An Empire Transformed
The Costs of War
The great war for empire = lot of debt for the british
national debt soared from £75 million to £133 million
Debt was made 60% of the nations budget go bye bye → so ministry had to increase the taxes on everything
taxes were everywhere
Land (owned by the rich people)
Consumables (things that can be consumed)
Sales taxes were placed on all kinds of ordinary goods like SALT, ALCHOHOL, BRICKS, CANDLES, PAPER
Stuff that the poor people used
1760s, the per capita tax burden was 20 percent of income
→ per capita tax burden: a FLAT tax that everyone has to pay (thats an adult)
To collect the taxes, the govt increased the size of the tax bureaucracy
Customs agents started patrolling agents around borders of england and started seizing goods from different countries.
omg maybe this is where like airport customs and stuff came from…
If people were caught smuggling they could be shipped to america as indentured servants. This happened to 50,000 people.
Weirdly enough the colonists didnt like this and protested this.
The radical whigs and the country party where to different political partys who complained about the war debt that turned into taxes for them
Felt that the government was turning and they would not get any personal liberties. THEY WERE ALSO TRYING TO REVERSE THE GROWTH OF THE GOVT
To reverse the growth british reformers decided that they wanted parliament to have more representation among all groups of citizens.
John Wilkes (radical whig) wanted more repesentation for commercial and manufacturing cities.
This war transformed british politics
The war made britain realize they were pretty useless to the colonies
Held the same amount of power as the town committees in massachusetts
Since the british are petty, they decided that they would enforce trade duties
Trade duties are basically just taxes that are made by the govt on different imported goods.
REVENUE ACT - the royal navy seized american crops that were going on vessels to/from the west indies.
The british now started to worry about …
Rebellion from the 60k french residents in canada
They were newly conquered colony for the british from the french
Rebellion from the natives (they already did it before with pontiac's rebellion)
a substantial military force would deter land-hungry whites from defying the Proclamation of 1763 and settling west of the Appalachian Mountains
Colonist loyalty
They no longer faced a threat from french canada so politicians though they would no longer care
British were scared to see the ending, so they thought why are we pretending this is nothing
They basically ended up deploying 15 royal bataloons (7500 troops) to north america
This ended up being a bad idea and put the british boys into more debt → greatest new post- war expenses were being incurred in North America
George Grenville and The Reform Impulse
George grenville was the dude that had to raise revenue from the colonies
People thought that he was able for the job → he understood the importance for imperial revenue
THE CURRENCY ACT
Made sure that all of the colonists would only use british bills istead of bills the colonists made themselves
This boosted their profits and british wealth
THE SUGAR ACT
Replaced the molasses act
Taxed 3 pence per gallon which meant that the people could still make a good profit
Tightened customs so that they would definitely get taxes
People still vowed to smuggle the molasses or just bribe officials
Publicly, the merchants claimed that the Sugar Act would ruin the distilling industry
américa no le gustó
Ending salutary neglect
Colonists said that the acts were not allowed and they raised constitutional objections against the sugar acts.
Now if any mechants were prosecuted under the sugar act they went to vice-admiralty courts, tribunals governing the high seas and run by British-appointed judges.
Now if you wnet against any customs act you had to face mean courts with mean people
Before they used to go to nice juries for breaking the Navigation acts
The sugar act = old american fears
Colonists argued that colonists should be treated equally to citizens in england
Though this was degrading to americans
BUT THIS IS NOT TRUE
Smuggler in britain were also tried under vice-adnirality courts.
No discrimination
Issue = british power
Since they were under salutary neglect for so long, once the british paid attention to them, they felt attacked.
This was kind of continued by actual brits
imperial reformers though that Americans were second-class subjects of the king, with rights limited by the Navigation Acts, parliamentary laws, and British interests.
An Open Challenge: The Stamp Act
STAMP ACT = FIRST IMPERIAL CRISIS
Made to cover the cost of keeping the british troops in america
act would require a tax stamp on all printed items, from college diplomas, court documents, land titles, and contracts to news- papers, almanacs, and playing cards. It was ingeniously designed.
