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Chapter 8 - America Secedes from the Empire Flashcards

Chapter 8 - America Secedes from the Empire (1775-1783) Timeline & Definitions

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507472974The Second Continental Congress selects who to head the army besieging Boston?George Washington0
507472975April 1775 - July 1776the colonists were both affirming their loyalty to the king by sincerely voicing their desire to patch up difficulties while at the same time raising armies and killing redcoats.1
507472976May 1775a tiny American force under Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold captured the British garrisons at Ticonderoga and Crown Point. There, a store of gunpowder and artillery was secured.2
507472977June 1775the colonists captured Bunker Hill. The British took it back with a large number of soldiers.3
507472978July 1775the Second Continental Congress adopted the "Olive Branch Petition".4
507472979Olive Branch Petitionwhich professed American loyalty to the king and begged to the king to stop further hostilities. The petition was rejected by the king. With the rejection, the Americans were forced to choose to fight to become independent or to submit to British rule and power.5
507472980August 1775King George III proclaimed that the colonies were in rebellion. He then hired German Hessians to bring order to the colonies.6
507472981October 1775the British burned Falmouth (Portland), Maine. In the same month, colonists made an attack on Canada in hopes that it would close it off as a possible source for a British striking point. The attack failed when General Richard Montgomery was killed.7
507472982January 1776the British set fire to Norfolk.8
507472983transatlantic communityThe Americans continued to deny any intention of independence because loyalty to the empire was deeply ingrained; many Americans continued to consider themselves apart of the mother country of Britain; colonial unity was poor; and open rebellion was dangerous.9
507472984Thomas Painereleased a pamphlet called Common Sense in 1776. It argued that the colonies had outgrown any need for English domination and that they should be given independence.10
507472985RepublicanismThomas Paine called for the creation of a new kind of political society, specifically a republic, where power flowed from the people themselves.11
507472986July 2, 1776Richard Henry Lee of Virginia's resolution of declaring independence was passed. It was the formal declaration of independence by the American colonies.12
507472987July 4, 1776The Declaration of Independence was formally approved by Congress on this date. Thomas Jefferson was appointed to draft up the Declaration of Independence. It was an explanation of everything the king had done to the Americans.13
507472988PatriotsDuring the War of Independence, they were called "Whigs."14
507472989LoyalistsDuring the War of Independence, they were called "Tories"15
507472990Tory"a thing whose head is in England, and its body in America, and its neck ought to be stretched."16
507472991Loyalistsmade up 16% of the American population. Many people of education and wealth remained loyal to England.17
507472992Loyalistswere most numerous where the Anglican church was strongest.18
507472993Loyalistswere well entrenched in New York City, Charleston, Quaker Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. They were least numerous in New England.19
507472994Patriotswere numerous where Presbyterianism and Congregationalism flourished-mostly in New England.20
507472995Before the Declaration of Independencethe Loyalists were treated relatively mild.21
507472996After the Declaration of Independencethe Loyalists were hanged, imprisoned, and roughly handled. The Loyalists were forced to leave because the Patriots had to eliminate their weaknesses.22
507472997March 1776The British concentrated New York City as a base of operation due to the fact that Boston was evacuated.23
507472998Battle of Long IslandIn 1776, General Washington and his men were overpowered by the British. Washington and his men escaped to Manhattan Island.24
507472999General William HoweGeneral Washington's adversary.25
507473000December 26, 1776Washington surprised and captured 1,000 Hessians who were sleeping.26
507473001Burgoyne's Blundering InvasionLondon officials had an intricate scheme for capturing the vital Hudson River valley in 1777. It would sever New England from the rest of the states and paralyze the American cause. The main invading force, lead by General Burgoyne, would push down the Lake Champlain route from Canada. General Howe's troops in New York, if needed, could advance up the Hudson River to meet Burgoyne near Albany. The 3rd force was commanded by colonel Barry St. Leger, who would come in from the west by way of Lake Ontario and the Mohawk Valley.27
507473002October 17, 1777General Burgoyne was forced to surrender his entire command at Saratoga to American general Horatio Gates (Burgoyne's Blunder). This win made it possible for the urgently needed foreign aid from France. (Turning point in war.)28
507473003April 1775After the shooting at Lexington, French secretly provided arms to the Americans.29
507473004French AllianceThe British offered the Americans home rule after the Battle of Saratoga. The French didn't want Britain to regain its colonies for fear that Britain would seize the sugar rich French West Indies. In order to stop this, the French made an open alliance with the Americans in 1778, offering all the British did with the exception of independence.30
5074730051779Spain and Holland became allies against Britain. The British decided to evacuate Philadelphia and concentrate their strength in New York City.31
507473006General Benedict Arnoldturned traitor against the Americans in 1780.32
507473007General Nathaniel Greenesucceeded in clearing most British troops out of Georgia and South Carolina.33
507473008The Treaty of Fort StanwixIn 1784 the first treaty between the United States and an Indian nation; signed with the Iroquois.34
507473009George Rogers Clarkconceived the idea of capturing the British of the wild Illinois country in 1778-1779.35
507473010John Paul Jonesis known as the father of the navy. He employed the tactic of privateering.36
507473011Privateeringwhen privately owned and crewed vessels were authorized by a government during a wartime to attack and capture enemy vessels, men, cargo, etc; it diverted manpower from the main war effort; it brought in needed gold, harassed the enemy, and raised American morale by providing victories in a time when victories were few.37
5074730121780-1781the U.S. government fell nearly bankrupt.38
507473013General CornwallisBritish fell back to Chesapeake Bay at Yorktown to await seaborne supplies and reinforcements. This time in war was one of the few times when British naval superiority had been lacking.39
507473014Admiral de Grasseoffered to join the Americans in an assault of Cornwallis via the sea. George Washington, along with Rochambeau's army, and Admiral de Grasse cornered Cornwallis. He was forced to surrender on October 19, 1781.40
5074730151782a Whig ministry replaced the Tory regime of Lord North.41
507473016Treaty of Paris of 1783British formally recognized the independence of the United States. Florida is given to Spain. Britain granted generous boundaries, stretching to the Mississippi on the west, to the Great Lakes on the north, and to Spanish Florida on the south. Yankees were to retain a share in the priceless fisheries of Newfoundland. The Loyalists were to no longer be prosecuted. Congress was to recommend to the state legislatures that confiscated Loyalist property be restored. The states vowed to put no lawful obstacles in the way of Loyalist property collection.42
507473017Negotiated the peace terms with BritainBen Franklin, John Adams, and John Jay.43

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