Note Taking Study Guide
... degree of self-government than did French and Spanish colonists. They had their own representative assemblies that could advise the governor and decide local issues. During the 1700s, England and France emerged as powerful rivals. In 1754, the French and Indian War erupted in North America and then ...
... degree of self-government than did French and Spanish colonists. They had their own representative assemblies that could advise the governor and decide local issues. During the 1700s, England and France emerged as powerful rivals. In 1754, the French and Indian War erupted in North America and then ...
Note Taking Study Guide
... English colonists enjoyed a greater degree of self-government than did French and Spanish colonists. They had their own representative assemblies that could advise the governor and decide local issues. During the 1700s, England and France emerged as powerful rivals. In 1754, the French and Indian Wa ...
... English colonists enjoyed a greater degree of self-government than did French and Spanish colonists. They had their own representative assemblies that could advise the governor and decide local issues. During the 1700s, England and France emerged as powerful rivals. In 1754, the French and Indian Wa ...
How the French Lost their Foothold in North America to the British
... In the interim, the Governor dispatched a company of soldiers under Pierre Joseph de Celoron down the St. Lawrence from Montreal, onto Lake Ontario to the Niagara River, across Lake Erie, then south on the Allegheny River to the Ohio River. Celoron’s expedition reached the Seneca village of Alequipp ...
... In the interim, the Governor dispatched a company of soldiers under Pierre Joseph de Celoron down the St. Lawrence from Montreal, onto Lake Ontario to the Niagara River, across Lake Erie, then south on the Allegheny River to the Ohio River. Celoron’s expedition reached the Seneca village of Alequipp ...
CONTACT - Teachers.AUSD.NET
... B. Arrived more than 40,000 years ago via Bering Strait (called Beringia when it was above land) and eventually spread to tip of South America (by 8,000 B.C.) 1. First immigrants hunted animals for meat and furs; probably built small fishing vessels. 2. Beringia became isolated when Bering Strait un ...
... B. Arrived more than 40,000 years ago via Bering Strait (called Beringia when it was above land) and eventually spread to tip of South America (by 8,000 B.C.) 1. First immigrants hunted animals for meat and furs; probably built small fishing vessels. 2. Beringia became isolated when Bering Strait un ...
From Discovery to Independence: An Outline of American History
... An Errand* into the Wilderness: The Colonial Beginnings of North America The beginnings of European civilization in North America were conspicuously different from those of Central and South America. There are mainly two reasons for this: first, North America lacked the gold and silver that its six ...
... An Errand* into the Wilderness: The Colonial Beginnings of North America The beginnings of European civilization in North America were conspicuously different from those of Central and South America. There are mainly two reasons for this: first, North America lacked the gold and silver that its six ...
Unit 2 European Explorers Text
... replacing Indians. Slavery had existed around the world since ancient times. Often, people who were on the losing side in wars were enslaved, or treated as the property of their conquerors. By the late 1400s, European explorers in West Africa were trading guns and other goods for slaves captured by ...
... replacing Indians. Slavery had existed around the world since ancient times. Often, people who were on the losing side in wars were enslaved, or treated as the property of their conquerors. By the late 1400s, European explorers in West Africa were trading guns and other goods for slaves captured by ...
Document
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
Colonial Economics
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
Colonial Life - TheMattHatters
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
... England were involved in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Most captured Africans were taken to colonies in the Caribbean and South America, then to North America. Only a small percentage came directly to the North ...
Late Colonial Society
... Life in the 1700s British American colonies – Ch. 5 of The American Pageant, “Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution,” pp. 84-97 Overall main idea: Life in colonial America included a growing diverse population, social mobility, agricultural-based economy, slow travel and a revival of Christianit ...
... Life in the 1700s British American colonies – Ch. 5 of The American Pageant, “Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution,” pp. 84-97 Overall main idea: Life in colonial America included a growing diverse population, social mobility, agricultural-based economy, slow travel and a revival of Christianit ...
Section 5 — Jamestown: The First English Colony
... settlers looked for a new workforce. Before long, Africans were replacing Indians. Slavery had existed around the world since ancient times. Often, people who were on the losing side in wars were enslaved, or treated as the property of their conquerors. By the late 1400s, European explorers in West ...
... settlers looked for a new workforce. Before long, Africans were replacing Indians. Slavery had existed around the world since ancient times. Often, people who were on the losing side in wars were enslaved, or treated as the property of their conquerors. By the late 1400s, European explorers in West ...