The act HURT THE RICH MORE THAN THE POOR
Benjamin franklin had a solution
He wanted one of the americans to be a member of the legislature
He was refused
They thought that he was too radical or sth
Brits said they already had virtual representation
Some members were sugra planters so technically they actually had no representation and the british = liars
Colonial leaders also doubted poor old franklin
They though that because of how far away they were from each other (the country and colonies) it would be hard
Brits ignored american opposition and decided to tax like their life depended on it
QUARTERING ACT
Requested by general thomas gage
Required colonists/colonial govt to give housing and food and that sorta stuff to the british troops
Parliament approved Grenville’s proposal that violations of the Stamp Act be tried in vice-admiralty courts.
HE STARTED TO MAKE AN IMPERIAL SYST IN AMERICA LIKE IRELAND!!!!!
British officials would govern the colonies with little regard for the local assemblies
This plan brough questions.
Taxation?
Jury trials?
Military housing?
Representation in self govt?
The Dynamics of Rebellion
Formal Protests and the Politics of the Crowd
The house of burgesses was the first formal group to start complaining about this
Patrick henry denounced grenville’s legislation and said some things that border on treason. Quickly started to scare the house of burgesses; they condemned the stamp act too
James otis had the house of reps call a meeting to find relief from the act
The Stamp Act Congress
Nine different assemblies sent delegates to the congress
Protested the loss of american glory aka rights and liberty
Especially focused on trial by jury
challenged the constitutionality of both the Stamp and Sugar Acts by declaring that only the elected representatives could tax them.
Some people were peaceful for some reason, so they decided on compromise not confrontation
They ‘humbly’ asked for a repeal
And would boycott british products
Crowd Acts
Since people were mad, they obvi had ‘disiblined mobs’ who demanded the resignation of stamp collector people
Considered violent action?
The sons of liberty were quite serious
They burned a statue of collector, Andrew OLiver
Then they destroyed his house :(
They even broke into his brother in laws house (but it ws fine bc he was a defender of the imperial authority)
John hancock and john adams encouraged the mobs
Mostly artisans and poor people in mobs
3,000 people came to the streets and screamed ‘liberty’ for a while
Resistance of the stamp act really started catching fire and spreading all around to other colonies.
The motives of the crowd
The great awakening made evalengelical proetstants hate on arrogant British military officers and corrupt royal bureaucrats.
In new england, rioters had anti-monarchy ideas from their ancestors
In new york radical whigs feared imperial reform and thought it would undermine political liberty
Mob = apprentices+day laborers+unemplyoed sailors+drunk peeps
They were the most patriotic (and thought they were right) when they drunk
The popular resistance was the stamp act
Collectors were constantly scared and some of theme even asked for military protection
Collectors would resign out of fear
Political insurrection gave a democratic cast to the emerging Patriot movement. → i honestly have no idea what it means but it could me important
The Idealogical Roots of Resistance
Some people tried to resist sophisticatedly (ew)
They would write pamphlets and other smart people documents
They drew on three intellectual traditions
English common law
Rules that protected the lives of the monarchs subjects
People would basically just write stuff arguing that they weren’t being treated according to the rules
Enlightenment rationalism
Used ideas of john locke and the natural rights - life, liberty, property
Governments must protect it
Also used the ideas of montesqui and separation of powers - legislative, executive, judicial branch
republican and Whig strands of the English political tradition
colonists praised the English Whigs for creating a constitutional monarchy that prevented the king from imposing taxes and other measures.
Some people though that the stamp act was made to make the colonists protests
These letters were circulated far and wide and they became an early call for the restsantce
Another Kind of Freedom
Patriots = no taxation; other colonists = bye bye slavery
Patriot writers felt like they were slaves bc they were taxed without reps
Ben franklin and james otis were one of many that though actual chattel slavery was wrong
Violated natural rights
African americans were making these connections as well and were wanting freedom
No slaves was not received well in the south
Slavery = economy in sout
Slaves wanted to win their freedom
They did this by supporting british troops
James madison stopped this from occurring
He understood how important it was to defend the colonists’ liberties without allowing the idea of natural rights to undermine the institution of slavery.
Parliament and Patriots Square Off
Parliament was feeling pressure
They were in turmoil by the time the news of riots and mobs were brought to britain.
