Enter Category Name
Potpourri
Acts
Declaration of Independence
Quotes
100

Why was The Battle of Saratoga a turning point of the war?

The Americans won the battle even though they were fighting against a larger army.

Weakened the British, especially in the North.

France agrees to help the Americans because they don't like the British either.


100

Loyalists, patriots, and neutralists and their %s. Why were the neutralists neutral?

Loyalists did not want independence and mostly lived in the South. 20%

Patriots did want independence and mostly lived in the North. 40-50%

Neutralists did not choose sides and were found all over. 30-50% They did not want to pick a side because it could result in danger and life threat.

100

Closed the port of Boston

Took away Massachusetts' self government

Allowed British officials to be tried in Britain

Forced colonists to house British soldiers

Intolerable act

100

Who wrote the D of I?

Jefferson

100

"A free country. A free country."

John Adams

200

What did the U.S. gain after the war?

Independence, all land from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi River, from Canada to Florida. British had to leave

200

How did women contribute to the war?


Nurses, cooks, spies, and soldiers in secret. Debrah Sampson, and Sally Saint Claire. when the men were off fighting in the war, the women maintained the farms, ran the businesses, and helped produce guns and cannons.


200

This act let Britain sell cheaper tea but kept the tax, making colonists feel their rights were being ignored and leading to the Boston Tea Party.

Tea act

200

First section

Also called the preamble, this section says:


  • Sometimes a people need to break away from a government.

  • When they do, they should explain why to the rest of the world.

  • All people are created equal.

  • People are born with natural rights, like life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

  • Governments exist to protect those rights.

  • If a government fails to do that, the people have the right to change or get rid of it and create a new one.

So basically, the government should help, not hurt.

200

"I'm not a Virginian, I'm American."

Patrick Henry

300

What did the British gain after the war?

The colonists had to pay back any debt they owed. The colonists had to give back anything they took from the Loyalists.

300

Lexington and Concord

Lexington and Concord were the first battles of the war (not counting Boston Massacre)

Minutemen, or colonists resisted in Lexington, and fought back at Concord

They sort of started the war, triggered by British troops marching to seize colonial arms in Concord

British's side: 73 killed, 174 wounded

Colonist's side: 49 killed, 39 wounded, 5 missing

300

The Continental Act was an agreement by the colonies to boycott British goods in protest of unfair British laws.

Continental act

300

Second section

This part lists all the complaints the colonists had against King George III.


Basically, it says:


  • The king abused his power

  • He made unfair laws

  • He taxed the colonies without consent

  • He took away colonists’ rights

  • He controlled courts and the military unfairly

The point of this section is to prove that the king was a bad ruler and justified breaking away from Britain.

300

"May the sword of the parent never be stained by the blood of their children."

John Dickinson

400

Differences between Radicals and Moderates

Radicals: Wanted big, immediate changes in government.

  • Often supported full independence from Britain.

  • Willing to take risks or fight to achieve their goals.

Short version: Radicals wanted major changes and were ready to act fast.

Moderates: Preferred small, gradual changes.

  • Often wanted to work with Britain instead of breaking away immediately.

  • Tried to avoid conflict when possible.

Short version: Moderates wanted slower changes and tried to stay peaceful.

400

The Stamp Act taxed paper goods and made colonists protest unfair British taxation.

Stamp act

400

Third section

This is the “we’re done” part.

It says:


  • The colonies are free and independent states

  • They no longer answer to Britain

  • They have the power to:


    • Make war

    • Form alliances

    • Trade with other countries

    • Govern themselves


This section officially cuts political ties with Great Britain.

400

"We will now all hang together or surely all hang separately."

Ben Franklin

500

Timeline

French and Indian War 1754-1763

Navigation Acts of 1756

Proclamation of 1763

Sugar Act of 1764

Currency Act of 1764

Quartering Act of 1765

Stamp Act of 1765

Townshend Acts of 1767

Boston Massacre 1770

Tea Act of 1773

Boston Tea Party 1773

Intolerable Acts/Coercive Acts of 1774

Battles of Lexington and Concord 1775

Battle of Bunker Hill 1775

Declaring Independence 1776

The Battle of Saratoga 1777

The Battle at Yorktown in 1781

Treaty of Paris 1783



500

The Proclamation Act of 1763 was a British law that banned colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains to avoid conflicts with Native Americans, which angered colonists who wanted land and felt Britain was limiting their freedom.

Proclamation Act

500

"No gentleman by declaring independence unprepared as we are would be to brave a storm in a skiff made of paper."

John Dickinson

M
e
n
u