
Home > Holidays
 Christian History, Spring 1996
TIMELINE: American Revolution
By Robert M. Calhoon
First Hints
1740s & 1750s
|
CHRISTIANITY
|
|
THE REVOLUTION
|
|
1740s Great Awakening inspired by George Whitefield's preaching spreads through colonies
|
|
1740-1748 King George's WarFrench and British maneuver to dominate North America
|
|
1747 Jonathan Edwards's The Visible Union of God's People envisions Americans bound together by shared conversion experience
|
|
1760 George III becomes king of England
|
|
1750 Jonathan Mayhew's Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and Non-Resistance announces Christian duty to resist tyranny
|
|
1756-1763 Seven Years' WarBritish expel French from North America
|
* * *
Prelude
1760s
|
CHRISTIANITY
|
|
THE REVOLUTION
|
|
1768-1769 Northern Anglicans demand appointment of a colonial bishop
|
|
1763 Peace of Paris ends Seven Years' War; British government in financial straits
|
|
1768 John Witherspoon becomes president of the College of New Jersey; unites Presbyterians and introduces Scottish Common Sense philosophy
|
|
1764 Sugar ActBritain tightens enforcement of the acts of trade, seeking more revenues from colonies
|
|
|
|
1765 Stamp ActAmericans complain of taxation without representation
|
|
|
|
1767 Townshend Actsattempts to indirectly tax the colonies
|
* * *
Turning Point
1770-1776
|
CHRISTIANITY
|
|
THE REVOLUTION
|
|
1772 Boston Committee of Correspondence indicts British policies, including prospect of a colonial Anglican bishop; John Allen preaches on The Beauties of Liberty
|
|
1770 Boston Massacrefive protesting Bostonians killed
|
|
1774 May Quebec Act condemned as extending "Papist Rule"; Sept. Baptist Isaac Backus demands that First Continental Congress, meeting in Carpenter's Hall, Philadelphia, protect Baptists' religious liberty
|
|
1773 Boston Tea Party protests Tea Act of 1773
|
|
1775 July Continental Congress calls for day of prayer and fasting; preachers debate whether to submit to British authority
|
|
1774 Intolerable Acts: including quartering of troops in homes; First Continental Congress meets
|
|
1776 July Declaration of Independence invokes "the laws of nature and of nature's God"; Sept. New Jersey Dutch Reformed split on political lines; Dec. North Carolina constitution restricts officeholding to Protestants; Dec. Virginia disestablishes the Anglican church
|
|
1775 Apr. Battles of Lexington and Concord force a British retreat; May Second Continental Congress seeks repeal of British policies; creates Continental Army and names George Washington commander; June Battle of Bunker Hill
|
|
|
|
1776 Jan. Thomas Paine's Common Sense ignites feelings for independence; July Thomas Jefferson pens Declaration of Independence; Dec. Washington crosses Delaware and defeats British at Trenton
|
* * *
War & Aftermath
1777-1789
|
CHRISTIANITY
|
|
THE REVOLUTION
|
|
1777 Aug. Pennsylvania officials deport 40-plus Quakers for "disloyalty;" Nov. Lutheran patriarch Henry Muhlenburg defends his neutrality
|
|
1777 Battle of Saratoga: American victory prompts France to support United States
|
|
1778-1780 Henry Alline, "Nova Scotia's Whitefield," ignites a Canadian revival that spreads to New England
|
|
1777-1778 Washington's army suffers through winter at Valley Forge
|
|
1778 South Carolina permits Anglican-like churches that meet certain criteria
|
|
1778 June Battle of Monmouth: longest action of the war a draw
|
|
1779 Virginia considers public subsidies for churches
|
|
1781 Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown, forcing peace negotiations
|
|
1780 Massachusetts decides to continue public funding of Congregational churches
|
|
1783 Treaty of ParisBritish recognize American independence
|
|
1781 Presbyterian Samuel McCorkle preaches against looting and abusing of loyalists
|
|
1787 U.S. Constitutional Convention
|
|
1786 Virginia adopts Thomas Jefferson's Statute for Religious Liberty
|
|
1789 Bill of Rights guarantees religious freedom
|
|
1788 Presbyterians establish a national denomination
|
|
|
|
1789 George Washington takes presidential oath on the Bible, adding "So help me, God."
|
|
|
* * *
Robert Calhoon is professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He is author of "Dominion and Liberty: Ideology in the Anglo-American World" (1994).
Copyright © 1996 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
Click here
for reprint information on Christian History.
Issue 50, May 1996, Vol. XV, No. 2, Page 26
|  |
 |