They decided it was time for the stamp acts to rip
Declaratory acts of 17something → 1766
This reaffirmed parliament powers to make laws that affected the colonists
Their true goal was to just get rid of all the turmoil that was being caused
Charles Townshend Steps In
When governor, william pitt, was ill and unable to go to parliament debates, charles townshend stepped in
Townshend was not nice to america
He sought restrictions on colonial assemblies
Supported the stamp act
Wanted to find new source of revenue for america
The Townshend Act of Legislation
Imposed duties on colonial imports
Paper
Paint
Glass
Tea
Raised to £40,000 a year.
Most of this went to the salaries of royal governors, judges, and imperial officials. Only a little bit went to the military
He did this so that officials would make parliament laws and carry out what the king said
devised the Revenue Act of 1767
a board of customs commissioners in Boston and vice admiralty courts in Halifax, Boston, Philadelphia, and Charleston.
He used parliamentary taxes to finance imperial administration
Townshend intended to undermine American political institutions.
Townshend duties revived the constitutional debate over taxation
Made the difference between external taxes(trade, mandated by navigation acts) and internal taxes(direct) even though he did NOT LIKE DISTINCTION
He indulged this and laid dute only on trade
A Second Boycott and the Daughters of Liberty
Colonial leaders did not lkie townshends actions
The massachusetts got together and condemned toenshend acts
Boston and new york merchants boycotted british goods
Started promotic domestic meatrials that they made in america
Women became very involved because nonimportation movement
They were reducing materials that their families were using
Mostly cutting back on imported goods consumption
They also helped en with boycotting
They spun wool and flaw for the needy
Newspapers celebrated the women
One town in massachusetts had 30,000 yards of cloth in one year from the women
The best things was it bringing more women out into the public eye
This surge in all of the domestic products did not entirely offset the loss of british products
The boycott mobilized american men
Sons of liberty did a lot from harassing people who bought the wrong things to publishing their merchants names so they would be publicly humiliated
The virginia house of burgesses vowed not to buy dutied articles, luxury goods, or imported slaves.
This showed the strength of bigger companies to all of the colonists
Even though this all seemed good, there were problems
There was pressure on anyone who resisted this
Caused a break in society
Merchants were now forced into buying and selling products a certain way
This became more profound as the imperial crisis continued
Troops to Boston
The americans trying to resist the british only made them try harder
American resistance to the Stamp Act had sparked a parliamentary debate
in 1768, it provoked a plan for military coercion.
To strengthen the hand in government that massachusetts had, they sent 2,000 troops
The Problem of the West
Ministries have been fighting
They did not know how to manage the lot of territory that they got form the treaty of paris
There was the line between colonists and the indians but now it was going to be broken
But the proclamation made THREE NEW CITIES
Quebec
East florida
West florda
Sadly, the colonists wanted to move west
Officers who fought in the war also got land grants that made them want to move over
Multiple groups wanted to got west
People who invested in numerous land speculation com- panies were petitioning the crown for large land grants in the Ohio country
Officers who had fought in the 7 years war and gotten land grants
Indian traders who had land grants from ohio indians who wanted to sell land titles
SQUATTERS who wanted to get a land title later
All of this activity antagonized the ohio indians
Helping them, shawnees got together with them and decided that they were not going to support westward expansion
They formed the Scioto Confederacy
In england, they thought that the proclamation line should have been permanent
A colonial secretary, greensborough, did not want any westward expanision bc he thought that it antagonized the indians and it would not benefit the english
BUT IN REALITY
He just had land in ireland and was scared by the number of people who were leaving for the new world and wanted to keep his tenants
But colonists were already moving west in large numbers so eventually, they took matters into their own hands
Idk what happens to them after this they ended that section on a cliffhanger
Parliament Waivers
Something good finally came out of the colonies agreeing!
Since the colonists agreed on nonimported goods for consumption there was a lot of back up in british trade
Basically, merchants → not selling, so, merchants = mad.
Merchants = mad → show their anger on parliaments
Merchants say REPEAL TOWNSHEND ACTS
Since the parliament was a baby who made no choices for themselves, they said OK
But they still did tax the North with tea bc they wanted to show they still had some control
The boston massacre
There was an evergrowing rift between patriots and parliament
There were SO MANY troops in boston for over a year and half (and in ny and nj and pa)
Pls figure out what these stand for on ur own, u made it this far
There was not a lot of violence with the troops btw
In a small part of boston 10% of population = soldiers
This did cause a dsipute where a group of nine British redcoats fired into a crowd and killed five townspeople.
