CGA Class of 2017 - Boston Liberty
Liberty in Boston, Mass.
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Massachusetts for Kids | US States Learning Video
This US States learning video for kids explores Massachusetts! Also known as the Bay State and the Pilgrim State, this state (officially called a commonwealth) is full of history and amazing creatures, like black-capped chickadee!
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Massachusetts for Kids | US States Learning Video
Boston Massacre
Short 5 min film of the event with analysis of political pictures
Created by Mr. Mills BA History Widener University
(That is me on the drums at the end too :) )
Boston Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Boston – Discover a city with roots in the past and eyes to the future. Check out all the best places to visit in Boston.
When ready, browse vacation packages to X:
Begin your #Boston #vacation with a history lesson. Start your #sightseeing by walking the Freedom Trail for a bird’s-eye view of the American Revolution, including Boston Common and “Old Ironsides,” the USS Constitution. Stop by some of the most prestigious colleges in the nation, including Harvard and Tufts University. Continue your Boston tour with a stop at Faneuil Hall, which has served as a marketplace since 1742, and check out a variety of shops and street performers.
No #visit to Boston is complete without paying homage at Fenway Park, where the Red Sox have held court for over a century. Don’t forget to fuel up with food afterward; Boston boasts a variety of restaurants, ranging from fresh seafood to classic Italian and everything in between.
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Massachusetts State Constitution
Prof. Allison discusses the origin, importance, and influence of the Massachusetts State Constitution. Even after the Revolution, Boston remains Revolutionary.
This course explores the history of Boston from the 1600’s to the present day. Learn about the native people who lived on the land we now know as Boston before the Puritans arrived. Discover how the European settlers created a robust system of self government and a democracy so strong that Boston became the birthplace of the Revolutionary War. Trace the city’s role in the American anti-slavery movement and the Civil War. The course will help you understand why Boston remains revolutionary to this day, redefining education, the arts and medicine, through its world-class museums, orchestras, hospitals and schools.
Learn more: historyofboston.org
Causes of the American Revolution - Sons of Liberty
RecyclingWorks MA Case Study | Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel
Learn more at: recyclingworksma.com
Interesting Boston Massacre Facts
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Defending Liberty in the Age of Trump: Lessons from the Front
(Visit:
0:30 - Introduction: Dylan Penningroth
5:51 - Main Presentation: David Cole
1:15:25 - Audience Questions
The ACLU is committed to civil rights and civil liberties issue. David Cole, National Legal Director of the ACLU and Georgetown law professor, explores what Trump's first year as president tells us about about constitutional law and the future of civil liberties and civil rights in the United States. David Cole was named Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union in 2016. He oversees approximately 1,400 civil liberties lawsuits, both state and federal. Series: UC Berkeley Graduate Lectures [4/2018] [Show ID: 33307]
13 American Colonies | US History | Kids Academy
13 American Colonies | US History | Kids Academy
Install now Kids Academy Talented & Gifted:
A colony is a place where people from other countries have settled outside their home country and this place is governed by their home country. By the mid-1700s England had set up 13 colonies along the East Coast of America.
There were three groups of colonies of the US-based on the way people lived in these colonies.
Northeast
Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts were the colonies in the northeast. Here people came from England mostly for religious freedom. However, living conditions here were tough. The soil was rocky, and the climate was cold hence cultivation was not an option for them. So, they switched to seafood and become sailors. Their ships were made from lumber in the area.
Middle colonies
New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware were the home to Germans, Irish and Dutch. The weather conditions were better here and many crops such as wheat were grown here.
Southern colonies
Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, made up the southern colonies. The climate here was much warmer and had really good soil which helped them to grow all sorts of crops. Their economy was based on agriculture.
One thing common in all these colonies was the slavery of black men. They suffered harsh living conditions and extreme slavery in all the colonies. Eventually, these 13 American colonies became 13 states and now exist as individual states in America.
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April 19, 2008 Bedford Massachusetts Liberty Pole Red Cap Independence American Revolution 1776
Lenox Hotel Review in Boston (Back Bay)
First stop on our East coast tour in the Summer of 2010 is Boston (Back Bay) where we stayed at the luxurious Lenox Hotel. Amenities and a gracious view are shown in this video.
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The story behind the Boston Tea Party - Ben Labaree
Discover what led American colonists in 1773 to toss tea into the Boston Harbor in what became known as the Boston Tea Party.
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Before the Revolutionary War, American colonists were taxed heavily for importing tea from Britain. The colonists, not fans of taxation without representation, reacted by dumping tea into the Boston Harbor, a night now known as the Boston Tea Party. Ben Labaree gets into the nitty-gritty of that famous revolutionary act.
Lesson by Ben Labaree, animation by Nick Fox-Gieg Animation.
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The American Revolutionary War for Kids: Learn About the Revolutionary War for Children - FreeSchool
The American Revolution was a turning point in history. After years of conflict followed by open warfare, Great Britain's North American colonies became a new, independent nation - the United States of America! This educational video for children discusses events leading up to the war including the Intolerable Acts, the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party, as well as major battles and events during the Revolutionary War. This video would make a great introduction to a Revolutionary War unit, and you can find a FREE coordinating worksheet packet at FreeSchool Publishing! (
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Liberty's Kids #01 The Boston Tea Party
Rediscover America With Liberty's Kids Watch All 40 Episodes Here ( No Login or Email Required! Episode #01 The Boston Tea Party Ben Franklin, Moses, and James discover disguised colonists raiding the tea-laden ship that Sarah is aboard.
