    wounded.

26
Lexington and Concord
  • What was this battle called?
  • What was this the end of?
  • Who was the famous poet who wrote about the
    minutemen?
  • What did the poem say?
  • Now the colonists faced 6 long years of fighting
    and at the end the 13 colonies would be a new,
    independent nation.
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