What Was The Making Of This Nation
American Revolution Level 5
Upland Unified School District
IDEA PAGES
I. UNIT THEME
• Freedom was so important to the colonists’ that they were willing to suffer and endure at any cost.
• Brave American patriots contributed greatly to the American Revolution.
• Freedom from oppression
II. FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Cognitive Content Dictionary
• Observation Charts
• Inquiry Chart
• Teacher-made Big Books
• Realia
• Picture File Cards
• Super Historian Awards
III. CLOSURE
• Student generated test
• Cause/effect
• Portfolio
- expository
- persuasive letter
- found poem
- biography
• Process inquiry and all charts
• Personal exploration
•Class/team big books
IV. GRADE 5 CALIFORNIA STANDARDS
History/Social Studies
5.3 Students describe the cooperation and conflict that existed among the Indians and between the Indian nations and the settlers.
1. Competition among the English, French, Spanish, Dutch, and Indian Nations for control of North America.
2. Cooperation that existed between the colonists and Indians during the 1600s and 1700s.
3. Conflicts before the Revolutionary War.
4. Role of broken treaties and massacres and the factors that lead to the Indians' defeat, including the resistance of Indian nations to encroachments and assimilation.
5. Internecine Indian conflicts, including the competing claim for control.
6. Influence and achievements of significant leaders of time.
5.4 Students understand the political, religious, social, and economic institutions that evolved in the colonial era
1. Influence of location and physical setting on the founding of the original 13 colonies,
their location on a map along with the location of the American Indian nations already
inhabiting these areas.
2. Major individuals and groups responsible for the founding of the various colonies and
the reasons for their founding.
3. Religious aspects of the earliest colonies.
4. Significance and leaders of the First Great Awakening that marked a shift in religious
ideas, practices and allegiances in the colonial period; the growth of religious toleration
and free exercise.
5. The British colonial period created the basis for the development of political self
government and a free market economic system, unlike Spanish and French colonial rule.
6. Introduction of slavery into America, the responses of slave families to their condition, the ongoing struggle between proponents and opponents of slavery, and the gradual institutionalization of slavery in the South.
7. Early democratic ideas and practices that emerged during the colonial period, including the significance of representative assemblies and town meetings.
5.5 Students explain the causes of the American Revolution.
1. Political, religious, and economic ideas and interests brought about the Revolution.
2. Significance of the first and second Continental Congress and the Committees of Correspondence.
3. People and events associated with the drafting and signing of the Declaration of Independence and the document's significance, including the key political concepts it embodies, the origins of those concepts, and its role in severing ties with Great Britain.
4. Views, lives, and impact of key individuals during this period.
5.6 Students understand the course and consequences of the American Revolution.
1. Identify and map the major military battles, campaigns and turning points of the Revolutionary War, the roles of the American and British leaders, and the Indian leaders' alliances on both sides.
2. Contributions of France and other nations and individuals to the outcome of the Revolution.
3. Different roles women played during the Revolution.
4. Personal impact and economic hardship on families, problems of financing the war, wartime inflation, and laws against hoarding and profiteering.
5. State constitutions established after 1776 embodied the ideals of the American Revolution and helped serve as models for the US Constitution.
6. Significance of land policies developed under the Continental Congress.
7. Ideals of the Declaration of Independence changed the way people viewed slavery.
English Language Arts
ORAL LANGUAGE/READING/WRITING SKILLS READING
1.0 Word Analysis, Fluency, and Systematic Vocabulary
Students use their knowledge of word origins and word relationships, as well as historical and literacy context clues, to determine the meaning of specialized vocabulary and to understand the precise meaning of grade-level-appropriate words.
Word Recognition
1.1 Read aloud narrative and expository text fluently and accurately and with appropriate pacing, intonation, and expression.
Vocabulary and Concept Development
1.2 Use word origins to determine the meaning of unknown words.
1.3 Understand and explain frequently used synonyms, antonyms, and homographs.
1.4 Know abstract, derived roots and affixes from Greek and Latin and use this knowledge to analyze the meaning of complex words.
2.0 Reading Comprehension
2.1 Understand how text features make information accessible and usable.
2.2 Analyze text that is organized in sequential or chronological order.
2.3 Discern main ideas and concepts presented in texts, identifying and assessing evidence that supports those ideas.
2.4 Draw inference, conclusions, or generalizations about text and support them with textual evidence and prior knowledge.
2.5 Distinguish facts, supported inferences, and opinions in text.
3.0 Literary Response and Analysis
3.1 Identify and analyze the characteristics of poetry, drama, fiction, and non-fiction and explain the appropriateness of the literary forms chosen by an author for a specific purpose.
3.2 Identify the main problem or conflict of the plot and explain how it is resolved.
3.3 Contrast the actions, motives and appearances of characters in a work of fiction and discuss the importance of the contrasts to the plot or theme.
3.4 Understand that theme refers to the meaning or moral of a selection and recognize themes in sample works.
3.5 Describe the function and effect of common literary devices.
3.6 Evaluate the meaning of archetypal patterns and symbols that are found in myth and tradition by using literature from different eras and cultures.
3.7 Evaluate the author's use of various techniques to influence readers' perspectives.
WRITING
1.0 Writing Strategies
1.1 Create multiple-paragraph narrative compositions:
a. Establish and develop a situation or plot.
b. Describe setting.
c. Present an ending.
1.2 Create multiple-paragraph expository compositions:
a. Establish a topic, important ideas, or events in sequence or chronological order.
b. Provide details and transitional expressions that link one paragraph to another in a clear line of thought.
c. Offer a concluding paragraph that summarizes important ideas and details.
1.3 Use organizational features of printed text to locate relevant information.
1.6 Edit and revise manuscripts to improve the meaning and focus of writing by
adding, deleting, consolidating, clarifying, and rearranging words and sentences.
2.0 Writing Applications
2.1 Write narratives:
a. Establish a plot, point of view, setting, and conflict.
b. Show, rather than tell, the events of the story.
2.2 Write responses to literature:
a. Demonstrate an understanding of a literary work.
b. Support judgments through references to the text and to prior knowledge.
c. Develop interpretations that exhibit careful reading and understanding.
2.3 Write research reports about important ideas, issues, or events by using the following guidelines:
a. Frame questions that direct the investigation.
b. Establish a controlling idea or topic.
c. Develop the topic with simple facts, details, examples, and explanations.
2.4 Write persuasive letters or compositions:
a. State a clear position in support of a proposal.
b. Support a position with relevant evidence.
c. Follow a simple organizational pattern.
d. Address reader concerns.
WRITTEN AND ORAL ENGLISH LANGUAGE CONVENTIONS
1.0 Written and Oral English Language Conventions
Students write and speak with a command of standard English conventions appropriate to this grade level.
1.1 Identify and correctly use prepositional phrases, appositives, and independent and dependent clauses; use transitions and conjunctions to connect ideas.
1.2 Identify and correctly use verbs that are often misused, modifiers, and pronouns.
1.3 Use a colon to separate hours and minutes and to introduce a list; use quotation marks around the exact words of a speaker and titles of poems, songs, short stories, and so forth.
1.4 Use correct capitalization.
LISTENING AND SPEAKING
1.0 Listening and Speaking Strategies
1. Ask questions that seek information not already discussed.
2. Interpret a speaker's verbal and nonverbal messages, purposes, and perspectives.
3. Make inferences or draw conclusions based on an oral report.
4. Select a focus, organizational structure, and point of view for an oral presentation.
5. Clarify and support spoken ideas with evidence and examples.
1.8 Analyze media as sources for information, entertainment, persuasion, interpretation of events, and transmission of culture.
