Bộ sách Scott Foresman social studies grade 5 gồm các quyển sau: 5.1 Uncovering Amerias Past 5.2 Vespucci Sails For America 5.3 Making Connections American Indians and Settlers 5.4 Conflict in the Colonies 5.5 Turning Points in the Fight for Freedom 5.6 Words of Freedom The US Constitution 5.7 Spreading Across the Continent 5.8 The Search for Land, Gold, and a New Life 5.9 Civil War Heroines 5.10 The Great Depression 5.11 The Home Front 5.12 Rockets and Satellites 5.13 When Everyone Became a Hero 5.14 New Problems New Solutions 5.15 Touring the United States
Trang 1Scott Foresman Social Studies
Nonfi ction • Time Line
• Maps
• Sidebars
ISBN 0-328-17540-4
ì<(sk$m)=bhfeag< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U
Fascinating Facts
• After Dr Joseph Warren died, Paul Revere identified him
by the two artificial teeth Revere had made for him
• In January 1777, Mary Goddard, probably the first
woman postmaster in the United States, issued the
first copy of the Declaration of Independence to include
the signers’ names
• During the Battle of Fort Washington in 1776, Margaret
Corbin took the place of her husband when he was killed
She continued firing his cannon until she was wounded
Scott Foresman Social Studies
Nonfi ction • Time Line
• Maps
• Sidebars
ISBN 0-328-17540-4
ì<(sk$m)=bhfeag< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U
Fascinating Facts
• After Dr Joseph Warren died, Paul Revere identified him
by the two artificial teeth Revere had made for him
• In January 1777, Mary Goddard, probably the first
woman postmaster in the United States, issued the
first copy of the Declaration of Independence to include
the signers’ names
• During the Battle of Fort Washington in 1776, Margaret
Corbin took the place of her husband when he was killed
She continued firing his cannon until she was wounded
Trang 2activist minutemen retreat morale negotiate turning point campaign siege
Write to It!
Select one of the battles mentioned in this book; then using an encyclopedia or the Internet, research more facts about the battle Write a two- or three-paragraph magazine article about the battle you have chosen
Write your article on a separate sheet of paper
ISBN: 0-328-17540-4
Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc
All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America This publication is protected
by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited
reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise For information regarding
permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue,
Glenview, Illinois 60025.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05
In this book you will read about the American Revolution
and some of the major battles the colonists fought to gain
their independence You will see how the war was fought
from its beginning to its end and discover some of the
important people in the American Revolution
Maps
MapQuest, Inc.
Photographs
Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.
Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education.
Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R) Background (Bkgd) Opener: ©The Granger Collection, NY
3 ©The Granger Collection, New York
7 ©The Granger Collection, NY
8 ©Bettmann/Corbis
9 ©Corbis
11 ©The Granger Collection, NY
12 ©SuperStock
14 ©Chateau de Blerancourt / Dagli Orti/The Art Archive
Editorial Offices: Glenview, Illinois • Parsippany, New Jersey • New York, New York Sales Offices: Needham, Massachusetts • Duluth, Georgia • Glenview, Illinois Coppell, Texas • Sacramento, California • Mesa, Arizona
Trang 3The American Revolution did not begin as a war for
independence The American colonists wanted to be
treated as British citizens, with the same rights that people
in Britain had
When Parliament, Britain’s lawmaking body, began
taxing the colonies directly, the colonists rebelled The
colonists felt that it was unfair for Parliament to tax
them when the colonists could not vote for members of
Parliament “Taxation without representation is tyranny”
became their cry
In 1765 Parliament passed the Stamp Act The Stamp
Act required colonists to buy stamps and place them on
important papers including letters, deeds, newspapers,
and even playing cards Many colonists refused to buy
the stamps
Parliament believed the taxes were fair, because it had
sent British soldiers to protect the colonists during the
French and Indian War and believed that the colonists
should pay for the war’s costs Parliament also passed
more acts that taxed the colonists
Events of the American Revolution
1775
The Battles of Lexington and Concord and the Battle of Bunker Hill
1777
The Battle of Saratoga
1779
John Paul Jones wins
a naval battle.
1776
The Declaration of Independence is signed.
