Revolution Study Guide
... Boston Tea Party: Samuel Adams and Paul Revere led patriots in throwing tea into Boston Harbor to protest tea taxes. First Continental Congress: Delegates from all colonies except Georgia met to discuss problems with England and to promote independence. Battle of Lexington and Concord: This was the ...
... Boston Tea Party: Samuel Adams and Paul Revere led patriots in throwing tea into Boston Harbor to protest tea taxes. First Continental Congress: Delegates from all colonies except Georgia met to discuss problems with England and to promote independence. Battle of Lexington and Concord: This was the ...
New England Uprising
... Merchants, lawyers, southern planters, middle-class Most were highly educated and wealthy Supported by lower class Believed in self-rule and free trade ...
... Merchants, lawyers, southern planters, middle-class Most were highly educated and wealthy Supported by lower class Believed in self-rule and free trade ...
English Colonies, 1600 – 1650
... and their management of Jamestown. The committee recommended the court dissolve the company, so the King revoked the charter, making Virginia a royal colony directly under his control. As a financial investment the London Company had been a disaster—the shareholders lost everything they invested. Al ...
... and their management of Jamestown. The committee recommended the court dissolve the company, so the King revoked the charter, making Virginia a royal colony directly under his control. As a financial investment the London Company had been a disaster—the shareholders lost everything they invested. Al ...
SG04 - Caledonia High School
... 6. American colony that was home to the Newport slave market and many slave traders 7. English company that lost its monopoly on the slave trade in 1698 8. African-American dialect that blended English with Yoruba, Ibo, and Hausa 9. Uprisings that occurred in New York City in 1712 and in South Carol ...
... 6. American colony that was home to the Newport slave market and many slave traders 7. English company that lost its monopoly on the slave trade in 1698 8. African-American dialect that blended English with Yoruba, Ibo, and Hausa 9. Uprisings that occurred in New York City in 1712 and in South Carol ...
British Colonial Trade Regulations, 1651-1764 Act
... * 1720s to 1790s, The Enlightenment: American political thought was influenced by Locke's natural rights philosophy (including consent of the governed) and Montesquieu's views on checks and balances ...
... * 1720s to 1790s, The Enlightenment: American political thought was influenced by Locke's natural rights philosophy (including consent of the governed) and Montesquieu's views on checks and balances ...
historical discussions 1 2 3 4 5
... who landed at Jamestown survived primarily on fish and turtles! Sturgeon was the most common fish. A sturgeon may live up to 60 years, weigh up to 800 pounds and reach lengths of up to 15 feet. Archaeologists have found the bony plates which cover the heads of sturgeon and the bony shields, or scute ...
... who landed at Jamestown survived primarily on fish and turtles! Sturgeon was the most common fish. A sturgeon may live up to 60 years, weigh up to 800 pounds and reach lengths of up to 15 feet. Archaeologists have found the bony plates which cover the heads of sturgeon and the bony shields, or scute ...
US History Ch3 Summary
... books, and china made in England. To control colonial trade, the English Parliament passed the Navigation Acts. These laws barred the colonies from sending some goods to other nations. They also required that all colonial trade had to travel on English or colonial ships and first be unloaded at Engl ...
... books, and china made in England. To control colonial trade, the English Parliament passed the Navigation Acts. These laws barred the colonies from sending some goods to other nations. They also required that all colonial trade had to travel on English or colonial ships and first be unloaded at Engl ...
a new world - Social Studies Resources
... scientists and historians that some Vikings landed in the area where Massachusetts is located today. There are also remains of a Viking settlement at L'Anse Aux Meadow, in Newfoundland, Canada. One of the events that led to the next discovery of North America was the Crusades. During the 1100s and 1 ...
... scientists and historians that some Vikings landed in the area where Massachusetts is located today. There are also remains of a Viking settlement at L'Anse Aux Meadow, in Newfoundland, Canada. One of the events that led to the next discovery of North America was the Crusades. During the 1100s and 1 ...
Unit Outline: North America, 1492-1763 - AP Central
... IV. Political development in the colonies until 1750 A. Official designations 1. Royal colonies (Virginia, New York, later Georgia) 2. Governance set up in charters (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island) 3. Proprietary colonies (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Carolinas, New Jersey) B. Political struct ...
... IV. Political development in the colonies until 1750 A. Official designations 1. Royal colonies (Virginia, New York, later Georgia) 2. Governance set up in charters (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island) 3. Proprietary colonies (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Carolinas, New Jersey) B. Political struct ...
New England Colonies
... • Declared the colony had no legal right to own land because they have no purchased it from the Native Americans • Banished in 1635; moved to “Providence” and began his own colony • Purchased the land from Native Americans inhabiting the area and received a charter from England to begin a settlement ...
... • Declared the colony had no legal right to own land because they have no purchased it from the Native Americans • Banished in 1635; moved to “Providence” and began his own colony • Purchased the land from Native Americans inhabiting the area and received a charter from England to begin a settlement ...
UNIT 2 Reading Summaries
... As they saw their children grow more Dutch than English, the Pilgrims decided to leave Holland for the new English colony of Virginia. They landed instead at Cape Cod and remained there. Led by William Bradford and helped by friendly Indian neighbors, the Pilgrims survived and created a society of s ...
... As they saw their children grow more Dutch than English, the Pilgrims decided to leave Holland for the new English colony of Virginia. They landed instead at Cape Cod and remained there. Led by William Bradford and helped by friendly Indian neighbors, the Pilgrims survived and created a society of s ...
