Section 3 PowerPoint Notes

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Chapter
6 Section 3
Chapter 6 Section 3
The War Widens
The War Widens
Chapter
6 Section 3
Objectives
• I can describe how the war widened and
effected more people and areas.
The War Widens
Chapter
6 Section 3
Terms and People
• enlist – sign up for duty
• civilian – person not in the military
• continental – paper money printed by the
Continental Congress
• George Rogers Clark – Virginian who led
American troops against the British on the
western frontier
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Terms and People (continued)
• Bernardo de Gálvez – governor of Louisiana
who played a major role in Spanish attacks
against the British
• John Paul Jones – American naval commander
who won a key battle against the British
• privateer – armed civilian ship given its
government’s permission to attack enemy ships
and keep their goods
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Set Question:
Why did some African American slaves fight
on both sides during the Revolution?
- Use pages 186-187 if needed
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
How did the effects of the war
widen?
While Continental soldiers faced battle in
the thirteen colonies, many people in other
places also felt the war’s effects.
American Revolution
Native
Americans
Western
settlers
The War Widens
Women
African
Americans
Chapter
6 Section 3
African Americans fought on both sides
during the American Revolution.
Patriots
African Americans
The War Widens
British
Chapter
6 Section 3
Free African Americans fought for the
Patriots from the beginning, seeing action at
several key battles.
• Lexington and Concord
• Bunker Hill
• Saratoga
Some enslaved people also supported the
Americans after escaping from their owners.
The War Widens
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If they fought for the British, however, enslaved
people were offered something of immense value.
Freedom
To gain their freedom, thousands of enslaved
Americans fled their owners and joined the
British.
The War Widens
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At first, George Washington refused to accept
African American soldiers.
Washington reversed his policy, however, after so
many African Americans began to join the British
forces.
By the end of the war, more than 7,000
African Americans had fought for the
Patriots.
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Women, too, were affected by the war, often
taking on new responsibilities.
Men who
enlisted were
away for at
least one year
The War Widens
At home, women:
• planted crops
• tended livestock
• ran businesses
Chapter
6 Section 3
Some women followed their husbands into
battle.
They provided
supplies, food,
and water. They
cared for the
wounded.
Some, like Molly
Pitcher, stepped
in to fight when
her husband fell.
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Soldiers and civilians alike were affected by
the financial burdens of paying for the war.
• Congress had no
power to tax, and
the states had little
money.
The War Widens
Continental
Continental
Continental
Value
• Congress printed
continentals to pay
expenses, but the
money soon lost its
value.
Continental
Amount printed
Chapter
Chapter
6 Section 3
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Those on the western frontier also felt the war’s
effects.
Native
Americans
British
Most Native Americans sided with the British,
fearing an American victory would bring more
settlers onto their lands.
The War Widens
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Looking at this picture what type of
warfare did Native Americans employ?
The War Widens
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Many Indian groups, however, were bitterly
divided about which side to support. Some split
into warring factions.
A deadly epidemic added to the crushing effects
of war.
Infighting
Smallpox
Native Americans
The War Widens
Western
raids
Chapter
6 Section 3
A man afflicted with Smallpox.
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Show small pox inoculation clip.
Students, this is kind of gross.
The War Widens
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George Rogers Clark pushed west to strike
British forts on the frontier.
Clark won key
battles against the
British and their
Native American
allies.
These victories
allowed settlers
to remain on the
frontier.
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Clark and other Americans were given help
by the Spanish, who declared war on Britain
in 1779.
Patriots
Spanish
The War Widens
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Bernardo de Gálvez, the governor of Louisiana,
played a key role in Spanish attacks that captured
British forts along the Mississippi and the Gulf of
Mexico.
British
Spanish
Gálvez also gave refuge to American ships in New
Orleans harbor.
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
The Americans needed the help. Their small navy
was no match for the British fleet, which
dominated the seas.
British ships
blockaded most
American ports
Thirteen
colonies
The War Widens
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A much-needed naval victory was won off the
English coast when John Paul Jones refused to
give up a long and difficult fight, forcing a British
ship to surrender.
Privateers also helped the Americans, seizing
supplies and goods from British merchant ships.
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The Bonhomme Richard engaging the Serapis.
The War Widens
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Closing Question:
Why did African Americans have a tough
decision as to which side they were going
to fight for? Explain your answer in 2
complete sentences.
The War Widens
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6 Section 3
Section Review
QuickTake Quiz
The War Widens
Know It, Show It Quiz