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Chapter 8

Chapter 8. America Secedes from the Empire, 1775–1783. I. Congress Drafts George Washington. Second Continental Congress (Phila. May, 1775) Select George Washington to head the army The choice was made with considerable misgivings Only a colonel, lost more battles than won

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Chapter 8

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  1. Chapter 8 America Secedes from the Empire, 1775–1783

  2. I. Congress Drafts George Washington • Second Continental Congress (Phila. May, 1775) • Select George Washington to head the army • The choice was made with considerable misgivings • Only a colonel, lost more battles than won • He radiated patience, courage, self-discipline

  3. p133

  4. II. Bunker Hill and Hessian Hirelings • 1775 to July 1776, fighting but no independence • June 1775 the colonists seized Bunker Hill • Olive Branch Petition (July 1775) • Professed American loyalty to the crown • George III proclaimed colonies in rebellion (8/75) • Rebellion a ‘hanging’ offense • Hired thousands of German (Hessian) troops

  5. III. The Abortive Conquest of Canada • In the north Portland, Maine burned (Oct. 1775) • Reprisal- U.S. daring Canadian invasion • British succeed in middle colonies • January 1776 - British set fire to Norfolk, Va. • March 1776 – Rebels forced to evacuate Boston • In the South the rebels win two victories • February 1776 – rebels win in North Carolina • June 1776 stop an invading fleet at Charleston

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  7. IV. Thomas Paine Preaches Common Sense • Loyalty to the empire was deeply ingrained: • Common Sense by Thomas Paine (1776) • Real power “from the consent of the governed.” • Goal-convince people their cause-independence

  8. Map 8-1 p135

  9. V. Paine and the Idea of “Republicanism” • Paine was calling for a republic • All government gain authority from popular consent • Individuals in a republic: • Sacrifice personal self-interest to the public good • The collective good of “the people” most important

  10. VI. Jefferson’s “Explanation” of Independence • An inspirational appeal for freedom was needed • To rally resistance at home. • To invite assistance for foreign nations • Congress selected Thomas Jefferson to write • The Declaration of Independence • Formally approved by Congress on July 4, 1776 • Had universal appeal- “natural rights”, had three parts • Philosophical background • List of Grievances • Resolution / action to be taken

  11. VII. Patriots and Loyalists • War of Independence was a war within a war • Many (most) colonists were apathetic or neutral • Loyalists-aka “Tories”, supported England • Many were educated, wealthy, older, and cautious • Patriots-aka rebels &“Whigs”, for independence • Revolution was a minority movement • Rebels took the task of “political education”

  12. VIII. The Loyalist Exodus • Before the Declaration in 1776 • Persecution of the Loyalists was relatively mild • Harsher treatment began after the Declaration • Were regarded as traitors • Some imprisoned, some hung • There was no wholesale reign of terror • Several hundred thousand were permitted to stay • ~80,000 were driven out or fled • The estates of the fugitives were confiscated and sold

  13. IX. General Washington at Bay • General Washington • Loss the Battle of Long Island (Sept 1776) • Howe didn’t chase and crush defeated U.S. troops • Washington won at Trenton (December 26, 1776) • Victory at Princeton (Jan. 1777)

  14. X. Burgoyne’s Blundering Invasion • London plan to capture Hudson R. valley (1777) • Divided and conquer strategy • Sever New England from the rest of the states • British stopped at Saratoga on (Oct 1777) • Caused French to support America • Washington moved to Philadelphia area • Defeated at Brandywine Creek and Germantown • Washington retired to Valley Forge

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  22. XI. Revolution in Diplomacy? • France wanted to regain N. Am. Dominance • The loss in the Seven Years’ War rankled deeply • U.S desperately needed help against the British • The Model Treaty(summer 1776) w/Fremch • No political or military connections, only commercial • Benjamin Franklin negotiated treaty in Paris

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  24. XII. The Colonial War Becomes a Wider War • France’s entry forced British to change strategy • Could no longer blockade the colonial coast • British decided to evacuate Philadelphia • Spain & Holland entered in 1779 • Russia, (1780) organized the Armed Neutrality • Most of Europe passive hostility toward Britain

  25. Table 8-1 p147

  26. XIII. Blow and Counterblow • 1780: French troops, gold & goodwill help • The Southern campaign • 1780 General Benedict Arnold turned traitor • Georgia was ruthlessly overrun in 1778-1779 • Charleston, South Carolina, fell in 1780 • General Greene reclaimed Georgia & South Carolina • ‘Standing and retreating’ strategy (1781)

  27. Map 8-2 p148

  28. XIV. The Land Frontier and the Sea Frontier • The West was ablaze during the war • 1777: “the bloody year” on the frontier • 1784 Iroquois Treaty of Fort Stanwix (gave up land) • George Rogers Clark • Attacked Britain’s Ohio River forts (1778-1779) • America’s infant navy led by John Paul Jones • Helped by swift privateers • Eventually British shippers/manufacturers wanted peace

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  30. Map 8-3 p149

  31. XV. Yorktown and the Final Curtain • Cornwallis fell back to Yorktown, VA • French & American army marched to controlled land • French navy moved to controlled the sea • The British were completely cornered • Cornwallis surrendered (Oct., 1781) • George III planned to continue the struggle • Sporadic fighting for more than a year

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  33. XVI. Peace at Paris • In GB people were tired of war, had a new gov’t • France wanted land / influence for their efforts • Franklin, Adams, Jay – American negotiators • John Jay negotiated secretly with Britain (1782) • The Treaty of Paris of 1783 • Britain recognized the independence of the U.S. • Granted generous boundaries • Return land of & no persecution of Loyalists • Debts long owed to British creditors had to be paid • However, the debt promises were not carried out

  34. XVII. A New Nation Legitimized • Treaty of Paris (1783) terms were favorable • America gained world recognition by winning

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