PPT007 - The Seven Years War
... England saw the colonies as unappreciative at best and disloyal at worst. Colonists had often refused to follow English officers into battle. British officers held the colonials in low regard and did not consider them to have any will to fight. New England shipping companies had continued to _____ w ...
... England saw the colonies as unappreciative at best and disloyal at worst. Colonists had often refused to follow English officers into battle. British officers held the colonials in low regard and did not consider them to have any will to fight. New England shipping companies had continued to _____ w ...
Guiding Questions Chapter 1-6 - Fulton Science Academy Private
... Maryland with South Carolina’s reliance on large-plantation rice-growing and African slavery based on West Indian models. 5. Identify the major similarities and differences among the southern colonies of Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. ...
... Maryland with South Carolina’s reliance on large-plantation rice-growing and African slavery based on West Indian models. 5. Identify the major similarities and differences among the southern colonies of Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. ...
CHAPTER 1: BEGINNINGS TO 1763
... Enterprising Americans, especially from “the sewer” rush to cash in on the 1698 Royal African Company loss of slave monopoly without a Monopoly what happens to the price of a slave? West Coast of Africa ...
... Enterprising Americans, especially from “the sewer” rush to cash in on the 1698 Royal African Company loss of slave monopoly without a Monopoly what happens to the price of a slave? West Coast of Africa ...
Colonial Economics
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
Document
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
Colonial Life - TheMattHatters
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
... • During the English Civil War, colonists took small steps toward self-government. • In 1643 several colonies joined forces in the United Colonies of New England. • Though Parliament had more power since Glorious Revolution, it dealt mainly with mainland England. • The monarchs and their officials m ...
Governing of Colonies to French and Indian War Teacher Notes
... As a result of English Civil War, for one example Creation of the Dominion of New England to gain more political control over colonies (fails) ...
... As a result of English Civil War, for one example Creation of the Dominion of New England to gain more political control over colonies (fails) ...
Colonization of the Americas
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
Colonization of the Americas
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
Colonization of the Americas
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
... Still others were neither pushed nor pulled – they were kidnapped from their homeland in Africa and brought in chains as slaves. - The Portuguese were the country who started the African slave trade – long before Columbus sailed for the Americas. - During the 1500’s, Spanish colonists started impor ...
New England Colonies - Team Sigma
... was the Puritans, a well educated middle-class people founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony. By the summer of 1630 more than 1,000 Puritans had settled in or nearby the city of Boston. By 1640 that number had increased to 20,000. In time New Hampshire, Maine, Rhode Island and Connecticut would join M ...
... was the Puritans, a well educated middle-class people founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony. By the summer of 1630 more than 1,000 Puritans had settled in or nearby the city of Boston. By 1640 that number had increased to 20,000. In time New Hampshire, Maine, Rhode Island and Connecticut would join M ...
Colonial Cooking
... The Colonial Pantry Everyone who arrived during the early 1600s had to become accustomed to three foods available in this new land. These foods included corn, pumpkins, and beans. In New England waters, seafood was plentiful-- especially lobster, clams, oysters, and cod fish. A popular soup made fr ...
... The Colonial Pantry Everyone who arrived during the early 1600s had to become accustomed to three foods available in this new land. These foods included corn, pumpkins, and beans. In New England waters, seafood was plentiful-- especially lobster, clams, oysters, and cod fish. A popular soup made fr ...
Colonizing North America
... to restore order in the colony. The colonists found a dependable source of income to sustain the colony: tobacco. By the 1580s, smoking tobacco had become popular in parts of Europe. The colonists’ success in growing and selling tobacco drew new colonists from England. ...
... to restore order in the colony. The colonists found a dependable source of income to sustain the colony: tobacco. By the 1580s, smoking tobacco had become popular in parts of Europe. The colonists’ success in growing and selling tobacco drew new colonists from England. ...
The Road to Revolution
... On April 5, 1764, Parliament passed a modified version of the Sugar and Molasses Act (1733), which was about to expire. Under the Molasses Act colonial merchants had been required to pay a tax of six pence per gallon on the importation of foreign molasses. But because of corruption, they mostly ev ...
... On April 5, 1764, Parliament passed a modified version of the Sugar and Molasses Act (1733), which was about to expire. Under the Molasses Act colonial merchants had been required to pay a tax of six pence per gallon on the importation of foreign molasses. But because of corruption, they mostly ev ...
UNIT 3 (Chapter 4)
... balance monarchy, aristocracy and democracy, thus guaranteeing the liberties of the people. B. The Reality of British Politics In reality, very few of the English people were represented in the political system. Over 80 percent of the adult males had no right to vote, and members of Parliament were ...
... balance monarchy, aristocracy and democracy, thus guaranteeing the liberties of the people. B. The Reality of British Politics In reality, very few of the English people were represented in the political system. Over 80 percent of the adult males had no right to vote, and members of Parliament were ...
Presentation Plus!
... They had built forts throughout the Great Lakes region and the Ohio River valley. They had strong alliances with the Native Americans. This allowed them to control land from the St. Lawrence River in Canada south to New Orleans. The British colonists had little help from Britain in fighting the Fren ...
