American Revolution

  • Sugar Act & colonists response

    Sugar Act & colonists response
    In 1764 Grenville prompted Parliament to enact a law known as the Sugar Act. The Sugar Act halved the duty on foreign-made molasses in the hopes that colonists would pay a lower tax rather than risk arrest by smuggling. It placed duties on certain imports that had not been taxed before. Most important, it provided that colonists accused of violating the act would be tried in a vice-admiralty court rather than a colonial court. Colonial merchants complained that it would reduce their profits.
  • Declaratory Act

    Declaratory Act
    In October 1765, merchants in New York, Boston, and Philadelphia agreed to a boycott of British goods until the Stamp Act was repealed. The widespread boycott worked, and in March 1766 Parliament repealed the law. On the same day that it repealed the Stamp Act, Parliament passed the Declaratory Act, which asserted Parliament’s full right “to bind the colonies and people of America in all cases whatsoever.”
  • Townshend Acts & colonists response/Why they were repealed

    Townshend Acts & colonists response/Why they were repealed
    In 1767, Parliament passed the Townshend Acts, named after Charles Townshend, the leading government minister.
    The Townshend Acts taxed goods that were imported into the colony from Britain, such as lead, glass, paint, and paper. The Acts also imposed a tax on tea, the most popular drink in the colonies. Colonists protest “taxation without representation” and organize a new boycott of imported goods.
  • French and Indian War

    French and Indian War
    As the French empire in North America expanded, it collided with the growing British empire. France and Great Britain had fought three inconclusive wars. In 1754, the French–British conflict reignited. This conflict is known as the French Indian War.
  • Treaty of Paris 1763

    Treaty of Paris 1763
    The war officially ended in 1763 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris. Great Britain claimed Canada and virtually all of North America east of the Mississippi River. Britain also took Florida from Spain. The treaty permitted Spain to keep possession of its lands west of the Mississippi and the city of New Orleans, which it had gained from France in 1762. France retained control of only a few islands and small colonies near Newfoundland, in the West Indies, and elsewhere.
  • Proclamation of 1763

    Proclamation of 1763
    To avoid further costly conflicts with Native Americans, the British government prohibited colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains. The Proclamation of 1763 established a Proclamation Line along the Appalachians, which the colonists were not allowed to cross. However, the colonists, eager to expand westward from the increasingly crowded Atlantic seaboard, ignored the proclamation and continued to stream onto Native American lands.
  • Writ of Assistance

    Writ of Assistance
    In 1761, the royal governor of Massachusetts authorized the use of the writs of assistance, a general search warrant that allowed
    British customs officials to search any colonial ship or building
    they believed to be holding smuggled goods. Because many merchants worked out of their residences, the writs enabled British officials to enter and search colonial homes whether there was evidence of smuggling or not. The merchants of Boston were outraged.
  • Stamp Act & colonists response

    Stamp Act & colonists response
    In March of 1765, Britain passes the Stamp Act, a tax law requiring colonists to purchase special stamps to prove payment of tax. Colonists harass stamp distributors, boycott British goods, and prepare a Declaration of Rights and Grievances.
  • Sons of Liberty is formed & Samuel Adams

    Sons of Liberty is formed & Samuel Adams
    Samuel Adams was one of the founders of the Sons of Liberty, the colonists again boycotted British goods.
  • Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre
    On March 5, 1770, a mob gathered in front of the Boston Customs House and taunted the British soldiers standing guard there. Shots were fired and five colonists, including Crispus Attucks, were killed or mortally wounded. Colonial leaders quickly labeled the confrontation the Boston Massacre. Colonial agitators
    label the conflict a massacre and publish a dramatic engraving depicting the violence.
  • Battle of Lexington

    Battle of Lexington
    The king’s troops reached Lexington on the dawn of April 19. As they neared the town, they saw 70 minutemen drawn up in lines on the village green. Then someone fired, and the British soldiers sent a volley of shots into the departing militia. Eight minutemen were killed and ten more were wounded, but only one British soldier was injured. The Battle of Lexington, the first battle of the Revolutionary War, lasted only 15 minutes.
  • Battle of Concord

    Battle of Concord
    The British marched on to Concord, where they found an empty arsenal. The British soldiers lined up to march back to Boston, but the march became a slaughter. Between 3,000 and 4,000 minutemen had assembled by now, and they fired on the marching troops from behind stone walls and trees. Bloodied and humiliated, the remaining British soldiers made their way back to Boston that night. Colonists had become enemies of Britain and now held Boston and its encampment of British troops under siege
  • Tea Act