If - NYS Historic Newspapers
... — „ ...v..,^^v „*„ ^n**tne 28th"of**M3y, 1754, ended with the fall of Quebec the 13tb of September, 1759. ttconttaiwdr on the ocean for three years longer, and then, In 17t>3, its issues were settled by the treaty of peace of Paris. In that treaty France surrendered to England all her possessions in ...
... — „ ...v..,^^v „*„ ^n**tne 28th"of**M3y, 1754, ended with the fall of Quebec the 13tb of September, 1759. ttconttaiwdr on the ocean for three years longer, and then, In 17t>3, its issues were settled by the treaty of peace of Paris. In that treaty France surrendered to England all her possessions in ...
European Colonies in America
... • Those who survived had help from the friendly local Indians. Massachusetts Bay Colony • This colony was established as both a religious haven and the headquarters of the Massachusetts Bay Company. • The colony’s success inspired the Great Migration, when 16,000 English settlers crossed the Atlanti ...
... • Those who survived had help from the friendly local Indians. Massachusetts Bay Colony • This colony was established as both a religious haven and the headquarters of the Massachusetts Bay Company. • The colony’s success inspired the Great Migration, when 16,000 English settlers crossed the Atlanti ...
CONTACT - Pueblo County High School
... C. By 8,000 B.C., Native Americans had reached tip of South America. 1. Hundreds of tribes with different languages, religious & cultures inhabited America. 2. Between 4,000 and 1500 B.C. permanent farm villages came to dominate parts of Peru, south-central Mexico, northeastern Mexico, and southwest ...
... C. By 8,000 B.C., Native Americans had reached tip of South America. 1. Hundreds of tribes with different languages, religious & cultures inhabited America. 2. Between 4,000 and 1500 B.C. permanent farm villages came to dominate parts of Peru, south-central Mexico, northeastern Mexico, and southwest ...
Chapter 3 Section 4 p.76-83
... Native Americans than did other Europeans . French trappers and missionaries traveled deep into Indian lands. They lived among the Native American peoples, learned their languages, and respected their ways. Although the missionaries had come to convert Native Americans to Catholicism, they did not t ...
... Native Americans than did other Europeans . French trappers and missionaries traveled deep into Indian lands. They lived among the Native American peoples, learned their languages, and respected their ways. Although the missionaries had come to convert Native Americans to Catholicism, they did not t ...
Social studies review flash cards
... Declaration of Independence Reaction to King George III’s refusal to acknowledge the colonial requests/demands, “dissolve the political bands” with Britain, provided philosophy for the establishment of the new nation “…all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with unalienable righ ...
... Declaration of Independence Reaction to King George III’s refusal to acknowledge the colonial requests/demands, “dissolve the political bands” with Britain, provided philosophy for the establishment of the new nation “…all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with unalienable righ ...
Answer Key – notes-and-comprehension
... Explorers hoped to reach Asia by sailing through North America! The Spanish and ...
... Explorers hoped to reach Asia by sailing through North America! The Spanish and ...
para 1 - Cengage Learning
... 3. Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, recognized the strategic and economic promise in Joliet and Marquette’s discovery of the Mississippi River. a) The acquisition of Louisiana was a major accomplishment for La Salle and for France. C. The Dutch Enterprise 1. By the 1630s, the Dutch dominated the ...
... 3. Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, recognized the strategic and economic promise in Joliet and Marquette’s discovery of the Mississippi River. a) The acquisition of Louisiana was a major accomplishment for La Salle and for France. C. The Dutch Enterprise 1. By the 1630s, the Dutch dominated the ...
Introduction Changes in Europe
... Colonialism is the domination of one group of people by another, and is an ancient phenomenon, going back to at least 500 BCE in Greece. Spain and Portugal were the dominant colonizers of North and South America during the fifteenth century. However, the nature of colonialism changed dramatically du ...
... Colonialism is the domination of one group of people by another, and is an ancient phenomenon, going back to at least 500 BCE in Greece. Spain and Portugal were the dominant colonizers of North and South America during the fifteenth century. However, the nature of colonialism changed dramatically du ...