Liberty's Kids is an animated educational historical fiction television series that teaches its audience about the origins of the United States of America. It tells of young people in dramas surrounding the major events in the Revolutionary War days. Celebrity voices such as Walter Cronkite (as Benjamin Franklin), Sylvester Stallone (as Paul Revere), Ben Stiller (as Thomas Jefferson), Billy Crystal (as John Adams), Dustin Hoffman (as Benedict Arnold), Arnold Schwarzenegger (as Baron von Steuben), and Don Francisco (as Bernardo de Galvez) lend credence to characters critical to the forming of a free country, from the Boston Tea Party to the Constitutional Convention.
Rediscover America Now With Liberty's Kids Watch All 40 Episodes Here ( No Login or Email Required!
Today in History: Port of Boston Act becomes law (1774)
John Robson looks at March 31 1774 when the Port of Boston Act became law, as part of a series of measures doubling down on the British government’s denial of basic English liberties to the English in Massachusetts by insisting on taxation without representation, limiting trial by jury and quartering troops in colonists’ homes. MORE
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Road To Revolution: Historic Boston (#GH4956) Trailer
In Historic Boston students discover how events in that city set the colonies on the road to revolution and independence. Paul Revere never really did proclaim The British are coming, the British are coming! Students find out what he really said, and so much more, in this engaging, information-packed video. Archival material, reenactment footage, and commentary from Paul Revere, bring the events leading up to the Revolutionary War to life.
Purchase the DVD here:
Pre-Revolutionary Boston: Setting the Stage for a Massacre (Part 1 of 9)
Robert J. Allison, Chairman of the Department of History at Suffolk University, joins the Society of the Cincinnati's Eleesha Tucker for an in-depth discussion on two critical moments in the early days of the Revolutionary War era: The Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party.
The people of Massachusetts had more power over their own government than anyone else in the British empire. These independent minded colonists increased in their feelings of bitterness and resentment as the crown raised taxes on American goods and sent soldiers to enforce the new policies. These building tensions eventually led to outward expressions of resistance. The Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party made the American Revolution inevitable.
Dr. Robert J. Allison is chairman of the history department of Suffolk University in Boston and teaches courses in American Constitutional history and the history of Boston at Harvard Extension School. He is the author of several books, including The Crescent Obscured: The United States and the Muslim World, 1776-1815 (2000); A Short History of Boston (2004); Stephen Decatur, American Naval Hero (2005); The Boston Massacre (2006); The Boston Tea Party (2007); and The American Revolution: A Concise History (2011).
The American Revolution - OverSimplified (Part 1)
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History Brief: The Intolerable Acts
Everything students need to know about the Intolerable Acts
Transcript:
The Intolerable Acts. Everything you need to know.
King George III and the new British Prime Minister, Lord North, were furious when they heard the news of the Boston Tea Party. In the spring of 1774, Parliament responded by passing four harsh laws that colonists found so rude, crude, and vile they called them The Intolerable Acts. What did these laws do?
The Coercive Acts, as they were called in Britain, were designed to punish Boston for the Tea Party and passed Parliament by a huge 4-1 majority. The Boston Port Act closed Boston Harbor, one of the empire’s busiest, until the destroyed tea, and the duties on it, were paid for in pounds sterling.
Massachusetts’s charter, granted by the Crown in 1691, was drastically overhauled. Officials in the governor’s council would be appointed by the royal governor, and town meetings could no longer take place without the governor’s permission. All local judges and officials would be appointed by the governor, and their salaries would be paid for by customs duties (taxes). All Committees of Correspondence in the colony were also to be disbanded.
The Administration of Justice Act followed, which stipulated that any British soldier or official charged with a capital crime in America would have their trial moved to England or to another colony where they would face a friendlier judge and jury.
The Coercive Acts also dispatched four regiments of British soldiers to Boston and authorized army officers to quarter the troops in the homes of private citizens. To truly emphasize the message to the colonists, King George III appointed Royal Army officer Thomas Gage, commander-in-chief of British troops in North America, as the new governor of the colony.
As a final act of punishment to the colonies, Lord North passed the Quebec Act, which set up a government for the colony that had been won from France a little more than a decade before. It made concessions to the Roman Catholic French living in the territory as it imitated the manner in which they were governed under the French colonial regime.
The second part of the Quebec Act proved to be quite “anti-American.” The southern boundary of Quebec was extended south to the Ohio River and the western half to the Mississippi, effectively stripping away the land claims of a half dozen colonies to the territory. British officials readily admitted in Parliament that the intention was to keep the English colonists bottled up close to the seaboard where they would be easier to control.
Not all of the members of Parliament supported the Coercive Acts. In fact, several warned that it would lead to massive resistance throughout the colonies. One even warned his fellow politicians that they might soon be “wading up to your eyes in blood.” William Pitt spoke out against the acts in the House of Lords because they “punish the innocent as well as the guilty.”
Lord North dismissed the negative arguments, assuring that the empire had nothing to worry about. Of the America colonies he commented, “She has neither army, navy, money, or men.” He then summed up the debates on the acts by stating, “We must control them or submit to them.”
After meeting with the former Governor of Massachusetts, Thomas Hutchinson, King George III informed Prime Minister North that the colonies would soon submit to their rule. It was around that same time that reports reached London that colonial leaders had planned something called the Continental Congress to meet in Philadelphia.