Timetoast

American Revolution

  • 1763 Sighning of the treatyof paris

    1763 Sighning of the treatyof paris
    Ending the Seven Year’s War, also known as the French and Indian War in North America. France ceded all mainland North American territories, except New Orleans Britain gained all territory east of the Mississippi River; Spain kept territory west of the Mississippi, but exchanged East and West Florida for Cuba.
  • Proclamation of 1763

     Proclamation of 1763
    Wary of the cost of defending the colonies, George III prohibited all settlement west of the Appalachian mountains without guarantees of security from local Native American nations. The intervention in colonial affairs offended the thirteen colonies' claim to the exclusive right to govern lands to their west.
  • Sugar Act

    Sugar Act
    The first attempt to finance the defence of the colonies by the British Government. In order to deter smuggling and to encourage the production of British rum, taxes on molasses were dropped; a levy was placed on foreign Madeira wine and colonial exports of iron, lumber and other goods had to pass first through Britain and British customs. The Act established a Vice-Admiralty Court in Halifax, Nova Scotia to hear smuggling cases without jury and with the presumption of guilt. These measures led
  • Stamp Act

    Stamp Act
    Seeking to defray some of the costs of garrisoning the colonies, Parliament required all legal documents, newspapers and pamphlets required to use watermarked, or 'stamped' paper on which a levy was placed.
  • Quartering Act

    Quartering Act
    Colonial assemblies required to pay for supplies to British garrisons. The New York assembly argued that it could not be forced to comply.
  • Stamp Act Congress

    Stamp Act Congress
    Representatives from nine of the thirteen colonies declare the Stamp Act unconstitutional as it was a tax levied without their consent.
  • Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre
    Angered by the presence of troops and Britain's colonial policy, a crowd began harassing a group of soldiers guarding the customs house; a soldier was knocked down by a snowball and discharged his musket, sparking a volley into the crowd which kills five civilians.
  • Repeal of the Townshend Revenue Act

    Repeal of the Townshend Revenue Act
  • Burning of the Gaspee

    Burning of the Gaspee
    The revenue schooner Gaspee ran aground near Providence, Rhode Island and was burnt by locals angered by the enforcement of trade legislation.
  • Tea Act

    Tea Act
    In an effort to support the ailing East India Company, Parliament exempted its tea from import duties and allowed the Company to sell its tea directly to the colonies. Americans resented what they saw as an indirect tax subsidising a British company.
  • Publication of Thomas Hutchinson letters

    Publication of Thomas Hutchinson letters
    In these letters, Hutchinson, the Massachusetts governor, advocated a 'great restraint of natural liberty', convincing many colonists of a planned British clamp-down on their freedoms.
  • Boston Tea Party

    Boston Tea Party
    Angered by the Tea Acts, American patriots disguised as Mohawk Indians dump £9,000 of East India Company tea into the Boston harbour
  • Continental Congress

    Continental Congress
    Colonial delegates meet to organise opposition to the Intolerable Acts.
  • Battle of Bunker Hill

    Battle of Bunker Hill
    The first major battle of the War of Independence. Sir William Howe dislodged William Prescott's forces overlooking Boston at a cost of 1054 British casualties to the Americans' 367.
  • British Surrenders of 5,700 troops at Saratoga

    British Surrenders of 5,700 troops at Saratoga
    Lacking supplies, 5,700 British, German and loyalist forces under Major General John Burgoyne surrender to Major General Horatio Gates in a turning point in the Revolutionary War.
  • Ratification of the Articles of confedration

    Ratification of the Articles of confedration
  • Shays Rebellion

    Shays Rebellion
    Massachusetts rebellion led by the Revolutionary War veteran Daniel Shays against high taxes.