... They had built forts throughout the Great Lakes region and the Ohio River valley. They had strong alliances with the Native Americans. This allowed them to control land from the St. Lawrence River in Canada south to New Orleans. The British colonists had little help from Britain in fighting the Fren ...
Colonial Regions Notes Mid-Atlantic (Middle) Colonies Southern
... Baltimore founded it as a refuge for English Catholics. Religion did not have the same impact on communities as in the New England colonies or the Mid-Atlantic colonies because people lived on plantations that were often distant and spread out from one another. Economy – The Southern economy was alm ...
... Baltimore founded it as a refuge for English Catholics. Religion did not have the same impact on communities as in the New England colonies or the Mid-Atlantic colonies because people lived on plantations that were often distant and spread out from one another. Economy – The Southern economy was alm ...
Unit I terms and questions and charts
... ,the cooler climates and clean water quickly increased the life expectancy as people became used to the new ...
... ,the cooler climates and clean water quickly increased the life expectancy as people became used to the new ...
Colonial Recruitment Poster
... family needed, built his own house and furniture, and made many of his own farm implements and tools. His wife took care of the vegetable garden and poultry. She preserved food for use during the winter, and made candles and soap. She spun wool and linen yarn, wove cloth (called homespun) and made ...
... family needed, built his own house and furniture, and made many of his own farm implements and tools. His wife took care of the vegetable garden and poultry. She preserved food for use during the winter, and made candles and soap. She spun wool and linen yarn, wove cloth (called homespun) and made ...
Grade 10
... (8.12) Geography. The student understands the physical characteristics of the United States during the 18th and 19th centuries and how humans adapted to and modified the environment. The student is expected to (A) analyze how physical characteristics of the environment influenced population distribu ...
... (8.12) Geography. The student understands the physical characteristics of the United States during the 18th and 19th centuries and how humans adapted to and modified the environment. The student is expected to (A) analyze how physical characteristics of the environment influenced population distribu ...
Unit 1 power point
... • Trade with the colonies was regulated by Great Britain. • The British sold expensive manufactured goods to colonists • While the colonist sold cheaper raw materials, such as tobacco and cotton, to the British. ...
... • Trade with the colonies was regulated by Great Britain. • The British sold expensive manufactured goods to colonists • While the colonist sold cheaper raw materials, such as tobacco and cotton, to the British. ...
CHAPTER 4 Experience of Empire: Eighteenth
... B. Peoples of the Spanish Borderlands Spain never had a secure political or military hold on her borderlands, but Spanish cultural influence persisted, especially in architecture and language. Those Indians who agreed to live under Spanish rule suffered economic discrimination, but not racial segreg ...
... B. Peoples of the Spanish Borderlands Spain never had a secure political or military hold on her borderlands, but Spanish cultural influence persisted, especially in architecture and language. Those Indians who agreed to live under Spanish rule suffered economic discrimination, but not racial segreg ...
Give Me Liberty 2
... The French and Indian war went badly for the British colonies until Captain James Wolfe took Quebec in 1759. The British finally won three years later. ...
... The French and Indian war went badly for the British colonies until Captain James Wolfe took Quebec in 1759. The British finally won three years later. ...
8-1.3 England`s 13 Colonies PPT Notes English and European
... The London Company (the stock company that ran Jamestown) started the __________________. The Headright System gave land to anyone who paid their own passage or the passage of others to the settlement. The headright system would help create large tobacco plantations. Growing tobacco required a lot o ...
... The London Company (the stock company that ran Jamestown) started the __________________. The Headright System gave land to anyone who paid their own passage or the passage of others to the settlement. The headright system would help create large tobacco plantations. Growing tobacco required a lot o ...
Chapter 5 Notes
... A. Land, Wealth, and Rights 1. Land was plentiful after taken from Native Americans (unlike Europe) 2. More land meant more people could vote than in Britain. B. Social Mobility 1. America unlike Europe in its social class system 2. No titled aristocracy (No Dukes, Earls, Sirs, etc.) 3. A Large Midd ...
... A. Land, Wealth, and Rights 1. Land was plentiful after taken from Native Americans (unlike Europe) 2. More land meant more people could vote than in Britain. B. Social Mobility 1. America unlike Europe in its social class system 2. No titled aristocracy (No Dukes, Earls, Sirs, etc.) 3. A Large Midd ...
Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies
The cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies includes the foods, eating habits, and cooking methods of the Thirteen British colonies in North America before the American revolution. It was derived from familiar traditions from the colonists’ home countries in the British Isles and particularly England. Many agricultural items came through trade with England and the West Indies. Certain familiar items grew better in the Old World than others, and this led to a dependence on imports which drove the daily lives of the colonists. However, the colonial diet was increasingly supplemented by new animal and plant foods indigenous to the New World.In the years leading up to 1776, a number of events led to a drastic change in the diet of the American colonists. As they could no longer depend on British and West Indian imports, agricultural practices of the colonists began to focus on becoming completely self-sufficient.