Unit 3: Path to Independence & Republicanism, 1763-1789
Chapter 5: The Problem of Empire, 1763-1776
Unit 3: Path to Independence & Republicanism, 1763-1789
An Empire Transformed
I.The Costs of Empire
- Pontiac’s Rebellion
- Proclamation of 1763
II.George Grenville and the Reform Impulse
- George Grenville
- The Sugar Act (1764)
- The End of Salutary Neglect
- vice-admiralty courts
III.An Open Challenge: The Stamp Act
- Stamp Act of 1765
- virtual representation
- Quartering Act of 1765
The Dynamics of Rebellion, 1765-1770
I.Formal Protests and the Politics of the Crowd
- The Stamp Act Congress
- Stamp Act Congress
- Crowd Actions
- Sons of Liberty
- The Motives of the Crowd
II.The Ideological Roots of Resistance
- natural rights
- John Dickinson’s Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania
III.Another Kind of Freedom
IV.Parliament and Patriots Square off Again
- Declaratory Act of 1766
- Charles Townshend Steps In
- Charles Townshend
- Townshend Act of 1767
- A 2ndBoycott the Daughters of Liberty
- nonimportation movement
- Troops to Boston
V.The Problem of the West
VI.Parliament Waivers
- Lord North
- The Boston Massacre
- Sovereignty Debated
- Samuel Adams
The Road to Independence, 1771-1776
I.A Compromise Repudiated
- committees of correspondence
- The East India Company and the Tea Act
- Tea Act of May 1773
- The Tea Party and the Coercive Acts
- Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
II.The Continental Congress Responds
- Continental Congress
III.The Rising of the Countryside
- The Continental Association
- Southern Planters Fear Dependency
IV.Loyalists and Neutrals
Violence East and West
I.Lord Dunmore’s War
- Lord Dunmore
- Dunmore’s War
II.Armed Resistance in Massachusetts
- Minutemen
III.The Second Continental Congress Organizes for War
- Second Continental Congress
- Congress Versus King George
- Fighting in the South
- Occupying Kentucky
IV.Thomas Paine’s Common Sense
- Thomas Paine
- Thomas Jefferson
- Independence Declared
- Declaration of Independence
- popular sovereignty
Unit 3: Path to Independence & Republicanism, 1763-1789
Crash Course # 6 Taxes and Smuggling
Chapter 6: Making War and Republican Governments, 1776-1789
Unit 3: Path to Independence & Republicanism, 1763-1789
The Trials of War, 1776-1778
I.War in the North
- General George Washington
- General William Howe
- Battle of Long Island (1776)
II.Armies and Strategies
III.Victory at Saratoga
- General Horatio Gates
- Battle of Saratoga (1777)
- Iroquois Confederation
IV.The Perils of War
V.Financial Crisis
- Robert Morris
VI.Valley Forge
- Valley Forge
- Baron von Steuben
The Path to Victory, 1778-1783
I.The French Alliance
II.War in the South
- Britain’s Southern Strategy
- Philipsburg Proclamation
- Guerilla Warfare in the Carolinas
- Battle of Yorktown (1781)
III.The Patriot Advantage
- currency tax
IV.Diplomatic Triumph
- Treaty of Paris of 1783
Creating Republican Institutions, 1776-1787
I.The State Constitutions: How Much Democracy?
- Pennsylvania’s Controversial Constitution
- Pennsylvania constitution of 1776
- Tempering Democracy
- mixed government
II.Women Seek a Public Voice
- Judith Sargent Murray
III.The War’s Losers: Loyalists, Native Americans, and Slaves
IV.The Articles of Confederation
- Articles of Confederation
- Continuing Fiscal Crisis
- The Northwest Ordinances
- Northwest Ordinance of 1787
V.Shays’s Rebellion
The Constitution of 1787
I.The Rise of a Nationalist Faction
II.The Philadelphia Convention
- The Virginia and New Jersey Plans
- Virginia Plan
- James Madison
- New Jersey Plan
- The Great Compromise
- Negotiations over Slavery
- National Authority
III.The People Debate Ratification
- Federalists
- The Antifederalists
- Antifederalists
- Federalists Respond
- Federalist No. 10
- The Constitution Ratified
Unit 3: Path to Independence & Republicanism, 1763-1789
Crash Course #7 Who Won the American Revolution
#8 The Constitution, the Articles, and Federalism