...pretty. All that matters is the final result. The Patriots were able to escape Sunday’s contest against division enemy New York 30-23. It was another win that maybe was not the most beautiful thing to watch, but the job was done nonetheless. The Patriots were trailing in the fourth quarter for the first time all season, but the important thing was that they did not panic. Tom Brady delivered another masterful performance, throwing for 355 yards and two touchdowns. The offensive line allowed three sacks against the vaunted Jets’ defensive line, however they were all in the first half. Patriots’ Head Coach showed once again why he is one of the best in game adjusters in the league. One key factor in this game was the Patriots’ inability to hold on to the football. They had ten...
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...If they mean to have war, let it begin here.¨ - John Parker (1729-1775). I feel the Revolutionary War was revolutionary with things bad that happened along the way. The war was revolutionary because it allowed independence to come to all the colonists, and allowed them to part away from Britain. The commander-in-chief during this war was George Washington. George Washington played a very big role and was in charge of making decisions, but kept his plan secret from his own men. The person that was mainly by his side through it all was Friedrich Von Steuben. George Washington chose Von Steuben because of how strong and fearless he was. Washington's soldiers were trained by Von Steuben to be less fearful and stronger than ever before. Something...
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...2011 Introduction The American Revolution began in 1775. It was a war fought between Great Britain and thirteen British colonies. It was also called the American Revolutionary War, United States War of Independence. The conflict between the British troops and the colonist began in Lexington and Concord Massachusetts when the Patriots (colonists who rebelled against British control) fired at British Soldiers in April 1775. Tensions were mounting from the Patriots or colonists, who were an angry about having to pay British taxes with little or no parliament representation. The Patriots wanted their independence from British rule and the opportunity to form the own government system. Although the war was originally a civil war between the British and the thirteen colonies, it quickly turned into an international conflict. This war lasted for eight years. “The turmoil of the revolution disrupted traditional class and social relationships and helped transform the lives of people who had long been relegated to the social periphery---African Americans, women and Indians.” Role of Women in the American Revolutionary War During the American Revolution, women played an active role in the British and American armies. Many of these women were wives and daughters of the soldiers. A lot of the women made small contributions to the war, but those contributions were life changing. With their men off to war, the women took up the men’s labor in addition to their roles as homemakers...
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...notable intellectual paradoxes in American history is how the founding fathers could promote the equal rights of man and their perceived enslavement by the crown while simultaneously holding a fifth of their own population in bondage. Another question that plaques the history of this great nation is why abolition, or widespread emancipation, did not occur at this period in time when revolutionary and republican rhetoric existed alongside of anti-slavery sentiments. A case can be made that Americans were speaking more loudly for the end of political enslavement, rather than the freedom of slaves themselves. The exclusion of slaves from the political forefront made it easier for Americans to make these hypocritical claims. Whether or not whites were able to justify themselves the exclusion of the black community from their cries for freedom, the parallels revolutionary rhetoric had on their own condition were not lost on slaves. Many took advantage of the revolutionary crisis and ran away and joined either side in hopes to attain their own independence. There reasons that Blacks chose to join the revolutionary fight are as varied as the individuals who made them. The motives were, at times, a desire for adventure and a belief in justice and the cause of the revolution, but the more likely reasoning behind their joining was the promise of a monetary reward and eventually freedom from bondage. This appears to be backed up by, Gary B. Nash, in “The African American Revolution,” when he...
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...The Revolutionary war started on April 19, 1775. This brutal war caused many men to lose their lives by fighting for what they believed in. The British, Patriots, and the Hessians all fought in the Revolutionary War. The Hessians were highly trained mercenaries with skills like no other. They played a significant role in the Revolution by helping the British Army fight against the Patriots. The Hessians were German soldiers that were hired by the British army to help fight with them during the war. Eight thousand of these men were sold to the British king for seven pounds a piece. These men were the definition of extraordinary soldiers. They were taught to fight at a young age and were excellent in school. They were the best known army to be by your side at this time. The American people gave them the nickname the “Hessians” because they...
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...flag How it was like the war We played capture the flag representing the revolutionary war on Friday last week during class. The British was the red team, the blue team represented the Americans, and the white was the French. The blue team had to get the flag to win and they needed to win the war against the red team. The war lasted for a long time. There was a few amount of small battles because of the revolutionary war. We played capture the flag to show what happened in the revolutionary war. In the capture the flag game we played six rounds. The first round Mr. D had one flag on each side. In round two Mr. D said that one person on the blue team wouldn't receive a prize even though everyone else beside that one person on...
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...Massachusetts, Patriots drove the royal officials out of every colony and assembled in mass meetings and conventions. Those Patriot governments in the colonies then unanimously empowered their delegates to Congress to declare independence. In 1776, Congress created an independent nation, the United States of America. With large-scale military and financial support from France and military leadership by General George Washington, the American Patriots won the Revolutionary War. The peace treaty of 1783 gave the new nation the land east of the Mississippi River (except Florida and Canada). The central government established by the Articles of Confederation proved ineffectual at providing stability, as it had no authority to collect taxes and had no executive officer. Congress called a convention to meet secretly in Philadelphia in 1787 to revise the Articles of Confederation. It wrote a a new Constitution, which was adopted in 1789. In 1791, a Bill of Rights was added to guarantee inalienable rights. With Washington as the Union's first president and Alexander Hamilton his chief political and financial adviser, a strong central government was created. When Thomas Jefferson became president he purchased the Louisiana Territory from France, doubling the size of the US. A second and last war with Britain was fought in 1812. All thirteen colonies united in a Congress that called on the colonies to write new state constitutions. After armed conflict began in Massachusetts, Patriots drove the...
