Treaty of Paris: Timeline
Treaty of Paris: Timeline
April 19, 1775
Fighting breaks out at Lexington and Concord
The official beginning of the American Revolution: fighting breaks out between patriots (yay!) and redcoats (boo!).
July 4, 1776
Declaration of Independence signed
You probably know this date pretty well. The Founding Fathers just really wanted to give everyone an excuse to eat hot dogs and watch fireworks.
February, 1778
French officially ally themselves with the United States
After the capture of the British army at Saratoga, the French think that maybe the U.S. has what it takes and officially becomes an ally. (They'd been secretly supplying arms and materiel since 1775 though, including 90% of patriot gunpowder.)
April, 1779
Spain joins the war
Looking for revenge for the Seven Years War, Spain—who had already been providing aid to the patriots—entered the war on the side of the United States.
Well, really they entered the war against Britain. Everyone kind of hated Britain at the time.
December, 1780
Dutch Republic declares war on Great Britain
Yup: that makes three European power mixing it up with Britain. The American Revolution was, at the time, a sideshow to these European wars. The U.S. was considered a convenient pawn to use to weaken Britain's position in the world.
And it worked—maybe too well.
October 19, 1781
Battle of Yorktown
This is the decisive victory of the Revolution. A joint force of American and French forces beat Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia.
April, 1782
Peace negotiations begin
American diplomats Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, Henry Laurens, and future president John Adams meet British diplomats David Hartley and Richard Oswald to discuss terms.
The French were looking for peace, but Spain would keep it up until they got Gibraltar, and the Dutch showed no signs of stopping. This put the U.S. in a great position to negotiate, with Britain facing a ton o' enemies.
November 30, 1782
Preliminary Articles of Peace signed
The first semi-treaty gets some ink on it, reaffirming everyone's desire to knock it off with the fighting. The Preliminary Articles are something of a rough draft for the eventual Treaty of Paris.
September 3, 1783
Treaty of Paris signed
All we are saying is give peace a chance.
January 14, 1784
Treaty of Paris ratified
Congress ratified the treaty, making it officially legal.
April 9, 1784
Treaty of Paris ratified...again
This time by the British. Both sides had to ratify it to make it legal. (Remember when we told you this process was slooooow?)
1789-1799
French Revolution
Inspired by the American Revolution (and clueless nobles who wore ridiculous wigs), this was ten years of chaos. The French expected the U.S. to aid them since they were doing a similar revolution-type thing.
The U.S. did not. That was kind of terrible—but then, so was the French Revolution.
1791-1804
Haitian Revolution
Also inspired by the American Revolution (not to mention horrible conditions), enslaved Black people in the French colony of Saint Domingue fight for their freedom.
After thirteen years they get it, becoming the second New World power in history to get their independence, and setting up a government that exists to this day.