1 / 4

The Revolution Within: Women, African-American, and the Indigenous

Revolutionary Women Used domestic roles Homespun Movement: Served Continental Army Allowed American soldiers in home Loyalist women left country/undertook acts of resistance Control of domestic consumption= political goals Boycott: British goods Edenton Tea party: 51 women/ North Carolina

wleah
Download Presentation

The Revolution Within: Women, African-American, and the Indigenous

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Revolutionary Women • Used domestic roles • Homespun Movement: • Served Continental Army • Allowed American soldiers in home • Loyalist women left country/undertook acts of resistance • Control of domestic consumption= political goals • Boycott: British goods • Edenton Tea party: 51 women/ North Carolina • Spied on British soldiers • Deborah Champion, Sara Decker Haligowski, Harriet Prudence, Patterson Hall, Lydia Darraugh: information to U.S. soldiers • Fought in war • Deborah Samson, Hannah Snell, Sally St. Claire: hid gender • Loyalist Women • Leave • Resistance The Revolution Within: Women, African-American, and the Indigenous

  2. 1770s • Most lived as slaves: North and South • Issues of enslavement and freedom • Sided with whom could promise personal liberty • 100,000 escaped or died during war • 5000 enlisted in Continental Army: Lexington & Concord, and Bunker Hill • 1775 George Washington: forbids recruitment of Blacks • Virginia Governor: Lord Dunmore: promises freedom to Blacks (side with British) • Black Loyalists- emigration of 3,000-4000 • Documented service to Crown: left U.S. for Britain and Nova Scotia • Massive Migration after War • Largely female • 1806: Women 4:3 in New York • Maritime industry- largest employer of black males post-Revolutionary African Americans during the Revolution

  3. Key Points: • Dependency on men to participate in public realm • Coverture: Contribute to the public realm • Republican Motherhood: Educating the next generation according to values of the men who fought for independence. (Republican values and ideals=good citizens) • Issues: • Liberty, Equality, Independence: Not Women. Whig political theorists: voting rights through ownership of property. • Ideal Whig woman: patriotic cause from inside separate spheres • Key Figures • Abigail Adams: property rights for married women • Mercy Otis Warren: political writer and propagandist for war • Issued pamphlet “A Colombian Patriot,” opposed ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1788 • 1805- first published history of the American Revolution • Postwar Efforts: rise of various women’s services and reform societies Gender and Politics during the Revolutionary Period

  4. Key Points • War • Excuse to take land • War of survival for Indigenous • Damaged food supplies and atrocities • Lenape: signed treaty with the new United States • Iroquois: split allegiance between British (Loyalists) and the Patriots. • Treaty of Paris: 1783. British ceded territories to U.S. • Did not inform indigenous communities • Replaced Treaty of 1763: which established British power in 13 colonies • Northwest Indian Wars: War against white encroachment • Issues: • Women and War • Competition for Indigenous Support: Loyalists and Patriots • Frontier Warfare: Brutal 1779 New York Sullivan Expedition • Treaties: New York and Iroquois Nation, 5, 000, 000 acres; establishment of reservations. Displacing the Indigenous Communities

More Related