    Tea Act
    In 1773, Lord North devised the Tea Act in order to save the nearly bankrupt British East India Company. The act granted the company the right to sell tea to the colonies free of the taxes that colonial tea sellers had to pay. This action would have cut colonial merchants out of the tea trade by enabling the East India Company to sell its tea directly to consumers for less. North hoped the American colonists would simply buy the cheaper tea; instead, they protested dramatically.
  • Boston Tea Party

    Boston Tea Party
    On the moonlit evening of December 16, 1773, a large group of Boston rebels disguised themselves as Native Americans and proceeded to take action against three British tea ships anchored in the harbor. In this incident, later known as the Boston Tea Party, the “Indians” dumped 18,000 pounds of the East India Company’s tea into the waters of Boston harbor.
  • Intolerable Acts - all 3 parts

    Intolerable Acts - all 3 parts
    An infuriated King George III pressed Parliament to act. In 1774, Parliament responded by passing a series of measures that colonists called the Intolerable Acts. One law shut down Boston harbor. Another, the Quartering Act, authorized British commanders to house soldiers in vacant private homes and other buildings. General Thomas Gage was appointed the new governor of Massachusetts. To keep the peace, he placed Boston under martial law, or rule imposed by military forces.
  • First Continental Congress meets

    First Continental Congress meets
    In response to Britain’s actions, the committees of correspondence assembled the First Continental Congress. In September 1774, 56 delegates met in Philadelphia and drew up a declaration of colonial rights. They defended the colonies’ right to run their own affairs and stated that, if the British used force against the colonies, the colonies should fight back.
  • Minutemen

    Minutemen
    After the First Continental Congress met, colonists in many eastern New England towns stepped up military preparations. Minutemen—civilian soldiers who pledged to be ready to fight against the British on a minute’s notice—quietly stockpiled firearms and gunpowder. General Thomas Gage soon learned about these activities. In the spring of 1775, he ordered troops to march from Boston to nearby Concord, Massachusetts, and to seize illegal weapons.
  • Midnight riders: Revere, Dawes, Prescott

    Midnight riders: Revere, Dawes, Prescott
    Colonists in Boston were watching, and on the night of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Samuel Prescott rode out to spread word that 700 British troops were headed for Concord. The darkened countryside rang with church bells and gunshots—prearranged signals, sent from town to town, that the British were coming.
  • Jogn Locke's Social Contract

    Jogn Locke's Social Contract
    One of the key Enlightenment thinkers was English philosopher John Locke. He maintained that people have natural rights to life, liberty, and property. He contended, every society is based on a social contract—an agreement in which the people consent to choose and obey a government so long as it safeguards their natural rights. If the government violates that social contract by taking away or interfering with those rights, people have the right to resist and even overthrow the government.
  • Loyalists and Patriosts

    Loyalists and Patriosts
    As the war began, Americans found themselves on different sides of the conflict. Loyalists—those who opposed independence and remained loyal to the British king—included judges and governors, as well as people of more modest means. Many Loyalists thought that the British were going to win and wanted to avoid punishment. Patriots—the supporters of independence—drew their numbers from people who saw political and economic opportunity in an independent America. Many Americans remained neutral.
  • Second Continental Congress

    Second Continental Congress
    In May of 1775, colonial leaders called the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia to debate their next move. The loyalties that divided colonists sparked endless debates at the Second Continental Congress.
  • Continental Army

    Continental Army
    During the second Continential Congress, Some delegates called for independence, while others argued for reconciliation with Great Britain. Despite such differences, the Congress agreed to recognize the colonial militia as the Continental Army and appointed George Washington as its commander.
  • Battle of Bunker Hill

    Battle of Bunker Hill
    Cooped up in Boston, British general Thomas Gage decided to strike at militiamen on Breed’s Hill, north of the city and near Bunker Hill. On June 17, 1775, Gage sent 2,400 British soldiers up the hill. The colonists held their fire until the last minute and then began to mow down the advancing redcoats before finally retreating. The misnamed Battle of Bunker Hill would prove to be the deadliest battle of the war.
  • Olive Branch Petition

    Olive Branch Petition
    By July, the Second Continental Congress was readying the colonies for war though still hoping for peace. Most of the delegates, like most colonists, felt deep loyalty to George III and blamed the bloodshed on the king’s ministers. On July 8, Congress sent the king the so-called Olive Branch Petition, urging a return to “the former harmony” between Britain and the colonies.
  • Publication of Common Sense