2.0 Speaking Applications
2.1 Deliver narrative presentations:
a. Establish a situation, plot, point of view, and setting with descriptive words and phrases.
b. Show, rather than tell, the listener what happens.
2.2 Deliver informative presentations about an important idea, issue, or event by the following means.
a. Frame questions to direct the investigation.
b. Establish a controlling idea or topic.
c. Develop the topic with simple facts, details, examples, and explanations.
V. ELD Standards (Grade 3-5)
Comprehension
Beginning Level:
Speak with few words/sentences
Answer simple questions with one/two word response
Retell familiar stories/participate in short conversations/using gestures
Early Intermediate Level:
Ask/answer questions using phrases/simple sentences
Restate/execute multi step oral directions
Intermediate Level:
Ask/answer questions using support elements
Identify key details from stories/information
Early Advanced Level:
Identify main points/support details from content areas
Advanced Level:
Identify main points/support details from stories & subject areas
Respond to & use idiomatic expressions appropriately
Comprehension, Organization & Delivery of Oral Communication
Beginning Level:
Uses common social greetings
Early Intermediate Level:
Identify main points of simple conversations/stories (read aloud)
Communicate basic needs
Recite rhymes/songs/simple stories
Intermediate Level:
Speak with standard English grammatical forms/sounds
Participate in social conversations by asking/answering questions
Retell stories/share school activities using vocabulary, descriptive words/paraphrasing
Early Advanced Level:
Retell stories including characters, setting, plot, summary, analysis
Use standard English grammatical forms/sounds/intonation/pitch
Initiate social conversations by asking & answering questions/restating & soliciting information
Appropriate speaking based on purpose, audience, subject matter
Ask/answer instructional questions
Use figurative language & idiomatic expressions
Advanced Level:
Question/restate/paraphrase in social conversations
Speak/write based on purpose, audience, & subject matter
Identify main idea, point of view, & fact/fiction in broadcast & print media
Use standard English grammatical forms/sounds/intonation/pitch
Reading – Word Analysis
Concepts about Print, Phonemic Awareness, Decoding & Word Recognition
Beginning Level:
Recognize familiar phonemes
Recognize sound/symbol relationships in own writing
Early Intermediate Level:
Read orally recognizing/producing phonemes not in primary language
Recognize morphemes in phrases/simple sentences
Intermediate Level:
Read aloud with correct pronunciation of most phonemes
Use common morphemes in oral & silent reading
Early Advanced Level:
Use knowledge of morphemes to derive meaning from literature/texts in content areas
Advanced Level:
Use roots & affixes to derive meaning
Reading – Fluency & Systematic Vocabulary Development
Vocabulary & Concept Development
Beginning Level:
Read aloud simple words in stories/games
Respond to social & academic interactions (simple questions/answers)
Demonstrate comprehension of simple vocabulary with action
Retell simple stories with drawings, words, phrases
Uses phrases/single word to communicate basic needs
Early Intermediate Level:
Use content vocabulary in discussions/reading
Read simple vocabulary, phrases & sentences independently
Use morphemes, phonics, syntax to decode & comprehend words
Recognize & correct grammar, usage, word choice in speaking or reading aloud
Read own narrative & expository text aloud with pacing, intonation, expression
Intermediate Level:
Create dictionary of frequently used words
Decode/comprehend meaning of unfamiliar words in texts
Recognize & correct grammar, usage, word choice in speaking or reading aloud
Read grade level narrative/expository text aloud with pacing, intonation, expression
Use content vocabulary in discussions/reading
Recognize common roots & affixes
Early Advanced Level:
Use morphemes, phonics, syntax to decode/comprehend words
Recognize multiple meaning words in content literature & texts
Use common roots & affixes
Use standard dictionary to find meanings
Recognize analogies & metaphors in content literature & texts
Use skills/knowledge to achieve independent reading
Use idioms in discussions & reading
Read complex narrative & expository texts aloud with pacing, intonation, expression
Advanced Level:
Apply common roots & affixes knowledge to vocabulary
Recognize multiple meaning words
Apply academic & social vocabulary to achieve independent read.
Use idioms, analogies & metaphors in discussion & reading
Use standard dictionary to find meanings
Read narrative & expository text aloud with pacing, intonation
Reading Comprehension
Beginning Level:
Answer fact questions using one/two word response
Connect simple test read aloud to personal experience
Understand & follow one-step directions
Sequence events from stories read aloud using key words/phrase
Identify main idea using key words/phrases
Identify text features: title/table of contents/chapter headings
Early Intermediate Level:
Use simple sentences to give details from simple stories
Connect text to personal experience
Follow simple two-step directions
Identify sequence of text using simple sentences
Read & identify main ideas to draw inferences
Identify text features: title, table of contents, chapter headings
Identify fact/opinion in grade level text read aloud to students
Intermediate Level:
Orally respond to comprehension questions about written text
Read text features: titles, table of contents, headings, diagrams, charts, glossaries, indexes
Identify main idea to make predictions & support details
Orally describe connections between text & personal experience
Follow multi-step directions for classroom activities
Identify examples of fact/opinion & cause/effect in literature/content texts
Early Advanced Level:
Give main idea with supporting detail from grade level text
Generate & respond to text-related comprehension questions
Describe relationships between text & personal experience
Identify function of text features: format/diagrams/charts/glossary
Draw conclusions & make inferences using text resources
Find examples of fact, opinion, inference, & cause/effect in text
Identify organizational patterns in text: sequence, chronology
Advanced Level:
Make inferences/generalizations, draw conclusions from grade level text resources
Describe main ideas with support detail from text
Identify patterns in text: compare/contrast, sequence/ cause/effect
Writing Strategies and Applications
Penmanship, Organization & Focus
Beginning Level:
Write alphabet
Label key parts of common object
Create simple sentences/phrases
Write brief narratives/stories using few standard grammatical forms
Early Intermediate Level:
Write narratives that include setting and character
Respond to literature using simple sentences, drawings, lists, chart
Write paragraphs of at least four sentences
Write words/simple sentences in content areas
Write friendly letter
Produce independent writing
Intermediate Level:
Narrate sequence of events
Produce independent writing
Use variety of genres in writing
Create paragraph developing central idea using grammatical form
Use complex vocabulary & sentences in all content areas
Write a letter with detailed sentences
Early Advanced Level:
Write detailed summary of story
Arrange compositions with organizational patterns
Independently write responses to literature
Use complex vocabulary & sentences in all content areas
Write a persuasive letter with relevant evidence
Produce writing with command of standard conventions
Advanced Level:
Write short narrative for all content areas
Write persuasive composition
Write narratives that describe setting, character, objects, events
Write multi-paragraph narrative & expository compositions
Independently use all steps of writing process
Writing Conventions
Beginning Level:
Begin own name and sentences with capital letter
Use period at end of sentence
Early Intermediate Level:
Begin proper nouns & sentences with capital letter
Use period at end of sentence/use some commas
Edit for basic conventions
Intermediate Level:
Produce independent writing
Use standard word order
Early Advanced Level:
Produce independent writing with correct capitals, punctuation, spelling
Use standard word order
Edit for basic conventions
Advanced Level:
Use complete sentences and correct order
Use correct parts of speech
Edit for punctuation, capitalization, spelling
Produce writing with command of standard conventions
Reading Literary Response and Analysis
Narrative Analysis of Grade-Level Appropriate Text
Beginning Level:
One/two-word oral responses to factual comprehension questions
Word/phrase oral response identifying characters and settings
Distinguish between fiction & non-fiction
Identify’ fairy tales, folk tale, myth, legend using lists, charts, tables
Early Intermediate Level:
Orally answer factual questions using simple sentences
Orally identify main events in plot
Recite simple poems
Orally describe setting of literature piece
Orally distinguish among poetry, drama, short story
Orally describe character of a selection
Intermediate Level:
Paraphrase response to text using expanded vocabulary
Apply knowledge of language to derive meaning from text
Early Advanced Level:
Describe figurative language (simile, metaphor, personification)
Distinguish literary connotations from culture to culture
Identify motives of characters
Describe themes stated directly
Identify speaker/narrator in text
Identify main problem of plot and how it is resolved
Recognize first & third person in literary text
Advanced Level:
Describe characteristics of poetry, drama, fiction & non-fiction
Evaluate author’s use of techniques to influence reader
Describe directly stated & implied themes
Compare & contrast motives of characters in work of fiction
VI. SCIENCE/MATH SKILLS
• Maps, charts, and graphs - location, latitude, and longitude
• Study Skills - note taking, highlighting key ideas, use of advance organizers
• Cause and effect
• Scientific process skills; observe, communicate, compare, categorize, infer, apply
VII. VOCABULARY
|Parliament |coerce |muskets |
|militia |debt |strategy |
|triangular trade |declaration |minutemen |
|resolution |enlist | |
|ammunition |hoard |liberty |
|Proclamation of 1763 |militia |intolerable |
|boycott |navigation |massacre |
|loyalists |patriot |natural rights |
|blockade |quarter troops |consequences |
|First Continental Congress |ratify |democracy |
|neutral |ratify |representation |
|repeal |representation |petition |
|Committee of Correspondence |traitor |inalienable rights |
| | | |
VII. RESOURCES and MATERIALS —Fiction
• Victory or Death! Stories of the American Revolution, Doreen Rappaport & Joan Verniero
• A Day in the Life of a Colonial Dressmaker, Amy French Merrill
RESOUCES AND MATERIALS—Non-fiction
• American Revolution, Dorling Kindersley
• The American Revolution, Steve Sheinkin
• A Day in the Life of A Colonial Soldier, J.L. Branse
• The Story of the Declaration of Independence, Norman Richards
• Reflections: United States History, Harcourt Brace, et al.