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...A great victory was attained for Britain in 1763 during the French and Indian War, which brought much debt from the battles and all land conquered. This forced the British to impose many taxation policies to the colonists of America, and after imposing and repealing the Stamp Act, the British attempted numerous more approaches of actions that in turn led to many protests by the colonists, including the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party. These rebellions where not of how high the taxes were, but that there wasn’t direct representation in the parliament for them. This furthered British suppressions and organizations of the colonial militias called “Loyalists” to move against the “Patriots”, colonists who were against the government, and...
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...First Continental Congress- gathering of colonial leaders who were deeply troubled about the relationship between Great Britain and its colonies in America Patriots- Colonists who chose to fight for independence from Great Britain Minutemen- local militia who got their name because they were always ready to fight Second Continental Congress- second group of delegates from colonies Continental Army- included soldiers from all colonies, carried out the fight against Britain George Washington- 1733-1799 Revolutionary war patriot, represenative of Continental Congresses, elected two terms as president Battle of Bunker Hill- famous conflict launched from Breed’s Hill Common Sense- 47-page pamphlet that was distributed in Philadelphia in January 1776 Thomas Paine- author of Common Sense Thomas Jefferson- 1743-1826 member of two Continental Congresses, chairman of committee to draft Declaration of Independence, Declaration’s main author, third president Declaration of Independence- formally announced the colonies’ break from Great Britain. Loyalists- colonists who choose to side with Britain Mercenaries- foreign soldiers who fought not out of loyalty, but for pay Battle of Trenton- was an important Patriot victory Battle of Saratoga- in New York, turning point of Revolutionary War Marquis de Lafayette- officer thought American Revolution was important, helped finance the revolution, served as a major general Baron Friedrich von Steuben- 1730-1794 Prussian soldier who...
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...“Come, my little girl, drink a glass of wine with me for the last time, for I am going to the hill tomorrow and I shall never come off”, quoted by a soldier going into battle at The Battle of Bunker Hill. The British won the Battle of Bunker Hill. What do you know about the Battle of Bunker Hill? Have you heard about it? This battle is important to the Revolutionary war because of its causes, leaders, and effects. The battle of bunker hill was an extension of the battles of lexington and concord, fought in 1775. Following lexington and concord the british withdrew to Boston.While in Boston, the british had a change in command in contemplated their next move. The british were planning to send troops to the hills from Boston. About 2,200...
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...stay. There were a lot of people who wanted to stay part of Britain and stay British citizens. These individuals were called loyalists. These people were colonists who fought for Great Britain and the Monarchy during the war and also after the war. During the War, Loyalists made up 15–20 percent of the population.Their enemies were the Patriots. They were the colonists who were also group of people who fought. The british and canadian believed that the loyalists are the magnificent ones. The Revolutionary War lasted right about 10 years. Many loyalists lived in New York. The loyalists started the Revolutionary War because the colonists were tired of all the games they were playing. All they wanted was just freedom. So the Patriots fought for freedom....
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...University of Phoenix Material Causes and Outcomes of the Revolution Part 1: Causes Complete the grid by describing each pre-war event and explaining how it contributed to the Revolutionary War. |Pre-war event |Description |Contribution to the Revolutionary War | |French and Indian War|The French and Indian War was a war that was fought between the British America |After the French and Indian War, England attempted to tighten and “flex” its control over| | |colonies and New France. This particular war resulted in a British victory over |the British colonies. Some of the actions and laws of the British crown angered the | | |the French, in addition to territorial changes as well. |colonist, thus, later contributing to the Revolutionary War. | |Sugar Act |In 1764 British Parliament passed the Sugar Act which reduced the tax rate on |The Sugar Act and the reactions of the colonist to the act greatly contributed to | | |molasses; and was strictly enforced. In addition, the Sugar Act also listed many|Revolutionary War. With strict enforcement of the Sugar Act and the tax, colonists were | | |other foreign goods to be taxed as well. |unable to evade...
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...George Washington Shaped America into Greatness Amanda Villeso American History Mr. David 4-24-17 “Give me liberty or give me death”(“Patrick Henry’s “Liberty or Death” Speech.”). George Washington definitely applied this saying when fighting in the Revolutionary War. Washington being called the Father of His Country has done many wonderful things for everyone. Being the leader of the Patriots, he had lived a successful and long life. Thomas Jefferson said “On the whole, his character was, in its mass, perfect, in nothing bad, in a few points indifferent; and it may truly be said that never did a nature and fortune combine more perfectly to make a man great…” (“Revolutionary-War.net.” “Greatest Stories Ever Told”) To think it all started here and in the end people like Jefferson would be saying things like this about him. George Washington’s family, education, and military career has helped America become a better country for all....
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...Revolution~DBQ The Revolutionary War is revolutionary in the social, political and economic factors in day to day life. Although it is widely disputed, there is reason behind it’s “revolutionary” standpoint, meaning that it is radically new or innovative and outside or beyond established procedure and principles. In Document #1 there is a group of patriots pulling down the Royal Statue in New York, during the 1770’s, showing how the Patriots were looking for a new and innovative government and political force to lead them under the tyranny of the crown. Also, Document #5 shows that 5 states ended up abolishing slavery within 1 year of the end of the Revolutionary War in 1783. And that started a trend throughout America up until slavery was...
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...How the Patriots contended at the Battle of Bunker Hill. The battle of Bunker Hill was very significant for the Americans because this was the first battle they had that made the Americans look like a contender. The reason the patriots had a chance was because of their leader William Prescott. This battle was also the turning point of the American Revolution. Because of William Prescott commanding the Americans contended at Bunker Hill. James L Nelson says in his book, With Fire and Sword, the Patriots required to be identical patient at Bunker Hill (267). The patriots obligated to wait until daylight to move at the British. The British’s objective was to circle around the Americans. The British wanted...
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