    Publication of Common Sense
    Just as important were the ideas of Thomas Paine. In a widely read 50-page pamphlet titled Common Sense, Paine attacked King George and the monarchy. Hedeclared that independence would allow America to trade more freely, independence would give American colonists the chance to create a better society—one free from tyranny, with equal social and economic opportunities for all. In April 1776, George Washington wrote, “I find Common Sense is working a powerful change in the minds of many men.”
  • Declaration of Indepence

    Declaration of Indepence
    On June 7, 1776, the Congress decided to prepare a formal Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson was chosen to prepare the final draft. It declared the rights of “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness” to be “unalienable” rights. On that basis, the American colonies declared their independence from Britain.
    On July 4, 1776, the delegates adopted the Declaration of Independence.
  • Redcoats push Washington's army across the Delaware River into Pennsylvania

    Redcoats push Washington's army across the Delaware River into Pennsylvania
    The British sailed into New York harbor in the summer of 1776 with a force of about 32,000 soldiers. They included thousands of German mercenaries, or hired soldiers, known as Hessians because many of them came from the German region of Hesse.
    Although the Continental Army attempted to defend New York in late August, the untrained and poorly equipped colonial troops soon retreated. By late fall, the British had pushed Washington’s army across the Delaware River into Pennsylvania.
  • Washington's Christmas night surprise attack

    Washington's Christmas night surprise attack
    Desperate for an early victory, Washington risked everything on one bold stroke set for Christmas night, 1776. In the face of a fierce storm, he led 2,400 men in small rowboats across the ice-choked Delaware River. They then marched to their objective—Trenton, New Jersey—and defeated a garrison of Hessians in a surprise attack. The British soon regrouped, however, and in September of 1777, they captured the American capital at Philadelphia.
  • Saratoga

    Saratoga
    General John Burgoyne planned to lead an army down a route of lakes from Canada to Albany, where he would meet British troops as they arrived from New York City. The two regiments would then join forces to isolate New England from the rest of the colonies. However, while he was fighting off the colonial troops, he didn’t realize that his fellow British officers were preoccupied with holding Philadelphia. American troops finally surrounded Burgoyne at Saratoga on October 17, 1777.
  • French-American Alliance

    French-American Alliance
    The surrender at Saratoga turned out to be one of the most important events of the war. Although the French had secretly aided the Patriots since early 1776, the Saratoga victory bolstered France’s belief that the Americans could win the war. As a result, the French signed an alliance with the Americans in February 1778 and openly joined them in their fight.
  • Valley Forge

    Valley Forge
    Washington and his Continental Army—desperately low on food and supplies—fought to stay alive at winter camp in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. More than 2,000 soldiers died, yet the survivors didn’t desert. Their endurance and suffering filled Washington’s letters to the Congress and his friends.
  • Friedrich von Steuben and Marquis de Lafayette

    Friedrich von Steuben and Marquis de Lafayette
    In February 1778, in the midst of the frozen winter at Valley Forge, American troops began an amazing transformation. Friedrich von Steuben, a Prussian captain and talented drillmaster, helped to train the Continental Army. Other foreign military leaders, such as the Marquis de Lafayette also arrived to offer their help. Lafayette lobbied France for French reinforcements in 1779, and led a command in Virginia in the last years of the war.
  • British victories in the South

    British victories in the South
    At the end of 1778, a British expedition easily took Savannah, Georgia. In their greatest victory of the war, the British under Generals Henry Clinton and Charles Cornwallis captured Charles Town, South Carolina, in May 1780. Clinton then left for New York, while Cornwallis continued to conquer land throughout the South. In early 1781, despite several defeats, the colonists continued to battle Cornwallis—hindering his efforts to take the Carolinas.
  • British surrender at Yorktown

    British surrender at Yorktown
    Shortly after learning of Corwallis’s actions, the armies of Lafayette and Washington moved south toward Yorktown. Meanwhile, a French naval force defeated a British fleet. By late September, about 17,000 French and American troops surrounded the British on the Yorktown peninsula and began bombarding them day and night. Less than a month later, on October 19, 1781, Cornwallis finally surrendered. The Americans had shocked the world and defeated the British.
  • Treaty of Paris

    Treaty of Paris
    Peace talks began in Paris in 1782. The American negotiating team included John Adams, John Jay of New York, and Benjamin Franklin. In September 1783, the delegates signed the Treaty of Paris, which confirmed U.S. independence and set the boundaries of the new nation. The United States now stretched from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi River and from Canada to the Florida border.