• A History of the US: From Colonies to Country, Joan Hakim
• The Boston Massacre, Allison Stark Draper
• What People Wore in Early America, Allison Stark Draper
• The Boston Tea Party, Allison Stark Draper
• The Colony of New York, Susan Whitehurst
INTERNET RESOURCES
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PLANNING PAGES
I. FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Cognitive Content Dictionary
• Observation Charts
• Inquiry Chart
• Teacher-made Big Books
• Realia
• Picture File Cards
II. INPUT
• World Map – From Pre-Columbian settlements to the French and Indian War
- Native American varied customs and traditions (5.1)
- Trace the routes of early explorers (5.2)
- Describe cooperation and conflict that existed among the American Indians and settlers (5.3)
- Describe political, religious, social and economic institutions that evolved in the colonial era (5.4)
• Big Book
- Explain the causes of the American Revolution
• George Washington Pictorial – Describe the views, lives and impact of key individuals during this period (5.5.4)
• Narrative Input – Describe the views, lives and impact of key individuals during this period (5.5.4)
• Back to George Washington Pictorial for battles (5.6.2)
• Expert Groups- Key people who effected the Revolution (5.5)
• Big Book – Traces the Declaration of Independence (5.6)
III. GUIDED ORAL PRACTICE
• Expert Groups
- Team Tasks
• T-Graph
• Found Poem/Paul Revere’s Ride
• Poetry/Songs/Chants
• Sentence Patterning Chart (aka Farmer-in-the-Dell)
• 10/2
• Numbered Heads together
• Mind Maps
• Process Grid
• Flex Groups
IV. READING/WRITING
• Whole Group
- Co-op strip paragraph
- Poetry frame
- Found Poetry
• Small Group
- Team tasks
- Process grid
- Group frame for ELD – student-generated text
- DRTA
- Ear-to-ear reading
- Observation charts
- Read arounds
- Flexible grouping – leveled and heterogonous
- Team writing workshop
• Individual
- Individual tasks
- Interactive journals
- Home/school connections
- Learning logs
- Sketch and write
- Writer’s workshop
V. CLOSURE
• Student-generated test
• Cause/effect
• Portfolio
- expository
- persuasive letter
- found poem
- biography
• Process inquiry and all charts
• Personal exploration
•Class/team big books
SAMPLE DAILY LESSON PLAN
DAY 1:
FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Standards - Historian Awards
• Cognitive Content Dictionary with Signal Word
• Observation Charts
• Inquiry Chart
• Big Book
INPUT
• World Map
-10/2
- Learning Log and ELD Review
• Timeline
-10/2
- Learning Log and ELD Review
GUIDED ORAL PRACTICE
• T- Graph – cooperation
• Picture Files
• Exploration Report
INPUT
• Input – George Washington (Continental Army & Militia)
-10/2
- Learning Log and ELD Review
• Poetry
READING/WRITING
• Interactive Journal
• Writer's Workshop
- mini lesson
- write
- Author's Chair
CLOSURE
• Process inquiry
• Home/School Connection
SAMPLE DAILY LESSON PLAN
DAY 2:
FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Cognitive Content Dictionary with Signal Word
• Process Home/School Connection
• Review input with word cards
• Chants – Highlight, sketch/add picture file cards
INPUT
•Narrative – Paul Revere
-10/2 and ELD Review
INPUT/GUIDED ORAL PRACTICE/READING/WRITING
• Expert Groups
• Team Tasks
READING/WRITING
• Journals
• Writer's Workshop
- mini lesson
- write
- Author's Chair
CLOSURE
•Process charts
•Home/School Connection
SAMPLE DAILY LESSON PLAN
DAY 3:
FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Cognitive Content Dictionary with Signal Word
• Process Home/School Connection
• Review inputs and highlight poetry and sketch.
• Revisit Narrative with word cards and conversation bubbles
INPUT/GUIDED ORAL PRACTICE/READING/WRITING
• Expert groups
- Team Tasks
• Found poem with Midnight of Paul Revere
GUIDED ORAL READING/READING WRITING
• Sentence Patterning Chart
– Reading Game
– Trading Game
– Flip Chant
• Whole class – Mind Map – Review of Pictorial
• Process Grid
• Coop Strip Paragraph
-respond, revise, edit
READING/WRITING
• Journals
• Writer's Workshop
- mini lesson
- write
- Author's Chair
CLOSURE
• Read Aloud
• Process charts
• Home/School Connection
SAMPLE DAILY LESSON PLAN
DAY 4:
FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Cognitive Content Dictionary with Signal Word – “Stumper Word”
• Review input charts
• Chants – highlight, sketch, add picture file cards
• Home/School Connection
READING/WRITING
• Flex group reading (leveled - ELD and "Clunkers and Links")
- Team Tasks
- Team oral evaluations
- Team share
• Story Map
• Poetry
• Listen and Sketch
• Journals
• Writer's Workshop
- mini lesson - 6 traits
- write
- Author's Chair
CLOSURE
• Read Aloud
• Process charts
• Home/School Connection
SAMPLE DAILY LESSON PLAN
DAY 5:
FOCUS/MOTIVATION
• Content Dictionary – “Stumper Word” (self-selected vocabulary)
• Read Aloud
• Chants
READING/WRITING
• Coop Strip reading for emergent/struggling readers
- Team Tasks
- Team written evaluations
- Team adds to walls
• Ear-to-Ear Reading
• Focused reading with Cognitive Content Dictionary
CLOSURE
• Process Inquiry and other charts
• Evaluate week
• Team Feud Game
Big Book
American Revolution
By Rachael Emery
(At top and bottom of each page)
Did you know the American Revolution was the result of the Colonists’ willingness to make great sacrifices to secure their independence from England?