The Battle of Trenton
1775
3
The Boston Tea Party Parliament finally canceled all the taxes except the tax on tea The colonists still were not happy In 1773 Britain sent three ships full of tea to Boston Harbor, but the Bostonians would not allow it to be unloaded When Britain refused to take the tea back, a number of Patriots dressed as Mohawks boarded the ships They threw 342 chests of tea overboard
in what became known as the Boston Tea Party No one knows who participated, but many were probably members
of the Sons of Liberty, a group of Patriot activists Britain closed the port of Boston to punish the Patriots
Patriots dressed as Mohawks threw chests of tea into Boston Harbor
1780
The British take Charleston.
1781
Cornwallis surrenders after the Battle
of Yorktown
1783
The Treaty of Paris is signed by the United States and Britain.
1784 1782
Trang 4Revere captured.
Prescott continues.
British retreat
Dawes turns back.
orth
idge
il 19
Lexington April 19
Old North Church
Roxbury Brookline
Medford
Charlestown Cambridge
Concord
Lexington
Boston Neck
Char les R.
Mys tic R.
Co nc
o
R iv
Boston Harbor
R.
Waltham
C W Weston
Revere’s route Dawes’s route Prescott’s route British advance
British retreat Road Bridge Battle
MASSACHUSETTS
N
The Battles of Lexington and Concord
On the night of April 18, 1775, eight hundred British
troops marched from Boston to the village of Lexington
When the troops reached Lexington, they found about fifty
militiamen They called themselves minutemen because
they were ready to fight at a minute’s notice
The British were on their way to Concord to seize the
colonists’ ammunition stored there The night before, three
men on horseback had tried to alert the people of both
towns that the British were coming
In Lexington Major John Pitcairn, second-in-command
of the British soldiers, yelled, “Disperse [Move away], ye
rebels, disperse!” A moment later a shot rang out Nobody
knows which side it came from, but the British returned fire
without waiting for orders Eight minutemen were killed and
ten others were wounded
The Battles of Lexington and Concord, April 1775
5
The British troops then went on to Concord, where they removed the ammunition in the arsenal They then searched nearby houses and farms for the rest of the hidden ammunition, but it had been taken to other towns
At the Old North Bridge near Concord, another battle took place between the British and the Americans In the two battles, 49 Americans were killed and 39 were wounded About 73 British were killed and 174 were wounded The British then returned to Boston When the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia heard of the battles, it elected George Washington as commander-in-chief of the new army
Spreading the Alarm
Three men had ridden horses through the Massachusetts countryside late into the night of April 18,
1775, to warn people about a British attack Paul Revere was made famous by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem, but William Dawes and Dr Samuel Prescott were just as important
All three men were captured by British soldiers that night, but Prescott escaped and made it to Concord
As Revere was surrounded and taken prisoner, Dawes got away
Trang 5Breed’s Hill
Moulton’s Hill Bunker
Hill
Charlestown
Neck
Boston Charlestown
M
y stic
R iver
Ch arl
e s R i
v e r
Boston Harbor
Causeway
Rail Fence
American fort Other American positions Route of British attack
Route of American retreat British
cannon fire British ship Hill
N
Boston Charlestown
Boston Harbor
.
6
The Battle of Bunker Hill
The next major battle was the Battle of Bunker Hill,
which was fought on nearby Breed’s Hill British ships were
in Boston Harbor, and the Americans heard the British were
planning an attack
During the night of June 16, 1775, the Americans took
ammunition and guns to the top of Breed’s Hill They built
a redoubt, a kind of temporary fort made by piling up dirt
It measured 160 feet long
When the British awoke the next morning, they were
amazed to see the redoubt and began firing from the
ships The fort was out of range
Two thousand British troops started up Breed’s Hill
Each soldier carried a sixty-pound pack and found it hard
Because they were low on ammunition, the Americans held their fire until the British were close Supposedly Colonel William Prescott ordered his men, “Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes.”
