merchant-bankers, 198, 202
   Tea Act, 63
   Mifflin, Thomas, 161, 162, 168–169
   militias
   Battles of Lexington and Concord, 83–84
   Chesapeake Bay defense, 122–123
   interstate conflicts, 201
   Lee’s call in First Continental Congress, 73, 75
   selection of officers, 99
   Shays’s Rebellion, 198
   sufficiency for defense, 39, 80
   time of service, 177–178
   training, 82
   Mississippi River, 191, 202, 226
   Monmouth Courthouse, battle of, 173–174
   Monroe, James, 136, 262
   Montesquieu, Baron de, 17, 217
   Monticello, 262
   Montreal, 97
   Morris, Robert, 103, 175, 189, 243, 255
   Mount Vernon, 9, 19, 261–262
   Mt. Airy, 26–28
   Native Americans. See American Indians
   Navigation Act, 47
   navy, American
   building of, 95–96, 100, 141, 147–148
   Chesapeake Bay defense, 122–123
   Delaware River defense, 108–109
   disbanding, 194
   privateers, 182
   Nelson, Thomas, 186
   New Hampshire, 117, 199, 201, 229, 234
   New Jersey, 116–117, 120, 228
   New York
   boycotts, 48
   British army base, 133–134, 136, 151, 172–173, 174
   Constitution ratification, 239
   Declaration of Independence, 116, 120, 125–126
   invasion during Seven Years’ War, 31
   New Hampshire land conflict, 201
   opposition to federal tax, 160, 193
   opposition to proportional voting, 207
   New York City, 39, 48, 56, 189
   Norfolk, 103
   North Carolina, 108, 178, 229–230, 239
   Northern Neck Peninsula, 15, 19
   defense by militia, 179–180
   hurricane damage, 53
   Lord Dunmore’s base, 122–123, 126–127
   slave population, 35–36
   Northwest Territory, 159, 204–206
   Notes of Proceedings in the Continental Congress (Jefferson), 115
   Ohio Land Company
   Articles of Confederation effect, 159, 193
   Effects of Northwest Ordinance, 206
   formation, 15
   Grand Ohio Company competition, 32–33, 103, 130–131, 145, 206
   Robert Morris involvement, 161–162
   Quebec Act, 66
   Spain, 191
   Olive Branch Petition, 96–97, 100
   Otis, James, 45–46
   Paine, Thomas, 104
   Parliament
   American representation, 48–49
   Continental Association, response to, by, 77–80, 82–83
   election of William Lee, 58
   powers vis-à-vis Congress, 207, 219, 234, 244
   rights to tax colonists, 38–39, 46–47, 58, 59, 76
   tea boycott response, 62–63, 64–67
   See also Stamp Act; tea boycott; Townshend Acts
   Pennsylvania
   colonial acquisition, 14–15
   Connecticut land conflict, 201
   Constitution ratification, 228
   Declaration of Independence support, 116, 120
   French invasion, 18
   militia, 185
   Quebec Act, 66
   Virginia land conflict, 201
   Philadelphia
   British attack, 2, 151, 152–155, 172–174
   Constitution ratification, 228–229
   protests, 39
   temporary federal capital, 253
   travel difficulties, 69–70
   Post–Revolutionary War debt crisis, 191–194
   Hamilton’s economic reforms, 249–253
   lack of specie, 197–198
   Shays’s Rebellion, 198–200
   taxation difficulties, and, 213–214
   See also Constitutional Convention
   Potomac River, 3, 19, 85, 195
   Powhatan Indians, 10
   President. See U.S. President
   Proclamation of Neutrality, 256–257, 258
   Putnam, Israel, 133
   Quakers, 35, 36, 206
   Quartering Act, 66–67, 234
   Quebec, 32, 97
   Quebec Act, 66, 234
   Quincy, Josiah, 56
   Randall, Joseph, 5, 15–16
   Randolph, Edmund, 209
   admiration for John Robinson, 32
   appointments to Constitutional Convention, 201
   Constitution, opposition to, 209, 226
   Constitution, support for, 232–233
   Randolph, Peyton, 28, 70
   Reflexions (Vergennes), 107
   Revere, Paul, 75, 83
   Revolutionary War
   arguments for, 107
   arms supply, 102, 109–110, 135, 149, 151–152
   arrival of French officers, 142–145
   Battle of Bunker Hill, 94–97
   Battle of Saratoga, 157–158
   Battles of Lexington and Concord, 83–85
   British flight from Boston, 104–105
   British raids of Chesapeake Bay, 122–123, 126–127, 179–180
   British response, 172
   British support, 88–89
   Declaration of Independence, 117–118
   formal alliance with France, 171
   French army, 186–187
   French court diplomacy, 135–136
   French support, 3
   Loans from overseas, 191–192
   Marquis de Lafayette, 183–187
   peace talks, 182, 187–188, 194
   southern campaign, 180–187