I just thought you would like to know.
Page 1
In order to pay for the French and Indian War, the British Parliament passed the Stamp Act which placed a tax on paper documents in the colonies. Things like newspapers, legal documents, and even playing cards were taxed. Many colonists opposed the law because they believed they were being taxed without representation. Working as a group, many colonists tried to force Britain to take back the Stamp Act. The colonists decided to boycott goods that were taxed.
Page 2
Soon, Parliament proposed new taxes for the colonies. In 1767, Parliament passed the Townshend Acts, which taxed all imports, such as glass, tea, paint and paper, brought into the colonies. The colonists grew more rebellious, boycotting all of the taxed goods. Eventually, in 1770, Parliament repealed all of the taxes, except for the tax on tea.
Page 3
Parliament, concerned about the rebellious colonists, sent 9,000 British soldiers to the colonies.
Having British soldiers in their colonies angered many colonists. The colonists began calling the British soldiers “lobsters” or “redcoats” because of their bright red uniform jackets.
The anger between the colonists and the British soldiers grew and fights broke out more and more often.
Page 5
One of the worst fights took place in Boston on March 5, 1770, when a large crowd of angry colonists gathered near several British soldiers. As the crowd moved forward, the soldiers opened fire. Three colonists were killed on the spot and two others died later.
Among the dead was an African-American sailor from Massachusetts named Crispus Attucks. Many people consider Crispus Attucks to be the first person killed in the fight for the colonies’ freedom.
Page 6
In 1773, Parliament passed the Tea Act. The Tea Act gave Britain a monopoly, or complete control, over the sale of tea in the colonies. Britain believed the colonist would buy the cheaper tea and pay the taxes. Instead, many colonists decided to boycott the tea.
Ships carrying thousands of pounds of tea for the colonists docked in Boston Harbor. About 150 members of the Sons of Liberty dressed as Mohawk Indians. They boarded the ships and broke open 342 chests of tea and threw it all overboard. The angry protest became known as the Boston Tea Party.
Page 7
To punish colonists in Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party, Parliament passed new laws known as the Coercive Acts that restricted colonists’ rights. The laws forced the colonists to obey. Many colonists said the new laws were “intolerable.” As a result, the laws also became known as the Intolerable Acts.
The acts were intended to punish the colonists, but instead they helped unite the colonists against Britain.
Page 8
In the colonies, many people feared that Britain might take stronger action to enforce its rule. In September 1774, representatives of the colonies met in Philadelphia to discuss how to respond to Britain. This formal meeting of representatives was called the First Continental Congress. The delegates petitioned the King, agreed to stop trade with Britain, and asked the colonies to form militias.
Page 9
The militia units were called the Minutemen because they were said to be ready to fight at a minute’s notice. In April 1775, General Gage from Britain, heard that two leaders from the Sons of Liberty were meeting in Lexington, and that the Minutemen were storing weapons in Concord. He ordered 700 British soldiers to march to Lexington and Concord. Paul Revere found out about the plan and warned the Minutemen. The Minutemen were ready and waiting.
Page 10
No one knows who fired the first shot, but the fighting marked the first step in creating the United States of America, and it was the beginning of a long, bitter war called the American Revolution.
Big Book
Declaration of Independence
By Rachael Emery
Page 1
The important thing about the Declaration of Independence is that it is our nation’s most cherished symbol of liberty.
Page 2
The Declaration of Independence was drafted by Thomas Jefferson between June 11 and June 28, 1776.
With the Declaration, Jefferson expressed the convictions in the minds and hearts of the American people. It contained the ideals of individual liberty.
Page 3
Part 1
Men have certain rights that can not be taken away from them.
1. That all men are created equal.
2. That all men are born with rights that no one can take away from them.
3. That some of these rights are life, liberty, and the right to be happy. (Pursuit of happiness.)
4. That the purpose of a government is to preserve these rights for all men.
5. That the government is the servant of the people and gets its powers with the permission of the people it governs.
6. That if a government fails to protect people’s rights, men have the right and the duty to change government.
7. That men have the right to form new governments that will protect their rights and provide safety and happiness.
Page 4
Part 2
- Tells how the king refused to grant these rights to Americans.
- It contains a long list of examples of tyranny by the king.
- It tells the world why the colonies broke away from his rule and became the United States of America.
This document was presented to the members of the Congress.
They debated about it for almost three days.
It was approved on July 4, 1776.
Page 5
• When the Declaration was read aloud from the yard of Independence Hall, on July 8, the crowd of people went wild.
• High in the tower of Independence Hall the great iron bell tolled so the whole city could hear.
• The bell came to be known as Liberty Bell.
• Several more years of war took place before the Americans finally defeated the British troops and the British decided to quit the war.
• General George Washington led the American armies and was the victor when the British surrendered.
• The grateful American people elected Washington as their first President, and he is known today as the Father of His Country.
Page 6
But the most important thing about the Declaration of Independence is that is asserts the fundamental American ideal of government, based on the theory of natural rights.
World Map Script
1. Input Continents and Oceans.
2. Native Americans lived on the continent of North America before it was settled by any Europeans.
3. Before the 1400’s Europeans believed the only way to reach Asia for trade was to sail east.
4. Christopher Columbus believed it was possible to get to Asia by sailing west, but he could not prove it.
5. Christopher Columbus convinced Spain’s Monarchs King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to fund his voyage.
6. Columbus landed somewhere in the West Indies.
- He believed he was in Asia
- He claimed the land for Spain
7. When England heard of Columbus’s success for Spain, King Henry VII sent John Cabot on an expedition to claim land and riches for England.
8. Amerigo Vespucci of Italy did not believe the land was Asia and came to realize that the world was bigger the previously believed.
9. In 1507, a German mapmaker published a world map that included the new continent and named it America
10. By 1500s, several European nations had sent explorers to claim land in America.
11. Spain realized that it needed to protect its claims in America and established colonies.
12. England saw Spain becoming wealthy from its claims and colonies and wanted to do the same.
13. John Smith left Jamestown and headed north, many colonists followed him looking for religious freedom.
14. While Spain and England were busy building colonies in North America, France was claiming more land in what are today Canada and the Northeastern United States.
15. New England, Middle and Southern Colonies, had settlements.
16. Trade Routes (Triangular Trade) was established with the colonies, England, and Africa.
17. By the mid-1700s, Spain, France, and Britain were trying to keep control of their lands in North America.
18. The French built forts and sent soldiers to the Ohio Valley to drive out the British. – The British saw this as an act of war.
19. The French lost nearly all their land in North America.
20. To ease tension with the Indians, The Proclamation of 1763 by Britain said that all lands west of the Appalachian belonged to the Indians.
21. Britain also imposed what would be the first of many taxes for the colonists’ to help pay for the cost of defending the colonies.
