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Uniting for Independence. Chapter 2 Section 2. The Colonies on Their Own. Colonists owed allegiance to the monarch and British government Colonies served as a source of raw materials Colonist became accustomed to governing themselves
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Uniting for Independence Chapter 2 Section 2
The Colonies on Their Own • Colonists owed allegiance to the monarch and British government • Colonies served as a source of raw materials • Colonist became accustomed to governing themselves • Colonists remained loyal in return for self-rule and protection from the French
Britain Tightens Control • French and Indian War • 1754-1763 • Tightened Britain’s hold on the continent • Started as land struggle between France and Britain • Great Britain won the war
Left the British with a large war debt – expected the colonies to help repay • George III had different ideas about how the colonies should be governed
Taxing the Colonies • To help pay for the war, taxes were levied on tea, sugar, glass, paper, other products • Stamp Act of 1765 • First direct tax • Tax on legal documents, pamphlets, newspapers
Britain’s revenue increased • Colonial resentment grew • Protests • Refusal to buy British goods • Boston Tea Party – British tea dumped into Boston Harbor
Intolerable Acts • Closed the Boston Harbor • Withdrew the right of MA to govern itself
Colonial Unity • Albany Plan of Union • 1754 • Benjamin Franklin • Plan for uniting the colonies • Colonies rejected it • Gave too much power to an assembly made up of representatives from all 13 colonies
British policies spurred an American sense of community • Colonist began to think of themselves as Americans
Taking Action • Stamp Act Congress • 1765 • New York • Delegates sent • First meeting to protest King George’s Action • Petition sent to king
Committees of Correspondence • 1773 • Colonial committees urging resistance to the British and keeping in touch with one another as events unfolded • Samuel Adams established first committee in Boston
The First Continental Congress • Delegates from all the colonies except Georgia met in Philadelphia in 1774 • Key Leaders • Patrick Henry • Samuel Adams • Richard Henry Lee • George Washington
Embargo – an agreement prohibiting grade, on Britain, and agreed not to use British goods • April 19, 1775 • British arrive – Lexington and Concord • “Shot heard ‘round the world”
The Second Continental Congress • Assumed the powers of a central government • President – John Hancock • Voted to organize an army and navy and to issue money • George Washington – commander of the Continental Army
Served as the acting government of the colonies throughout the war • Purchased supplies, negotiated treaties, rallied support for the colonists’ cause
Independence • Common Sense • Thomas Paine • Argued that monarchy was a corrupt form of government; George III was an enemy to liberty • Samuel Adams declared that America was already independent
The Declaration of Independence • Committee • John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Robert Livingston, and Roger Sherman • Prepare a written declaration of independence • June 28, 1776 – edited draft to Congress • July 4, 1776 – Congress approves final draft
John Hancock first to sign • 56 delegate signatures • “The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America”
Key Parts of the Declaration • Ideas from thinkers such as Locke and others • Set out the colonists reasons for proclaiming their freedom • Justify the revolution and to put for the founding principles of the new nation
No government at that time had been founded on the principles of human liberty and consent of the government • Three Parts • Begins with a statement of purpose and basic human rights
The middle section lists specific complaints against George III • The conclusion states the colonists’ determination to separate from Great Britain
The First State Constitution • Transformation of the colonies into states subject to no higher authority • By the end of 1776, 10 states had adopted written constitution
Most contained a bill of rights • All recognized the people as the sole source of authority in a limited government with only those powers given by the people