Finally, shots rang out and dozens of British soldiers fell
Twice the troops were forced to retreat, but on the third try, the British were able to take the hill The Americans had run out of ammunition, but they continued to fight with bayonets
The first American officer to lose his life in the war was
Dr Joseph Warren, a great Patriot and leader He was an officer but he chose to fight with his troops
It was a British victory, but the Americans had proved they could hold their own in battle More than 1,000 British were killed or wounded, while the Americans lost about 145 men British General George Clinton said it was
“a dear bought [costly] victory Another such would have ruined us.”
Dr Joseph Warren was a physician and
an American officer
Trang 6During the next year and a half, several battles were
fought The Americans established a Continental navy and
looked for help from other countries France began giving
aid to the colonies The Continental Congress wrote and
signed the Declaration of Independence, declaring that the
Thirteen Colonies were a free country
The British took over New York City in the summer of
1776, and Washington’s troops were forced to evacuate
The British won several victories in a row and Washington’s
troops retreated across the Delaware River into
Pennsylvania in December 1776
The Battle of Trenton
On Christmas Day, the British army was camped in
Trenton, New Jersey The army was made up mostly of
Hessians, German soldiers paid to fight for the British
Washington knew they would celebrate Christmas late into
the night with dancing and singing, so he decided the next
morning would be the perfect time for a surprise attack
During the night, 2,400 American soldiers crossed the
river Their boats dodged large chunks of floating ice, and
wind and sleet made their journey miserable
George Washington and his troops crossed the Delaware River
9
The British army was taken completely by surprise
Washington’s army did not suffer a single loss of life, and only four of his men were wounded About twenty-two British soldiers were killed and ninety-twenty-two were wounded The Americans captured the remaining men
One of Washington’s officers wrote in his diary, “We have taken nearly 1000 prisoners, six cannon, more than 1000 muskets, twelve drums ”
The Battle of Trenton provided badly-needed supplies and ammunition and boosted the soldiers’ morale A few days later, the Americans defeated the British at Princeton In July
1777, the British captured Fort Ticonderoga in New York
Thomas Paine Inspires the Army
The morale, or spirits, of the
American soldiers was low before the Battle of Trenton The soldiers had been losing battles, and the American forces were poorly trained and
dressed in rags
Thomas Paine’s pamphlet, Common Sense, had convinced many colonists
that independence was the only way
to be free from Britain’s rule Now he wrote the first of
the Crisis Papers, designed to keep up the morale of the
Americans On Christmas evening, Washington ordered that the booklet be read to his troops Many think Paine’s inspirational words gave the soldiers the inspiration to continue fighting
Thomas Paine
Trang 7Lake Champlain
Lake George
St L aw
re n ce
Ri ve r
iv e
Albany
Montréal
Saratoga
New York City
Fort Ticonderoga
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEW YORK
MASSACHUSETTS
RHODE ISLAND CONNECTICUT
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND
DELAWARE
NEW JERSEY
MAINE (PART OF MASSACHUSETTS)
C A N A D A
N
Burgoyne’s route Battle site
13 Colonies
Marquis de Lafayette, a Frenchman, volunteered and
became Washington’s trusted aide That summer, the British
defeated the Americans in Brandywine Creek in Pennsylvania,
and British forces occupied Philadelphia in September
The Battle of Saratoga
British General John Burgoyne planned to send three
armies into New York State The armies would meet in
Albany and New England would then be separated from the
rest of the colonies At first the plan seemed to work
The Battle of Saratoga, 1777
11
The Americans held the British off during the first Battle
of Saratoga on September 19, 1777 General Burgoyne was forced to retreat, halting the British advance into New York
Three weeks later, the Americans beat the British at Bemis Heights in the second Battle of Saratoga This was
an important victory Major General Horatio Gates and Major General Benedict Arnold led the American army The two sides negotiated, and on October 17, 1777, Burgoyne surrendered his entire army of five thousand men
This was the turning point of the war, when things began
to change The world now believed the Americans could win the war, and European countries gave their support to the Americans
Benedict Arnold: Hero and Traitor
If Benedict Arnold had died from the leg wound he received at Saratoga, he would
be remembered as a great American hero For three years
he served the American army as
a daring and imaginative leader
In 1780, however, he sold the British information that could lead to the capture of West Point He was in debt and thought that he should have been promoted more quickly Arnold’s plan did not work, because his contact, British Major John Andre, was captured with the plans Arnold had provided
Benedict Arnold