Timeline of the Revolution
|1763 |Treaty signed between England and France ending the French and Indian War. |
|1765 |Parliament passed The Stamp Act as a means to pay for British expenses during the War. |
| |Colonists violently protest the measure. |
|1766 |March 18 |
| |-Stamp Act repealed, but on the same day parliament passes the Declaratory Act asserting its right to make laws |
| |binding on the colonies. |
|1768 |October: |
| |British troops arrive in Boston to enforce laws. |
|1770 |March: |
| |-Four workers shot by British troops stationed in Boston - becomes known as “The Boston Massacre.” |
|1773 |December: |
| |-Massachusetts patriots dress as Mohawk Indians protest the British Tea Act by dumping crates of tea into Boston |
| |Harbor – becomes known as “The Boston Tea Party” |
|1174 |January |
| |-First Continental Congress convenes in Philadelphia. |
|1775 |January |
| |-Thomas Paine’s Common Sense is published, becomes an instant best seller and pushes the colonies closer to |
| |independence. |
| |April: |
| |-Shots fired at Lexington and Concord – becomes known as “The Shot Heard Around the World” |
| |-“Minute Men” force British troops back to Boston. |
| |-George Washington takes command of the Continental Army. |
| |July 4 |
| |-Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence is ratified by the Congress |
| |July |
| |-A huge British force arrives in New York Harbor determine to stop the rebellion. |
|1776 |August |
| |-Continental Army loses at Long Island, New York. |
| |December 26 |
| |-George Washington crosses the Delaware River and captures a Hessian force at Trenton, New Jersey. Renews hope for |
| |the patriots. |
| |December |
| |-In desperate need of financing and arms, Congress sends Benjamin Franklin to France to urge the French to ally with|
| |America. |
|1777 |July |
| |-America had a devastating loss at Fort Ticonderoga |
| |-The Marquis de Lafayette arrives in America |
| |September |
| |-Washington defeated at Brandywine |
| |October |
| |-Philadelphia is lost to the British |
|1778 |February |
| |-France signs a treaty of alliance with America. |
|1780 |Americans ‘lose’ a series of engagements in the south, but a heavy toll is still experienced on the British Army. |
|1781 |October |
| |-Working together the American and French troops trap Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia. He surrenders his |
| |British army. |
|1783 |September |
| |-A peace treaty is signed between Great Britain and the United States |
| |December |
| |-George Washington gives up the command of the Continental Army and returns to a private life. |
Narrative Input
Three men rode on horseback on an April night in 1775:
Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Dr. Samuel Prescott.
Each carried the same message: “The redcoats are coming!”
You may have heard of Paul Revere, because a poet,
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, wrote a famous poem
about his ride. Listen carefully because you can almost
hear Longfellow’s words galloping like a horse’s hooves:
Listen, my children, and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;
Hardly a man is now alive,
Who remembers that famous day and year.
The Patriots were worried. It looked as if war
with Britain couldn’t be avoided. The Patriots
were the colonists who wanted independence.
They wanted to be free of British rule. The
other colonists, the ones who wanted to stay
British subjects, were called Loyalists. Some
Patriots, like Samuel Adams, expected war. But
most Patriots still hoped to find peaceful ways to
settle their differences with England.
It was scary to think of war. England was a great
power. The colonies were scattered and had little
military experience. Still, it made sense to be
prepared for the worst. So, New Englanders began
to stockpile, or save, cannonballs and gunpowder.
They piled them up in Concord, a small town about
20 miles of northwest of Boston.
When the British soldiers heard about the stockpiling,
they decided to go after the piles of ammunition. Paul
Revere and his Boston friends learned of the British
plans. They found out that the redcoats were going to
march on Concord the next morning. Besides the
gunpowder, Revere was worried about his friends Sam
Adams and John Hancock. They were hiding in
Lexington, a city right next door to Concord. The
British were searching for those two troublemakers
because they wanted to hang them as traitors.
Someone had to get a warning to those towns – and fast!
It would help to know which way the redcoats would march.
Would they go by the long land route over the Boston neck?
Or would they take the shorter route - by boat across the
water to Charlestown and then on foot from there?
Billy Dawes didn’t wait to find out. He snuck by the British
guard on duty at the neck. As soon as he was out of sight
of the guard, Dawes jumped on a horse and went at a gallop.
He knew the redcoats would start out soon, and he shouted
that message as he rode through town. That same dark night,
Paul Revere sent someone to spy on the British. “Find out
which way the redcoats will march,” the spy was told. “Then
climb into the high bell tower of the North Church and send a
signal. Light one lantern if they go by land. Hang two
lanterns if they go by sea.”
Paul Revere got in a boat and quietly rowed out into the
Charles River. A horse was ready for him on the Charlestown
shore. He waited - silently. (Revere was a known Patriot and
would have been arrested if the British had found him outdoors at
night.)
And lo! As he looks, on the belfry’s height
A glimmer, and then a gleam of light!
He springs to the saddle, the bridle he turns,
But lingers and gazes, till full of his sight
A second lamp in the belfry burns!
Now he knew! The redcoats would take the water route
across the Charles River, just as Paul Revere was doing.
What happened next? Well, both Billy Dawes and Paul
Revere rode hard, through the night warning everyone in
the countryside that the British were coming. They met
at Lexington in time to tell Sam Adams and John Hancock
to escape. But before they could go on to Concord, they
were stopped by British patrol. The redcoats took their
horses.
Luckily, by this time, a third man, Dr. Samuel
Prescott, was riding with Dawes and Revere. The doctor
managed to escape from the British, ride home to
Concord, and warn everyone there.
The American farmers were ready and they grabbed their
guns. They were called the “Minutemen” because they could
fight on a minute’s notice. Capt. John Parker was the
leader of the minutemen, and what he said on that day is now
carved in stone near the spot where he stood. “Stand your
ground. Don’t fire unless fired upon. But if they mean to
have a war, let it begin here!”
And it did begin right there at Lexington. Each side said the
other fired the first shot. No one knows who really did, but a poet
named Ralph Waldo Emerson called it “the shot heard round the
world.” When the smoke cleared, eight American farmers lay dead.
It was April 19, 1775. The Revolution had begun.
Paul Revere's Ride
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
|Listen my children and you shall hear |
|Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere, |
|On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five; |
|Hardly a man is now alive |
|Who remembers that famous day and year. |
|He said to his friend, "If the British march |
|By land or sea from the town to-night, |
|Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch |
|Of the North Church tower as a signal light,-- |
|One if by land, and two if by sea; |
|And I on the opposite shore will be, |
|Ready to ride and spread the alarm |
|Through every Middlesex village and farm, |
|For the country folk to be up and to arm." |
|Then he said "Good-night!" and with muffled oar |
|Silently rowed to the Charlestown shore, |
|Just as the moon rose over the bay, |
|Where swinging wide at her moorings lay |
|The Somerset, British man-of-war; |
|A phantom ship, with each mast and spar |
|Across the moon like a prison bar, |
|And a huge black hulk, that was magnified |
|By its own reflection in the tide. |
|Meanwhile, his friend through alley and street |
|Wanders and watches, with eager ears, |
|Till in the silence around him he hears |
|The muster of men at the barrack door, |
|The sound of arms, and the tramp of feet, |
|And the measured tread of the grenadiers, |
|Marching down to their boats on the shore. |
|Then he climbed the tower of the Old North Church, |
|By the wooden stairs, with stealthy tread, |
|To the belfry chamber overhead, |
|And startled the pigeons from their perch |
|On the sombre rafters, that round him made |
|Masses and moving shapes of shade,-- |
|By the trembling ladder, steep and tall, |
|To the highest window in the wall, |
|Where he paused to listen and look down |
|A moment on the roofs of the town |
|And the moonlight flowing over all. |