   See also Beaumarchais, Pierre-Augustin Caron de; Continental Army; Continental Congress, Second; Cornwallis, Charles; Declaration of Independence; Howe, William; intelligence/spying; post–Revolutionary War debt crisis; Revolutionary War, French support; Washington, George, during Revolutionary War
   Rhode Island, 48, 229, 239
   Richmond, 80, 180, 183
   riots, 38, 56, 59, 202
   Robinson, John, 29
   Richard Henry Lee conflict 29, 32–37
   slave trade, 34–36
   on treasury notes, 32–33, 36–37
   Rutledge, Edmund, 133
   Rutledge, Edward, 114, 116–117
   Saratoga, battle of, 157–158
   Second Treatise of Government (Locke), 123
   Senate. See U.S. Senate
   Seven Years’ War
   Braddock expedition, 18–23, 31
   British debts from, 38
   consequences for French, 92
   expulsion of French from Fort Duquesne, 32
   surplus of obsolete arms, 109
   Shawnee Indians, 194
   Shays’s Rebellion, 198–200, 249
   Sherman, Roger, 207
   Shippen, William, 17, 72, 120, 161
   Six Nation Confederacy, 14–15
   slavery/slaves
   agreements at Constitutional Convention, 207
   aristocracy, 224
   Declaration of Independence, 124–125
   effects on Senate voting, 220
   emancipation by British army, 101, 180, 183–184
   headrights, 8–9
   opposition by RHL, 2, 33–36, 50–51, 73, 218
   prohibition in Northwest Territory, 159, 205–206
   slave rebellions, 36
   voting rights, 218
   Smith, Adam, 251
   Smith, Jean Edward, 216
   South Carolina, 116–117, 124, 229
   Spain
   assistance during Revolutionary War, 141, 168
   Florida control, 228
   Mississippi River control, 191, 194
   threat to United States, 118
   speculation, 175, 201, 255
   Springfield, 198
   spying. See intelligence/spying
   Stamp Act, 37–51
 />   arguments against, 38–41
   colonial resistance, 45–46
   effects of, 37–38
   influence on RHL, 40–43
   Lee family response, 40–45
   political turmoil, 46–51
   Staten Island, 127, 133
   Steptoe, Elizabeth, 23, 77
   Steptoe, James, 23
   Steuben, “Baron” von, 170, 171–172
   Stratford Hall, 12–14, 263–264
   expansion by Thomas Lee, 15
   inheritance, 77
   library, 17–18
   location, 19
   Stratford Landing
   boycott of British trade, 77–78, 85
   British attack, 181–182
   hurricane damage, 53
   Suffolk Resolves, 75–76
   Sullivan, John, 133
   Supporters of the Bill of Rights, 59–60
   Supreme Court, 208–209, 248
   Susquehannock Indians, 10
   tariffs. See taxes/tariffs
   Tarleton, Banastre, 183–184, 186
   taxes/tariffs
   Articles of Confederation, 160, 193, 197, 203–204, 213–214
   Bacon’s Rebellion, 11
   direct vs. indirect, 38
   liquor distillers, 250
   non-British imports, 39
   opposition to federal taxes, 200, 219, 221–222, 230, 234
   Parliament’s right to levy, 38–39, 46–47, 58, 59, 76
   property taxes, 225, 249
   Seven Years’ War, 32
   slaves, 34–36
   Virginia Assembly, 168
   See also Stamp Act
   Tayloe, John, 26–28
   Tayloe, Rebecca Plater, 26–28
   Tea Act, 62–64
   tea boycott, 62–68
   British response to tea losses, 64–67
   participation by RHL, 77–78
   Tea Act, 62–63
   “Tea Parties,” 63–64
   Thomson, Charles, 115–116, 130
   Virginia Tidewater, 29, 51
   tobacco
   as currency, 146
   harvesting, 35
   Lee family’s tobacco trade, 9, 55–57, 77–78, 123
   shipping, 57
   Townshend Acts, 46
   arguments over legitimacy, 48–49
   boycott response, 62–63
   partial repeal, 55–56
   trade
   American Revolution effects, 191
   British obstruction, 78
   effects of Declaration of Independence, 108
   French/American trade, 109, 158
   fur trade, 33
   merchants, 46, 58, 63, 194, 198, 202
   national bank, 251
   1769 hurricane effects, 52–53
   state control, 201
   waterway networks, 194–196
   See also boycotts; currency; merchants; tobacco
   U.S. Congress, First, 237–248
   Bill of Rights ratification, 246–248
   establishment of government departments, 245–246
   Federalist/Antifederalist divisions, 239–241
   Hamilton’s economic reforms, 249–253
   member pay, 255
   RHL appointment, 237–238
   tariff law proposal, 244–245
   See also Bill of Rights; U.S. President
   U.S. Constitution, 200–204, 206–235
   emolument clause of, 255
   executive powers, 214, 219–220, 225, 234, 245
   government structure, 207–208
   military, 225, 230, 233–234
   prohibition of titles, 244
   ratification, 3, 228
   representation, 206–207, 224, 248
   state vs. federal powers, 215, 219, 233–234
   trial by jury, 214–215
   Virginia ratification convention, 230–235
   See also Constitutional Convention; U.S. Congress, First