Early Contact with Native Americans- The Spanish and the British I
... C. By 8,000 B.C., Native Americans had reached tip of South America. 1. Hundreds of tribes with different languages, religious & cultures inhabited America. 2. Between 4,000 and 1500 B.C. permanent farm villages came to dominate parts of Peru, south-central Mexico, northeastern Mexico, and southwest ...
... C. By 8,000 B.C., Native Americans had reached tip of South America. 1. Hundreds of tribes with different languages, religious & cultures inhabited America. 2. Between 4,000 and 1500 B.C. permanent farm villages came to dominate parts of Peru, south-central Mexico, northeastern Mexico, and southwest ...
02.III Northern Explorations and Encounters | WHAT DIFFERENCES
... Church. Luther attracted followers all over northwestern Europe, including France, where they were persecuted by Catholic authorities. Converted to Luther’s teachings in 1533, Frenchman John Calvin fled to Switzerland, where he developed a radical theology. His doctrine of predestination declared t ...
... Church. Luther attracted followers all over northwestern Europe, including France, where they were persecuted by Catholic authorities. Converted to Luther’s teachings in 1533, Frenchman John Calvin fled to Switzerland, where he developed a radical theology. His doctrine of predestination declared t ...
Road_to_Revolution_Graphic_Organizer[1]
... -Native Americans fought for both sides but mostly the French -Colonies need help to fight French so Parliament sends army to help -French and British start fighting in Europe too -Spain joins French -ends in 1763 ...
... -Native Americans fought for both sides but mostly the French -Colonies need help to fight French so Parliament sends army to help -French and British start fighting in Europe too -Spain joins French -ends in 1763 ...
Westward, Ho! An Expanding Nation
... Napoleon had a problem: he needed money to finance his war against Britain. Without Santo Domingo, Napoleon had little use for Louisiana. In order to solve his money problem, he decided to sell the Louisiana Territory. A French official told U.S. representatives Robert Livingston and James Monroe th ...
... Napoleon had a problem: he needed money to finance his war against Britain. Without Santo Domingo, Napoleon had little use for Louisiana. In order to solve his money problem, he decided to sell the Louisiana Territory. A French official told U.S. representatives Robert Livingston and James Monroe th ...
Unit Content - Franklin College
... south. His plan backfired as loyalist and Patriot forces in the south fought Indians. The Patriots were the only ones that came out without feeling the pressure. This crippled the British army so much that they had no choice but to surrender bringing an end to Revolutionary War after six and half ...
... south. His plan backfired as loyalist and Patriot forces in the south fought Indians. The Patriots were the only ones that came out without feeling the pressure. This crippled the British army so much that they had no choice but to surrender bringing an end to Revolutionary War after six and half ...
The American Revolution SETTING THE STAGE Philosophes such
... fighting lasted until 1763, when Britain and her colonists emerged victorious—and seized nearly all French land in North America. The victory, however, only led to growing tensions between Britain and its colonists. In order to fight the war, Great Britain had run up a huge debt. Because American co ...
... fighting lasted until 1763, when Britain and her colonists emerged victorious—and seized nearly all French land in North America. The victory, however, only led to growing tensions between Britain and its colonists. In order to fight the war, Great Britain had run up a huge debt. Because American co ...
Peace of Paris (1783)
The Peace of Paris of 1783 was the set of treaties which ended the American Revolutionary War. On 3 September 1783, representatives of King George III of Great Britain signed a treaty in Paris with representatives of the United States of America—commonly known as the Treaty of Paris (1783)—and two treaties at Versailles with representatives of King Louis XVI of France and King Charles III of Spain—commonly known as the Treaties of Versailles (1783). The previous day, a preliminary treaty had been signed with representatives of the States General of the Dutch Republic, but the final treaty which ended the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War was not signed until 20 May 1784; for convenience, however, it is included in the summaries below.The British lost their Thirteen Colonies and the defeat marked the end of the First British Empire. The United States gained more than it expected, thanks to the award of western territory. The other Allies had mixed-to-poor results. France got its revenge over Britain after its defeat in the Seven Years' War, but its material gains were minor (Tobago, Senegal and small territories in India) and its financial losses huge. It was already in financial trouble and its borrowing to pay for the war used up all its credit and created the financial disasters that marked the 1780s. Historians link those disasters to the coming of the French Revolution. The Dutch did not gain anything of significant value at the end of the war. The Spanish had a mixed result; they conquered British West Florida, but Gibraltar remained in British hands; in the long run, the new territory was of little or no value.