|Beneath, in the churchyard, lay the dead, |
|In their night encampment on the hill, |
|Wrapped in silence so deep and still |
|That he could hear, like a sentinel's tread, |
|The watchful night-wind, as it went |
|Creeping along from tent to tent, |
|And seeming to whisper, "All is well!" |
|A moment only he feels the spell |
|Of the place and the hour, and the secret dread |
|Of the lonely belfry and the dead; |
|For suddenly all his thoughts are bent |
|On a shadowy something far away, |
|Where the river widens to meet the bay,-- |
|A line of black that bends and floats |
|On the rising tide like a bridge of boats. |
|Meanwhile, impatient to mount and ride, |
|Booted and spurred, with a heavy stride |
|On the opposite shore walked Paul Revere. |
|Now he patted his horse's side, |
|Now he gazed at the landscape far and near, |
|Then, impetuous, stamped the earth, |
|And turned and tightened his saddle girth; |
|But mostly he watched with eager search |
|The belfry tower of the Old North Church, |
|As it rose above the graves on the hill, |
|Lonely and spectral and sombre and still. |
|And lo! as he looks, on the belfry's height |
|A glimmer, and then a gleam of light! |
|He springs to the saddle, the bridle he turns, |
|But lingers and gazes, till full on his sight |
|A second lamp in the belfry burns. |
|A hurry of hoofs in a village street, |
|A shape in the moonlight, a bulk in the dark, |
|And beneath, from the pebbles, in passing, a spark |
|Struck out by a steed flying fearless and fleet; |
|That was all! And yet, through the gloom and the light, |
|The fate of a nation was riding that night; |
|And the spark struck out by that steed, in his flight, |
|Kindled the land into flame with its heat. |
|He has left the village and mounted the steep, |
|And beneath him, tranquil and broad and deep, |
|Is the Mystic, meeting the ocean tides; |
|And under the alders that skirt its edge, |
|Now soft on the sand, now loud on the ledge, |
|Is heard the tramp of his steed as he rides. |
|It was twelve by the village clock |
|When he crossed the bridge into Medford town. |
|He heard the crowing of the cock, |
|And the barking of the farmer's dog, |
|And felt the damp of the river fog, |
|That rises after the sun goes down. |
|It was one by the village clock, |
|When he galloped into Lexington. |
|He saw the gilded weathercock |
|Swim in the moonlight as he passed, |
|And the meeting-house windows, black and bare, |
|Gaze at him with a spectral glare, |
|As if they already stood aghast |
|At the bloody work they would look upon. |
|It was two by the village clock, |
|When he came to the bridge in Concord town. |
|He heard the bleating of the flock, |
|And the twitter of birds among the trees, |
|And felt the breath of the morning breeze |
|Blowing over the meadow brown. |
|And one was safe and asleep in his bed |
|Who at the bridge would be first to fall, |
|Who that day would be lying dead, |
|Pierced by a British musket ball. |
|You know the rest. In the books you have read |
|How the British Regulars fired and fled,--- |
|How the farmers gave them ball for ball, |
|>From behind each fence and farmyard wall, |
|Chasing the redcoats down the lane, |
|Then crossing the fields to emerge again |
|Under the trees at the turn of the road, |
|And only pausing to fire and load. |
|So through the night rode Paul Revere; |
|And so through the night went his cry of alarm |
|To every Middlesex village and farm,--- |
|A cry of defiance, and not of fear, |
|A voice in the darkness, a knock at the door, |
|And a word that shall echo for evermore! |
|For, borne on the night-wind of the Past, |
|Through all our history, to the last, |
|In the hour of darkness and peril and need, |
|The people will waken and listen to hear |
|The hurrying hoof-beats of that steed, |
|And the midnight message of Paul Revere. |
Poetry Booklet
Name: ________________
The Colonist Bugaloo
We are the Colonists and we’re here to say,
Old King George is in our way!
He taxes our products, even our tea,
Freedom is the goal for you and me!
Declaring independence from Britian’s rule,
Doing the colonist bugaloo!
No one represents us and that’s not fair,
England and the King take more than their share.
Britain won’t listen so we’ll have to fight,
Freedom and independence are a natural right.
Fighting for freedom, independence too,
Doing the colonist bugaloo!
At Lexington and Concord we made our stand,
And fired the shot heard across the land.
Revere and Dawes gave out a shout,
“The British are coming! Get your muskets out!”
The Redcoats were shooting; the patriots shot too,
Doing the colonist bugaloo!
Known as the Minutemen, they were fast to fight,
Convinced of their cause, they knew they were right.
Fighting at Concord, forcing the British back,
The Americans prepare for Boston and the next attack.
On to Bunker Hill, with George Washington too,
Doing the colonist bugaloo!
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Historian Bugaloo
I’m a historian and I’m here to say,
Studying the Revolution is the American Way!
Learning about the battles and what started the fight,
We discover our heritage and learn our rights.
Meeting the generals and the common folk too,
Doing the historian bugaloo!
America used to be a colony,
Thirteen states longing to be free!
King George in England wouldn’t let go
So the battle lines formed and we were foes.
Loyalists fought for England, Germany too,
Doing the historian bugaloo!
The Patriots fought on the Colonist’s side,
The Minutemen’s bravery stirred their pride.
Lexington, Concord, the battles raged,
Support from the French finally set the stage.
Surrender at Yorktown, and a treaty too,
Doing the historian bugaloo!
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I’m a Colonist
(To the tune I am a Nut)
I’m a colonist; I’ve made a stand,
I’ll fight for freedom for America’s land.
I left my farm and family too,
The Continental Army will find me true!
I’m a soldier! Yes, sir!
I’m a soldier! Yes, sir!
We marched long and hard to Valley Forge,
Waiting for orders to fire or charge.
The camp was rough, with mud and ice.
Dirty and hungry and covered with lice.
I won’t quit! No sir!
I won’t quit! No sir!
Washington inspired us, and von Stueben too,
Spring is here; the sun is shining through.
General Howe took off, now Clinton we’ll fight,
’78 isn’t easy, but we know we’re right.
Fight for freedom! Yes, sir!
Fight for freedom! Yes, sir!
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Marching Home
To the tune of “When Johnny Comes Marching Home”
When Minutemen come marching home again; Hurrah! Hurrah!
When Minutemen come marching home again; Hurrah! Hurrah!
The drums will beat and the men will shout,
And the women, they will all turn out,
And the Colonies are free from British rule!
Cornwallis surrendered the Union Jack; Hurrah! Hurrah!
We won at Yorktown, no turning back; Hurrah! Hurrah!
Surrender took place on October nineteenth,
1781’s a year that can’t be beat!
And Washington led the way to victory!
The British soldiers threw down their guns; Hurrah! Hurrah!
They marched away and the fighting was done; Hurrah! Hurrah!
Congress informed and the news spread quick
Old King George couldn’t believe they were licked,
But in Paris, France he signed the treaty of peace!
When Minutemen come marching home again; Hurrah! Hurrah!
When Minutemen come marching home again; Hurrah! Hurrah!
The drums will beat and the men will shout,
And the women, they will all turn out,
And the Colonies are free from British rule!
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Patriots
Patriots here, patriots there
Patriots, patriots, everywhere.
Brave patriots fighting.
United patriots marching.
Determined patriots resisting,
And embattled patriots dying.
Patriots at their printing press,
Patriots on the battlefields,
Patriots at Valley Forge,
And patriots throughout the colonies.
Patriots here, patriots there
Patriots, patriots, everywhere.
Patriots! Patriots! Patriots!
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Victory Cadence
Yorktown was the final battle,
Guns were fired and sabers rattled,
King George thought he could hold the South,
But Washington knew it could be a rout.
Sound off----Washington
Sound off----George
Sound off----1 2 3 4 Victory!
Britain’s strategy worked at first,
But Horatio Gates drove ‘em back and worse,
The Swamp Fox known as Frances Marion
Used guerilla tactics to further bury them.
Sound off----strategy
Sound off----tactics
Sound off----1 2 3 4 Victory!
Nathan Greene took command of our army.
They were hungry and dirty and cold and swarmy.
Sometimes they had to eat frogs for dinner.
Bravely they fought to be the winner.
Sound off----Continental
Sound off----Army
Sound off----1 2 3 4 Victory!
Cornwallis was tired; the British trapped,
The French were in harbor, just as mapped.
Washington had surrounded his enemy,
He guaranteed freedom for you and for me.