It happened on March 5, 1770
A day before my sisters birthday!
She was born in 2005 tho
The soldiers were let free after a trial
Colonists viewed this as an abuse of imperial power
Sovereignty Debated
After the boston massacre and the colonies recieved the news, they had emotions. 🥹
They were getting fed up after many years of conflict
Ben franklin
Patrick henry
Sam adams
They all refused parliament supremacy and DEMANDED equality for american assemblies
Franklin even had an idea!
He suggested that the colonies were now different states joined by a king… thats it
BUT it still made people mad he acatually said, “no line that can be drawn between the supreme author- ity of Parliament and the total independence of the colonies.”
I have no idea what this means
Moral of the story, the british were bad to america. America said ‘not today’ and they fought.
There was violence bc americans are violent
And they were ready to be violent again
Honestly, i feel so patriotic rn.
Like people around me legit just stood up and said the pledge of allegiance. (granted the morning announcements are playing rn but whatever)
The Road to Independence (1771-1776)
A Compromise Repudiated
The towns talked to each other!
Samuel Adams established a committee of correspondence and formed a communication network between Massachusetts towns for colonial rights.
The burning of the Gaspée roused other states to have their own committees!
Virginia
Connecticut
South Carolin
New Hampshire
Used correspondence that would communicate with other colonies. 📱
The committees sprang into action after the passage of the Tea Act, which relieved the British East India Company of paying taxes on tea it imported to Britain or exported to the colonies.
The Tea Act made the East India Company’s tea less expensive than Dutch tea, which encouraged Americans to pay the Townshend duty.
The Patriots made the Tea Act basically nothing by forcing the East India Company’s ships to return tea to Britain or to store it in public warehouses.
Radical Patriots accused the ministry of bribing Americans to give up their opposition to British tax.
A scheme to land a shipment of tea and collect the tax led to a group of Patriots throwing the tea into Boston Harbor.
1774 → Parliament rejected a proposal to repeal the Tea Act and instead enacted four Coercive Acts to force Massachusetts into submission.
Port bill
Govt act
New quartering act (housing for soldiers)
Justice act
THEY ARE CALLED ‘INTOLERABLE ACTS’
The activities of the committees of correspondence created a sense of unity among Patriots.
leaders saw the Quebec Act (1774) as another demonstration of Parliament’s power to intervene in American domestic affairs
Bc it extended Quebec into territory claimed by American colonies and recognized Roman Catholicism
The Continental Congress Responds
Delegates of the Continental Congress
a new colonial assembly
met in Philadelphia in September 1774 to address a set of controversial and divisive issues
Pennsylvania, Joseph Galloway’s proposal, America would have a president-general appointed by the king and a legislative council selected by the colonial assemblies.
Even though the council would have veto power over parliamentary legislation that affected America, the plan was rejected and seen as being too conciliatory.
Conciliary → intended or likely to placate or pacify.
Instead, the First Continental Congress passed a Declaration of Rights and Grievances that condemned and demanded the repeal of the Coercive Acts and repudiated the Declaratory Act.
The Congress began a program of economic retaliation, beginning with a non-importation agreement that went into effect in December 1774 (jesus’ bday!)🎄
The British ministry branded the Continental Congress an illegal assembly
refused to send commissioners to America to negotiate.
The ministry declared that Americans had to pay for their own defense and administration acknowledge Parliament’s authority to tax them
imposed a blockade on American trade with foreign nations
ordered General Gage to suppress dissent in Massachusetts.
The Rising of the Countryside
the success of the urban-led Patriot movement would depend on the actions of the large rural population.
The revolution was on the backs on farmers
Sadly most farmers had little interest in imperial issues
the French and Indian War, which had taken their sons for military duty and pre- and post-war taxes, changed their attitudes.
The urban-led boycotts of 1765 and 1769 had also raised the political consciousness of many rural Americans.
Patriots appealed to the yeomen tradition of agricultural independence
many northern yeomen felt personally threatened by British imperial policy
Despite their higher standard of living, southern slave owners had fears similar to those of the yeomen.