   U.S. House of Representatives, 207, 210, 220–221, 253
   U.S. President
   character, 225
   election, 238–239
   executive departments, 245–246
   executive orders, 256–258, 262–263
   judicial appointments, 248
   powers under Constitution, 208, 211, 225, 234
   Senate powers overlap, 214
   title of address, 242–244
   U.S. Senate
   Electoral College votes, 208, 218
   judicial appointments review, 248
   overlap of presidential-senatorial powers, 214
   representation, 220
   RHL appointment, 237–238
   RHL as president pro tempore, 254
   terms of service, 239
   Valley Forge
   deaths, 160–161
   diversion of supplies, 167–170, 173
   tactical advantages, 160
   Vergennes, comte de (Charles Gravier), 93, 102, 107, 158
   Vermont, 201
   Virginia
   commercial union with Maryland, 195–196
   convention on parliamentary levies, 69, 73
   Elizabeth I and, 8
   land conflict with Pennsylvania, 201
   Lee family control, 1
   militia, 18–23, 85, 101, 177
   money, 200
   navy, 122, 147–148, 180
   Ohio Territory control, 130–131, 159
   population, 9
   Shays’s Rebellion, 199
   slavery laws, 35
   See also House of Burgesses; Virginia Assembly
   Virginia Assembly
   Bill of Rights
   ratification, 247–248
   Constitution ratification debate, 226, 230–235
   convention after king rejects congressional appeal, 80–82
   Declaration of Independence support, 108
   draft,167–168
   Thomas Jefferson inquiry, 186, 187
   Thomas Nelson election, 186
   removal of RHL, 145–147
   See also House of Burgesses
   Virginia Gazette, 31, 42, 215
   Virginia Independent Chronicle, 225, 227
   voting
   bare majority vs. two-thirds majority, 211, 230
   Coercive Acts, 66
   property requirements, 218, 238–239, 241–242
   state populations, 206–207, 248, 253
   Wadsworth, Jeremiah, 216
   Wakefield School, 5–6, 15–16
   War of 1812, 262
   Warren, Joseph, 86
   Washington, Augustine, 21, 26
   Washington, Corbin, 249
   Washington, DC, 252–253
   Washington, George, 1, 3
   Boston Tea Party criticism, 64
   Braddock’s expedition, 18–23
   commander of Virginia militia, 85
   on Constitution, 206, 209, 214, 215, 216, 226, 235
   criticism by Patrick Henry, 231–232
   criticism of role in Seven Years’ War, 31
   election as Constitutional Convention president, 201
   House of Burgesses, 28
   Mercer/Lee duel, 45
   mythologizing of, 262
   Ohio Valley Company formation, 15
   oratory, 71
   property, 29, 53
   reluctance to attend Constitutional Convention, 202–203
   Stamp Act opposition, 40
   views on federal government, 200
   views of The Federalist, 226
   waterway networks, 194–196
   Washington, George, as President
   election, 238–239
   executive departments, 246
   federal capital, creation of, 252–253
   inauguration, 243
   judicial appointments, 248
   Proclamation of Neutrality by, 256–257, 258
   Revolutionary War debts, 249–250
   RHL’s appointment to Senate, 238
   vetoes congressional representation bill, 253
   Whiskey Rebellion, 261
   Washington, George, during Revolutionary War
<
br />   attempted assassination of, 127–128
   on Continental Army officers, 98–99, 142–143, 149–150
   Conway’s plot against, 162–170
   Cornwallis’s Virginia campaign, 185
   currency counterfeiting by British, 148–149
   enlistment shortages, 145, 178
   flight to Delaware River, 136–137, 138–139
   Germantown disaster, 160–161
   Kips Bay defense, 134
   money shortages, 103–104
   need for navy, 102
   nomination as commander-in-chief, 86–87, 151
   Norfolk seizure, 101
   Philadelphia defense, 152–155
   pursuit of Howe’s army, 172–174
   response to treaty with France, 171
   supply shortages, 96, 97
   surrendering of commission, 188–189
   Valley Forge, 160–161, 167–170, 173
   Yorktown, battle of, 186–187
   See also Conway, Thomas; Revolutionary War; Valley Forge
   Washington, Martha, 165
   Washington, William Augustine, 249
   Wayne, Anthony, 185
   Wealth of Nations (Smith), 251
   Webster, Noah, 70, 216
   Westmoreland Resolves of 1766, 41–43, 46
   Wilkes, John
   criticism of king, 60, 93–94
   friendship with Arthur Lee, 61, 88–89
   opposition to British taxation of Americans, 59–60, 61
   Williamsburg, 13, 80, 98
   Willing, Thomas, 103
   Wirt, William, 37, 119, 146–147, 222
   Yorktown, battle of, 186–187
   
   
   
 
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