Age of Enlightenment
- Application of scientific principles to human constructs.
- Goal: Determine what is best for human flourishing and what is most natural.
- Examples:
- Free-market capitalism (Laissez-faire economics: belief that markets will self-regulate).
 
- Influenced the American Revolution:
- The United States was founded on Enlightenment principles like liberty, individual rights, and democratic governance.
 
Pietism and the Great Awakening
Pietism
- Focused on emotional connections to faith.
The Great Awakening
- New Lights: Advocated for new worship styles with emotional sermons.
- Old Lights: Preferred traditional worship methods.
- Impact:
- Created a shared experience that united people across colonies.
- Encouraged questioning of traditional authority, influencing colonial attitudes toward governance.
 
Governing the Colonies
- 
Colonial Assemblies: - Strengthened over time, using a bicameral legislature (lower and upper houses).
- Lower houses were elected by property-owning white men.
- Held the power of the purse (control over taxation and budgets).
 
- 
Salutary Neglect: - British policy of minimal interference allowed colonies to flourish economically and politically.
 
- 
Colonial Demographics: - 90% of the population lived in rural areas.
- 62% Anglo-Saxon, 20% African slaves, 7% Irish, 6% German, 5% other groups.
- Intermarriage led to a mixed “American” identity.
 
French and Indian War
- Fought over control of the Ohio River Valley.
- Sides:
- British and Colonists vs. French and Native Americans (e.g., Iroquois sided with British).
 
Key Events
- 
George Washington: - Built Fort Necessity but was forced to surrender after attacking a French patrol.
 
- 
Albany Congress (1754): - Meeting of 7 colonies and the Iroquois to discuss defense.
- Proposed the Albany Plan of Union (continental assembly for trade, policy, and defense)—rejected by colonies.
 
- 
British Struggles: - Early defeats due to poor strategies (e.g., wearing red uniforms in forests).
 
- 
Turning Point: - New Prime Minister William Pitt focused war efforts in the colonies.
- Promised colonists land and money.
- British victories in Montreal and Quebec led to their eventual success in 1763.
 
Consequences
- 
Treaty of Paris (1763): - France gave up North American holdings, retaining only Caribbean sugar islands.
- Britain became the dominant power in North America.
 
- 
Pontiac’s War (1763): - Native American resistance to British expansion.
- Led to the Proclamation of 1763, restricting settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains.
 
- 
British National Debt: - Increased from £75 million to £133 million, prompting new taxes and stricter policies.
 
Colonial Resistance to British Policies
Acts Imposed by Britain
- 
Currency Act (1764): - Banned colonies from using paper money.
 
- 
Sugar Act (1764): - Lowered taxes on molasses to curb smuggling but angered colonists.
 
- 
Stamp Act (1765): - Taxed printed materials.
- Violations tried in vice-admiralty courts without jury trials.
 
- 
Quartering Act (1765): - Required colonies to house and supply British troops.
 
Motivations for Protest
- Influence of the Great Awakening (encouraged questioning authority).
- Enlightenment principles (natural rights, separation of powers).
- Desire to maintain traditional British rights (jury trials, local governance).
Key Resistance Movements
- 
Stamp Act Congress (1765): - Declared only colonies could tax themselves.
 
- 
Sons of Liberty: - Organized demonstrations, boycotts, and intimidation tactics.
 
- 
Colonial Boycotts: - Led to economic pressure on Britain, resulting in the repeal of the Stamp Act.
- However, Parliament passed the Declaratory Act, reaffirming its authority over the colonies.
 
Townshend Acts and Boston Massacre
- 
Townshend Acts: - Imposed duties on paper, paint, glass, and tea.
- Funds used to pay royal governors and judges, reducing colonial control.
 
- 
Colonial Reaction: - Renewed boycotts and non-importation agreements.
- Daughters of Liberty produced domestic goods to avoid reliance on British imports.
 
- 
Boston Massacre (1770): - Conflict between colonists and British soldiers left 5 colonists dead.
- Used as propaganda to rally colonial resistance.
 
Tea Act and Boston Tea Party
- 
Tea Act (1773): - Designed to bail out the British East India Company by lowering tea prices but cutting out colonial merchants.
 
- 
Boston Tea Party: - Colonists dumped £1 million worth of tea into Boston Harbor.
 
- 
Coercive (Intolerable) Acts: - Parliament’s punishment for the Boston Tea Party:
- Closed Boston Harbor.
- Restricted Massachusetts’ self-governance.
- Allowed trials of British officials to be held in England.
- Strengthened the Quartering Act.
 
 
- Parliament’s punishment for the Boston Tea Party:
First Continental Congress (1774)
- 
Meeting: - Delegates from 12 colonies met in Philadelphia.
 
- 
Goals: - Repeal of the Coercive Acts.
- Organized economic resistance (cut off colonial exports).
 
- 
Outcomes: - Stockpiling of arms.
- Committees of Safety began replacing royal authority.
- Agreement to meet again if demands were not met.