Battles and Strategy
Key Figures
The Treaty of Paris 1783
Vocabulary
Global and Social Impact
100

This early battle was technically a British victory because they took the hill, but the Patriots claimed a moral victory by inflicting heavy casualties.

The Battles of Bunker Hill


100

The Virginian chosen by the Second Continental Congress to serve as commander-in-chief of the Continental Army.

George Washington.

100

This nation was the United States' most important military ally and was a key reason Britain agreed to negotiate peace.

France

100

A common nickname for British soldiers due to the color of their uniforms.

Redcoats

100

Colonists who supported Britain during the war were known by this name.

Loyalists

200

Washington's surprise attack on Hessian forces after crossing the Delaware River on Christmas night, which boosted Patriot morale.

The Battle of Trenton

200

The author of the pamphlet Common Sense, which argues that colonies should not be ruled by a king.

Thomas Paine

200

The Treaty of Paris established this river as the new western boundary of the United States.

The Mississippi River

200

Local citizen-soldiers who fought alongside the Continental Army, often protecting their own towns.

Militia

200

Many enslaved people chose to join this side during the war because they were promised freedom.

The British

300

The British strategy adopted later in the war that focused on invading the Southern colonies, expecting help from Loyalists.

The Southern Campaign.

300

The British general who was forced to surrender at Yorktown, effectively ending the war.

General Charles Cornwallis

300

Under the treaty terms, this European country regained control of Florida.

Spain

300

A military tactic where an army surrounds a place to cut off supplies and force a surrender, used at Boston.

Siege

300

American independence helped inspire a revolution in this Caribbean colony (Saint-Domingue).

Haiti

400

The final major battle of the war where General Cornwallis was trapped by American troops on land and the French navy at sea.

The Battle of Yorktown.

400

The French general who marched his troops alongside Washington to help surround the British at Yorktown.

General Rochambeau

400

The treaty promised that this group of people would have their confiscated property returned to them.

Loyalists

400

The political belief that power should rest with the people and their representatives, not a monarch.

Republicanism

400

While women gained some respect for raising patriotic citizens, they still lacked this major political right after the war.

Voting

500

A hit and run fighting tactic used effectively by Patriot fighters like Francois Marion to disrupt British supply lines in the South.

Guerrilla Warfare.

500

Name the three American negotiators who represented the United States at the Treaty of Paris talks.

Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and John Jay

500

This group was completely excluded from the treaty negotiations, despite living on the land that was given to the United States.

Native American Nations

500

The term for the forced removal of people from their land, a consequence suffered by many Native Americans after the war.

Displacement

500

The American Revolution set a "precedent," which means this.

An example that others follow

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