American Pageant CH 2 - Washougal School District
... ans. They were again defeated. The peace treaty of 1646 repudiated any hope of assimilating the native peoples into Virginian society or of peacefully coexisting with them. Instead it effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians from their ancestral lands and formally separated Indian from white area ...
... ans. They were again defeated. The peace treaty of 1646 repudiated any hope of assimilating the native peoples into Virginian society or of peacefully coexisting with them. Instead it effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians from their ancestral lands and formally separated Indian from white area ...
The Planting of English America
... ans. They were again defeated. The peace treaty of 1646 repudiated any hope of assimilating the native peoples into Virginian society or of peacefully coexisting with them. Instead it effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians from their ancestral lands and formally separated Indian from white area ...
... ans. They were again defeated. The peace treaty of 1646 repudiated any hope of assimilating the native peoples into Virginian society or of peacefully coexisting with them. Instead it effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians from their ancestral lands and formally separated Indian from white area ...
British Colonies
... What would be a problem with this? Halfway Covenant – allowed baptism of children who were not believers. Why? ...
... What would be a problem with this? Halfway Covenant – allowed baptism of children who were not believers. Why? ...
Ch1 summary - Mr Clotzman
... Jamestown, Virginia. It was the first permanent English colony in the Americas. The colony struggled until settlers began to grow tobacco to ship to Europe. To work on tobacco plantations, they hired indentured servants. These people agreed to work for a few years on land owned by the tobacco farmer ...
... Jamestown, Virginia. It was the first permanent English colony in the Americas. The colony struggled until settlers began to grow tobacco to ship to Europe. To work on tobacco plantations, they hired indentured servants. These people agreed to work for a few years on land owned by the tobacco farmer ...
Colonial Recruitment Poster
... a. Indentured servants, whose employers paid their passage to America and who were bound to their employers until they had fulfilled their period of service b. Slaves, who were bound to their masters for life. Indentured servants and slaves were found in all the colonies. POPULATION 1. Population Gr ...
... a. Indentured servants, whose employers paid their passage to America and who were bound to their employers until they had fulfilled their period of service b. Slaves, who were bound to their masters for life. Indentured servants and slaves were found in all the colonies. POPULATION 1. Population Gr ...
The British Colonies - CGMS Social Studies
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. The two sides ended their rivalry in North America in the French and Indian ...
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. The two sides ended their rivalry in North America in the French and Indian ...
(Survey) Chapter 3
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. ...
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. ...
Section 1: England and Its Colonies
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. The two sides ended their rivalry in North America in the French and Indian ...
... claimed control of the entire Mississippi River valley, but they had few settlers compared to the British. They were interested in the fur trade and developed friendly relations with many Native American groups as a result. The two sides ended their rivalry in North America in the French and Indian ...
foundations of america
... but I was still more astonished to see people on horseback. I did not know what this could mean, and indeed I thought these people were full of nothing but magical arts. While I was in this astonishment, one of my fellow prisoners spoke to a countryman of his about the horses who said they were the ...
... but I was still more astonished to see people on horseback. I did not know what this could mean, and indeed I thought these people were full of nothing but magical arts. While I was in this astonishment, one of my fellow prisoners spoke to a countryman of his about the horses who said they were the ...
In the mid-1700s, a German schoolteacher named Gottlieb
... The Puritans of Massachusetts gained the freedom to practice their religion the way they wanted to. But instead of granting similar freedom to others, they set up a government that required everyone in the colony to worship as they did. When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching diff ...
... The Puritans of Massachusetts gained the freedom to practice their religion the way they wanted to. But instead of granting similar freedom to others, they set up a government that required everyone in the colony to worship as they did. When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching diff ...
The 13 Colonies During the 1500s and 1600s, Spain, France, and
... religion without persecution. Puritans followed strict rules and were intolerant of other religions. Life in New England was dominated by church, and there were severe consequences for those who failed to attend, or, those who spoke out against the Puritan ways. Economy –was largely dependent on the ...
... religion without persecution. Puritans followed strict rules and were intolerant of other religions. Life in New England was dominated by church, and there were severe consequences for those who failed to attend, or, those who spoke out against the Puritan ways. Economy –was largely dependent on the ...
CHAPTER 2
... Massachusetts had extended its boundaries into New Hampshire and after complaints from Robert Mason, Charles II took New Hampshire from it and gave it a royal gov’t, Massachusetts almost lost Maine, too Renewed the order for the General Court to sent agents, they were, however, purposely inadequ ...
... Massachusetts had extended its boundaries into New Hampshire and after complaints from Robert Mason, Charles II took New Hampshire from it and gave it a royal gov’t, Massachusetts almost lost Maine, too Renewed the order for the General Court to sent agents, they were, however, purposely inadequ ...
Unit 1 Review Sheet
... Did Christopher Columbus the famous explorer discover America? Not really. Many other explorers came before him, but Columbus landing in the Caribbean in 1492 was very important because his travel led to the colonization of the New World (North, Central, and South America) by European countries. Col ...
... Did Christopher Columbus the famous explorer discover America? Not really. Many other explorers came before him, but Columbus landing in the Caribbean in 1492 was very important because his travel led to the colonization of the New World (North, Central, and South America) by European countries. Col ...
Three Cultures Meet
... • Farther inland, however, in the mountains and valleys of the Appalachian foothills, the economy was based on small-scale subsistence farming, hunting, and trading by settlers of Scots-Irish and English descent. ...
... • Farther inland, however, in the mountains and valleys of the Appalachian foothills, the economy was based on small-scale subsistence farming, hunting, and trading by settlers of Scots-Irish and English descent. ...