Sound off----Surrender
Sound off----Yorktown
Sound off----1 2 3 4 Victory!
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Yes, Ma’am!
Is this the Stamp Act? Yes, ma’am!
Is this the Stamp Act? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? Taxes on papers!
How do you know? Taxes on documents!
Can you tell me more? Parliment passed it.
Can you tell me more? And the colonies pay it.
Is this a Tea Party? Yes, ma’am!
Is this a Tea Party? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? Sam Adams in Boston, in disguise.
How do you know? Tea chests in the harbor, oh my!
Can you tell me more? We won’t pay the tax!
Can you tell me more? King George is unfair!
Are you Sam Adams? Yes, ma’am!
Are you Sam Adams? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? I opposed the taxes!
How do you know? I opposed the taxes!
Can you tell me more? I called for independence!
Can you tell me more? I called for independence!
Are you a Minuteman? Yes, ma’am!
Are you a Minuteman? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? We’re part of the militia.
How do you know? We’re part of the militia.
Can you tell me more? We’re ready to fight in a minute!
Can you tell me more? We’re ready to fight in a minute!
Are you a Loyalist? Yes, ma’am!
Are you a Loyalist? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? I support King George.
How do you know? I support King George.
Can you tell me more? I’ll fight for the English!
Can you tell me more? I’ll fight for the English!
Are you a Son of Liberty? Yes, ma’am!
Are you a Son of Liberty? Yes, ma’am!
How do you know? I protest against the King!
How do you know? I protest against the King!
Can you tell me more? I fight to stop the tax collectors!
Can you tell me more? I fight to stop the tax collectors!
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Date: ____________________
American Revolution
Home/School Connection #1
Tell your parents two things you learned about George Washington. Tell them why he was a key figure in the American Revolution. Have your parent tell you about another key figure they remember from history. It can be someone from another country. Sketch and write what they tell you.
Cuéntales a tus padres dos cosas que aprendiste sobre George Washington. Cuéntales por qué él era una figura clave en la Revolución Americana. Pídele a tus padres que te cuenten sobre otra figura clave que ellos recuerdan en la historia. Puede ser alguien de otro país. Puedes dibujar y escribir lo que ellos te dicen.
Parent: __________________________ Student: ___________________________
Date: ____________________
American Revolution
Home/School Connection #2
Retell the story of The Shot Heard Around the World. Did they know about Paul Revere? Sketch and write what your parent’s think of this story.
Cuéntales a tus padres sobre el cuento del Tiro Escuchado Alrededor del Mundo. ¿Sabían ellos sobre Paúl Reveré? Dibuja y escribe lo que tus padres piensan de este cuento.
Parent: __________________________ Student: ___________________________
Date: ____________________
American Revolution
Home/School Connection #3
Tell your parents how the American Revolution led to the Independence of the 13 Colonies from British rule. Ask them if they know about any other revolutions that have occurred and what results came of them. Sketch and write what they tell you.
Cuéntales a tus padres como la Revolución Americana resulto en la independencia de las 13 Colonias de la regla Británica. Pregúnteles si ellos conocen sobre otras revoluciones que han ocurrido y que resultados tuvieron. Puedes dibujar y escribir lo que ellos te dicen.
Parent: __________________________ Student: ___________________________
Date: ____________________
American Revolution
Home/School Connection #4
Explain “taxation without representation” to your parents. Ask them if they have ever felt that they were being taxed unfairly. Sketch and write what they tell you.
Explícale a tus padres lo que es "impuestos sin representación." Pregúntales si ellos han sentido alguna vez ellos se han sentido que fueron cobrados impuestos injustamente. Puedes dibujar y escribir lo que ellos te dicen.
Parent: __________________________ Student: ___________________________
Expert Group
The Story of Molly Pitcher
An Artillery wife, Mary Hays McCauly (better known as Molly Pitcher) shared the rigors of Valley Forge with her husband, William Hays. Her actions during the battle of Monmouth on June 28, 1778 became legendary. That day at Monmouth was as hot as Valley Forge was cold. Someone had to cool the hot guns and bathe parched throats with water.
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Across that bullet-swept ground, a striped skirt fluttered. Mary Hays McCauly was earning her nickname "Molly Pitcher" by bringing pitcher after pitcher of cool spring water to the exhausted and thirsty men. She also tended to the wounded and once, heaving a crippled Continental soldier up on her strong young back, carried him out of reach of hard-charging Britishers.
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On her next trip with water, she found her artilleryman husband back with the guns again, replacing a casualty. While she watched, Hays fell wounded. The cannon, its crew too depleted to serve it, was about to be withdrawn. Without hesitation, Molly stepped forward and took the rammer staff from her fallen husband’s hands.
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For the second time on an American battlefield, a woman bravely manned a gun. (The first was Margaret Corbin during the defense of Fort Washington in 1776.) For her heroic role, General Washington himself issued her a warrant as a noncommissioned officer. Thereafter, she was widely hailed as "Sergeant Molly." A flagstaff and cannon stand at her gravesite at Carlisle, Pennsylvania. A sculpture on the battle monument commemorates her courageous deed.
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Expert Groups
Mercy Otis Warren
Mercy Otis Warren was born in 1728 in Massachusetts. Mercy became a writer, and she wrote plays and poems that supported independence. Her ideas and writings convinced many people in Massachusetts to become Patriots. Of all the people writing to support the patriotic cause, Mercy Otis Warren was the only woman who published plays, books, and poetry.
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In 1743, Mercy attended the Harvard Graduation and met James Warren. In November 1754, she married him and went to live in the Warren family farm at Eel River, Plymouth, Massachusetts.
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When the colonies increasingly rebelled against English rule, Mercy Otis Warren became perhaps the most important of Revolutionary War women. Like the men of her family, she was among those ready to throw out the colonial governor. In 1772 -- four years before the Declaration of Independence, she published The Adulateur, a play that made fun of the governor. Her second play was The Defeat (1773), and she published her third in 1775, just as the rebellion began to be violent. All her plays urged people to take risks to achieve American independence.
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The Revolution was scarcely begun before Warren began recording the history of it. Her work not only provided an insider's view of the Revolution, but also paved the way for women authors. Until that time, the few who existed in American did not set out to publish, but instead wrote primarily for themselves (as in the case of Anne Bradstreet and Phyllis Wheatley).
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Mercy Otis Warren believed that Britain's laws and taxes were unfair and that families in the colonies couldn't pay for expensive British goods. She said that Britain was too far away to understand the colonists' rights and needs. For this reason alone, the colonists would be better off alone with their own independence and freedom.
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Expert Group
Samuel Adams, Son of Liberty
Samuel Adams was born in Boston to prosperous parents, and he developed his ideas about freedom while studying at Harvard College in the 1740s. After completing his studies, Samuel returned to Boston, Massachusetts to work for his father. He began to question the fairness of the laws imposed by the governor, who was appointed by the British government.
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Samuel believed the colonists had a right to elect their own government officials and he began to convince others about their rights for fairness, justice and representation. He wrote newspaper articles and essays and promoted his ideas at taverns and meetings. Samuel and the members of the Country Party opposed these laws. Samuel organized a group called the "Sons of Liberty."
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Conflicts with colonists and Britain grew worse in the 1760s and 1770s when the British Parliament imposed new taxes on the colonists, and these taxes nearly caused Samuel’s father’s financial ruin. The Sons of Liberty resisted the tea tax by secretly dumping tea into Boston harbor in the famous "Tea Party." He kept working for the cause during this time even though four of his six children died, followed by his wife, Elizabeth, leaving Samuel to raise two children alone.