Trang 8In the winter of 1777, Washington’s army set up
quarters at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania The army’s morale
was low for three months because of cold, hunger, disease,
and lack of supplies
In June 1778 Washington’s army fought General Henry
Clinton’s troops to a standoff in the Battle of Monmouth
in New Jersey In July France declared war on Britain and
the British could not concentrate all their resources on
fighting the Americans In December 1778 the British
began a campaign in the South, capturing Savannah
and Augusta, Georgia
13
In 1779 the British asked American Indians to attack frontier settlements That September, John Paul Jones,
who commanded the ship Bonhomme Richard, fought
a battle with the British ship Serapis off the coast of
England The British called for Jones’s surrender, but he replied, “I have not yet begun to fight!” Jones managed to capture the British ship as his ship sank
The next spring the British captured Fort Moultrie in Charleston, South Carolina This was the worst American defeat in the war, and the Americans lost their entire Southern Army of 5,400 men along with four ships
British troops led by General Charles Cornwallis defeated the Americans in battles in South Carolina
Cornwallis planned to invade North Carolina, but he changed his plans after the Americans won the Battle of Kings Mountain
General Nathanael Greene was named commander
of the Southern Army Greene’s army spent the next six months chasing Cornwallis through the backwoods of the Carolinas and Virginia The British were short on supplies In March 1781 Cornwallis suffered heavy losses
in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in North Carolina He retreated into Virginia and made Yorktown his base
Washington observed his troops
at Valley Forge
Trang 914 15
The Battle of Yorktown
In a brilliant move, Washington decided to attack the British on the Yorktown peninsula French Admiral de Grasse headed for Chesapeake Bay near Yorktown His fleet included twenty-nine ships and three thousand soldiers
De Grasse’s fleet fought a major battle with the British fleet The defeated British fleet retreated to New York, and
de Grasse kept Cornwallis from leaving the peninsula by sea
More French ships arrived, and de Grasse sent some of them up Chesapeake Bay to transport Washington’s army
to Yorktown Here the American troops, with seventeen thousand men, began a siege of Yorktown British supplies were running low, and the French fleet fired cannons at the British day and night The American army surrounded them, making it impossible for the British to retreat by land
On October 19, 1781, Cornwallis surrendered his troops
at Yorktown This was the last major battle of the war
Parliament voted in February not to continue the war The next month, peace negotiations began
The untrained, poorly outfitted group of patriots had defeated the highly trained and well-supplied British army and navy The United States of America was free at last
Washington meets with his generals
at Yorktown
Trang 10Glossary
activist a person who believes in or takes part
in a cause campaign a series of military operations
minutemen colonial militia groups that could be ready
to fight at a minute’s notice morale the state of a person’s or a group’s spirits
negotiate to talk about something in order to come to
an agreement retreat to pull back a military force that is in danger
from an enemy attack siege the surrounding of an army or a town to try to
make it surrender turning point the point at which a very important
change takes place
Vocabulary
activist minutemen retreat morale negotiate turning point campaign siege
Write to It!
Select one of the battles mentioned in this book; then using an encyclopedia or the Internet, research more facts about the battle Write a two- or three-paragraph magazine article about the battle you have chosen
Write your article on a separate sheet of paper
ISBN: 0-328-17540-4
Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc
All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America This publication is protected
by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited
reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise For information regarding
permission(s), write to: Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue,
Glenview, Illinois 60025.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V0G1 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05
In this book you will read about the American Revolution
and some of the major battles the colonists fought to gain
their independence You will see how the war was fought
from its beginning to its end and discover some of the
important people in the American Revolution
Maps
MapQuest, Inc.
Photographs
Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions.
Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Scott Foresman, a division of Pearson Education.
Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R) Background (Bkgd) Opener: ©The Granger Collection, NY
3 ©The Granger Collection, New York
7 ©The Granger Collection, NY
8 ©Bettmann/Corbis
9 ©Corbis
11 ©The Granger Collection, NY
12 ©SuperStock
14 ©Chateau de Blerancourt / Dagli Orti/The Art Archive