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2. On the Eve of Independence

2. On the Eve of Independence

Assessment

Presentation

History

8th Grade

Easy

Created by

Darleen Perez

Used 6+ times

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7 Slides • 5 Questions

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2. On the Eve of Independence

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Nearly a year passed between the skirmishes at Lexington and Concord and the British retreat from Boston.  During that time, there was little talk of  independence .  Most colonists still considered themselves loyal British subjects, and they believed their quarrel was not with Great Britain itself but with its  policies  toward the colonies.

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Multiple Choice

How long has passed?

1

a year

2

two years

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The Olive Branch Petition

 Many Americans pinned their hopes for peace on King George. In July 1775, the Second Continental Congress sent a petition to George III asking him to end the quarrel. John Adams called the petition an “olive branch,” which is an ancient symbol of peace.

By the time the petition reached London, however, the king had declared the colonies to be in “open and avowed Rebellion.” He ordered his ministers “to bring the Traitors to Justice.”

Being called a traitor was enough to change the mind of one of Washington's generals, who confessed that he had long “looked with some degree of horror on the scheme of separation.” Now he agreed with Patrick Henry that colonists “must be Independent or Slaves.”


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Multiple Choice

The Olive Branch Petition was an effort to end the _____ between the colonist and Great Britain .

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Quarrel

2

friendship

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Multiple Choice

“___________,” which is an ancient symbol of peace.

1

Peace tree

2

olive branch

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Common Sense

 Many colonists, however, still looked with horror at the idea of independence. Then, early in 1776, a Patriot named Thomas Paine published a fiery pamphlet entitled Common Sense in which he scoffed at the idea that Americans owed any loyalty to King George. “Of more worth is one honest man to society,” he wrote, “than all the crowned ruffians who ever lived.”

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Paine also attacked the argument that the colonies' ties to Great Britain had benefited Americans. Just the opposite was true, he said. American trade had suffered under British control, and Americans had also been hurt by being dragged into Great Britain's European wars.

Paine ended with a vision of an independent America as a homeland of liberty. “Ye that love mankind!” he urged. “Ye that dare oppose not only the tyranny, but the tyrant, stand forth! . . . The sun never shined on a cause of greater worth.”

Within a few months, more than 120,000 copies of Common Sense were printed in the colonies. Paine's arguments helped persuade thousands of colonists that independence was not only sensible, but that it was the key to a brighter future.

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Multiple Choice

Paine's arguments helped persuade _______ of colonists that independence was not only sensible, but that it was the key to a brighter future.

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100's

2

1000's

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Thomas Paine published the pamphlet Common Sense to persuade colonists to support independence from Great Britain. Thousands of colonists were moved by Paine’s vivid vision for an independent American nation.

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Multiple Choice

Who wrote Common Sense ?

1

Alexander Hamilton

2

Thomas Paine

2. On the Eve of Independence

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