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Samuel proposed a meeting with representatives of all the colonies to discuss their problems. It took a long time to reach agreement. The Continental Congress first met in Philadelphia in 1774. Just as he had in Boston, Samuel promoted his ideas for independence with the other delegates. Two years later, the Continental Congress met again in Philadelphia. They adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, and Samuel signed it.
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He spent the rest of his life as a voice for reform, and he died in Boston in 1803. Bells all over America tolled and flags flew at half-mast. Samuel's strong belief in independence and his ability to persuade support for the cause of freedom earned him the name "the Father of the American Revolution."
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Expert Group
Phillis Wheatly, American Poet
Phillis Wheatley was born in Africa (probably Senegal) about 1753 or 1754. When she was about eight years old, she was kidnapped and brought to Boston. There, in 1761, John Wheatley bought her for his wife, Susanna, as a personal servant. The Wheatley family taught Phillis English and Christianity, and, impressed by her quick learning, they also taught her some Latin, ancient history, mythology and classical literature.
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The Wheatleys gave Phillis time to study and write. In 1767, the Newport Mercury published Phillis Wheatley's first poem, a tale of two men who nearly drowned at sea, and of their steady faith in God. She published more poems each year 1771-1773, and a collection of her poems was published in London in 1773.
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The American Revolution interrupted Phillis Wheatley's career, and her life. The people of Boston -- and of America and England -- bought books on other topics rather than the volume of Phillis Wheatley poems. It also caused other disruptions in her life. First, her master moved the household to Providence, Rhode Island, then back to Boston.
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Phillis was eventually freed and married a man named John. The Revolutionary War continued, and John and Phillis moved briefly to Wilmington, Massachusetts. Having children, trying to support the family, losing two children to death, and dealing with the war's effects and a shaky marriage, Phillis Wheatley was able to publish only a few poems during this period.
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In 1776, Phillis Wheatley wrote a poem to George Washington, congratulating him for his appointment as commander of the Continental Army. That was while her master and mistress were still alive, and while she was still quite the sensation. But after her marriage, she addressed several other poems to George Washington. She sent them to him, but he never responded again.
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Eventually John deserted Phillis, and to support herself and surviving child she had to work as a scullery maid in a boardinghouse. In poverty and among strangers, on December 5, 1784, she died, and her third child died hours after she did. Her last known poem was written for George Washington.
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Mind Map
Process Grid
| |Position in Colonial |Contributions |Sacrifices |Obstacles |Interesting Facts |
| |America | | | | |
|George Washington |Plantation owner in |Created and organized |Spent 8 years away |His mother was loyal |False teeth made of |
| |Virginia |the U.S. Continental |from home in service |to King George |hippo ivory |
| |Highly respected |Army |to his country |Defeated at the |Nicknamed “Father of |
| |gentleman from the |Commander and Chief of|Refrained from taking|battle of Brandywine |Our Country” |
| |South |the Continental Army |more power than was |Some people wanted |Married to Martha |
| |Distinguished General|Surprised the British |due to him |him removed from |Custis and adopted |
| |and commander and |at Saratoga and |Did not want to be |commander |her children, later |
| |chief of the colonial|Georgetown |seen as a tyrant like|Many men of the |two grandchildren |
| |armies |Victory at Yorktown |King George |Continental Army |When to school until |
| | |Took a leading part in|Endured brutal |defected |the age of 16, then |
| | |the creation of the |winters with his |Betrayed by John |studied on his own |
| | |Constitution |soldiers |Andre and Benedict |6’4” |
| | |Unanimously elected to| |Arnold |Instituted the Purple|
| | |be the first President| | |Heart as a way to |
| | |of the United States | | |recognize bravery |
| | |He continued to lead | | |Born in 1732 |
| | |men into battle with | | |Horse named Nelson |
| | |minimal manpower and | | | |
| | |resources | | | |
|Mercy Otis Warren |Married to James |Her ideas and writing |As a women, she was |She was a considered |Born in 1728 |
| |Warren and lived on a|convinced many people |not entitled to a |a rebel because of |“Taxation without |
| |farm Massachusetts |to become patriots |formal education |her strong political |Representation is |
| |Only woman who |She published The |She believed taxes |beliefs |tyranny” the |
| |published plays, |Adulatueur, a play |were unfair and |Never saw any place |principle slogan for |
| |books, and poetry to |that made fun of the |colonist couldn’t |beyond Eastern |the American |
| |support the patriotic|governor |afford to pay for |Massachusetts which |Revolutionary War was|
| |cause |Her work provided an |expensive British |narrowed her focus |credit to her brother|
| | |insiders view of the |goods. | |James Otis |
| | |Revolution | | |Even as a child she |
| | |She paved the way for | | |engaged in |
| | |women authors | | |conversations with |
| | | | | |her father and |
| | | | | |brothers about |
| | | | | |politics |
| | | | | |Known as the |
| | | | | |conscience of the |
| | | | | |American Revolution |
| | | | | |America’s first woman|
| | | | | |playwright |
| | | | | |Mother was a decedent|
| | | | | |from the Mayflower |
| | | | | |Her circle of friends|
| | | | | |included Abigail |
| | | | | |Adams and Martha |
| | | | | |Washington |
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|Molly Pitcher |Artillery wife (wife |Brought pitchers of |Husband wounded in |Women were not |George Washington |
| |of a soldier) |water to the troops on|the war |allowed to fight in |gave her a medal |
| | |the battlefield |She had to fight in |the army |She’s nicknamed |
| | |Tended to wounded |his place |No believed women had|“Sergeant Molly” |
| | |soldiers | |a place on the |A flagstaff and a |
| | |Carried a crippled | |battlefield |cannon stand at her |
| | |soldier off the | | |gravesite |
| | |battlefield | | | |
|Phillis Wheatly |Brought over from |She appeared before |She lost her children|Her intelligence was |She was kidnapped |
| |Africa and purchased |George Washington in |to death |questioned and she |from Africa and |
| |by John Wheatly to be|March, 1776 for her |The war interrupted |had to defend her |became a slave at age|
| |a personal servant |poetry and was a |her writing career |literary ability in |8 |
| |for his wife Susanna |strong supporter of |To support herself |court |Her first poem was |
| |Well-known poet |independence |she worked as a |A book of poems had |published when she |
| | |She wrote a poem to |scullery maid |to be published in |was 12 years old |
| | |King George to get him| |London because |She was very well |
| | |to repeal the Stamp | |publishers in Boston |educated for a black |
| | |Act | |refused to publish. |woman |
| | |She was honored for | | | |
| | |her poetry by the | | | |
| | |founding fathers | | | |
| | |As the American | | | |
| | |Revolution gained | | | |
| | |strength she turned to| | | |
| | |writing about themes | | | |
| | |from the point of view| | | |
| | |of the colonist | | | |
|Samuel Adams |Prosperous Bostonian |He founded the “Sons |Taxes from Britain |It took a long time |When he died flags |
| |Harvard Graduate |of Liberty” |nearly caused |for the colonies to |across America flew |
| | |He wrote newspaper |financial ruin for |come to an agreement |at half-mast and |
| | |articles and essays |his family |about how to solve |bells rang |
| | |Spoke at taverns and |Took a great risk by |their problems |He’s known as the |
| | |meeting about fairness|organizing the “Tea | |father of the |
| | |and justice |Party” | |American Revolution |
| | | |Worked hard for the | | |
| | | |Revolution even | | |
| | | |though his wife and 4| | |
| | | |of his 6 children | | |
| | | |died | | |
|Patriot |Position in Colonial |Contributions |Sacrifices |Obstacles |Interesting Facts |
| |America | | | | |
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-----------------------
Position in Colonial America
Sacrifices
Obstacles
Interesting Facts
Contributions
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
[pic]
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
By Jimi Gillespie, UUSD
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