Loyalist Americans
prominent Americans worried that resistance to Britain would destroy respect for all political institutions, ending in mob rule.
tenant farmers, the Regulators, and some enslaved blacks → refused to support the resistance movement.
Some prominent Americans of “loyal principles” denounced the Patriot movement and formed a small, ineffective pro-British party.
but Americans who favored resistance to British rule commanded the allegiance—or at least the acquiescence—of the majority of white Americans.
Armed Resistance Begins
Continental congress meets
New England was already in open defiance of British authority.
General Gage ordered British troops to seize Patriot armories and storehouses at Charleston and Cambridge.
20k colonial militiamen mobilized to safeguard supply depots(Minutemen of Concord)
Gage dispatched soldiers to capture colonial leaders and supplies at Concord.
Forewarned by Paul Revere and others, the local militiamen met the British first at Lexington and then at Concord.
tHE BRITISH ARE COMINGGGGGG
militiamen ambushed de brits from neighboring towns with both sides suffering losses.
Twelve years of economic conflict and constitutional debate ended in civil war.
The Second Continental Congress Organizes for War
Lets try to be better
After losing battles at Breed’s Hill and Bunker Hill, in 1775 the Continental Congress created a Continental army headed by best buddy George Washington.
He was still pretty young then so i guess they just said, youre on your own now kid, and just let him go rogue
Moderates led by John Dickinson of Pennsylvania passed a petition that expressed loyalty to the king and requested the repeal of oppressive parliamentary legislation.
Zealous Patriots such as John Adams and Patrick Henry won passage of a dec of the causes and necessities of taking ap arms.
Moderates petition
The king refused the moderates’ petition and issued a Proclamation for Suppressing Rebellion and Sedition in August 1775.
Hoping to add a fourteenth colony to the rebellion, the Patriot forces invaded Canada and took Montreal in September but later failed to capture Quebec.a
American merchants cut off all exports to Britain and its West Indian sugar islands, and Parliament retaliated with a Prohibitory Act, banning trade with the rebellious colonies.
Lord Dunmore of Virginia organized two military forces and offered freedom to slaves and indentured servants who joined the Loyalist cause.
One was entirely white and the other was fully black
Faced with black unrest and pressed by yeomen and tenant farmers demanding independence, Patriot planters called for a break with Britain.
By April of 1776, Radical Patriots had, through military conflict, transformed the North Carolina assembly into an independent Provincial Congress, which instructed its representatives to support independence.
By May 1776, Virginia Patriots had followed suit bc theyre copycats😺
Thomas Paine’s Common Sense
Loyal to the crown? I think not…
Lots of colonists still claimed that they were loyal to the crown
This prob had to do with their parents and not wanting to shift the social hierarchy
By 1775, more patriots were joining the cause
Many artisans and laborers were joining the patriots
Held similar values
Many Scots-Irish in Philadelphia became Patriots for religious reasons
some well-educated persons questioned the idea of monarchy altogether.
Thomas paine wrote something
He wrote common sense
Something that seeme to be lacking in the 1770s
The book was not true to its name and instead was about independence and republicanism
However, it still managed to sell a lot of copies and made a lot of americans into patriots
People liked the book bc his message was clear
To reject the arbitrary powers of the king and Parliament and create independent republican states.
🎉INDEPENDECE DECLARED🎉
Congress approves dec of independence
On july 4, 1776
Thomas jefferson was the main author
justified the revolt by blaming the rupture on George III rather than on Parliament.
Jeffie also said that every man was equal he had many slaves and that they posses life, liberty, AND EQUALITY?!?!?!
Like what? Did he have short term memory loss and just forget about his hundreds of slaves??
We found ourselves a hypocrite
Governments also needed consent of the governened for power
Individual liberty
popular sovereignty, and republican government with independence, Jefferson established them as defining values of the new nation.
Ok but i dont like him
We all read travels with george and i formed some opinions about this ‘mastermind’
Colonists celebrated the Declaration by burning George III in effigy and toppling statues of the king; these acts helped to break the ties to the monarch and to establish the legitimacy of republican state governments.
Effigy- sculpture or model of a person
This was the beginning of a beautiful democracy