13RITI31-1 COLONIAL. RULE
... it signed the Treaty of Paris in 1763. In the meantime, the former French colony (officially named the Province of Quebec in 1763) had a military government under the direction of James Murray, who had served under General James Wolfe at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham. Unlike the British leader ...
... it signed the Treaty of Paris in 1763. In the meantime, the former French colony (officially named the Province of Quebec in 1763) had a military government under the direction of James Murray, who had served under General James Wolfe at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham. Unlike the British leader ...
History of Canada after the Fall of New France
... Tempers flared and the British soon occupied all of Massachusetts. Upset colonists boarded at British ship full of tea and dumped it all into the ocean. This became known as the Boston Tea Party. On July 4, 1776 the 13 colonies separated from the British Crown and declared the United States of Ameri ...
... Tempers flared and the British soon occupied all of Massachusetts. Upset colonists boarded at British ship full of tea and dumped it all into the ocean. This became known as the Boston Tea Party. On July 4, 1776 the 13 colonies separated from the British Crown and declared the United States of Ameri ...
Rationalism Period (1750-1800)
... • Served in Virginia House of Burgesses and became an outspoken defender of American rights. • After the war, served as the American Minister to France. • Became our nation’s first Secretary of State and second vice president before becoming the third president in 1801. ...
... • Served in Virginia House of Burgesses and became an outspoken defender of American rights. • After the war, served as the American Minister to France. • Became our nation’s first Secretary of State and second vice president before becoming the third president in 1801. ...
1. Possible answers: 2. Completed annotations: • The Blue team is
... • The teacher tells the Blue team they will get a prize if they win. This increases their motivation, just like . . . the Declaration of Independence increased the motivation of many Americans to fight and win the war. • Because they have more experienced players, the Red team is almost able to st ...
... • The teacher tells the Blue team they will get a prize if they win. This increases their motivation, just like . . . the Declaration of Independence increased the motivation of many Americans to fight and win the war. • Because they have more experienced players, the Red team is almost able to st ...
The Articles of Confederation
... Case Study #1—Settling the National Debt Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress decided how much each state should contribute to pay for the army and other national expenses. Congress could borrow money, print paper currency, and issue loan certificates. However, the national government did ...
... Case Study #1—Settling the National Debt Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress decided how much each state should contribute to pay for the army and other national expenses. Congress could borrow money, print paper currency, and issue loan certificates. However, the national government did ...
The Critical Period
... Revolution. In the years which followed, the new American government faced many difficult problems. Just determining what the new “central” or national government would be like caused several problems because the founding fathers wanted to make certain this new government could not become a powerful ...
... Revolution. In the years which followed, the new American government faced many difficult problems. Just determining what the new “central” or national government would be like caused several problems because the founding fathers wanted to make certain this new government could not become a powerful ...
Chapter 5 An American Babel, 1713–1763
... North of the Bay area, two overlapping economies emerged. The New England colonies, longestablished but less affluent than other regions, had not found a staple crop capable of flourishing in the rocky soil. All the reserves of beaver pelts had been harvested and most of the scarce fertile land was ...
... North of the Bay area, two overlapping economies emerged. The New England colonies, longestablished but less affluent than other regions, had not found a staple crop capable of flourishing in the rocky soil. All the reserves of beaver pelts had been harvested and most of the scarce fertile land was ...
The Washington Administration After the Constitution was ratified
... States, including debts, attacks on American ships, trade with the West Indies, impressment, and compensation for slaves freed during the American Revolutionary War by the British army. Unfortunately, Jay was unable to get most of these issues resolved in 1794 because he was negotiating from a posit ...
... States, including debts, attacks on American ships, trade with the West Indies, impressment, and compensation for slaves freed during the American Revolutionary War by the British army. Unfortunately, Jay was unable to get most of these issues resolved in 1794 because he was negotiating from a posit ...
Chapter Assessment
... The colonists felt “No taxation without representation!” about the British taxes. The Intolerable Acts were established as a punishment to Boston for boycotting tea. Colonists believed that only their colonial assemblies had the right to tax them because they had a say in that government, not ...
... The colonists felt “No taxation without representation!” about the British taxes. The Intolerable Acts were established as a punishment to Boston for boycotting tea. Colonists believed that only their colonial assemblies had the right to tax them because they had a say in that government, not ...
Copy of Road to Revolution
... tax had been paid; first time colonist were taxed to clearly raise ________________, not just regulate trade. ...
... tax had been paid; first time colonist were taxed to clearly raise ________________, not just regulate trade. ...
Study Guide: Chapter 8 (The New Nation 1786
... The economic crisis incurred immediately following the civil war was one where inflation was rampant, debt was ever-present, and there was no formal system of government that could do anything to aid the newly formed nation. With tensions such as national debt and the value of money plummeting, push ...
... The economic crisis incurred immediately following the civil war was one where inflation was rampant, debt was ever-present, and there was no formal system of government that could do anything to aid the newly formed nation. With tensions such as national debt and the value of money plummeting, push ...
Lexington and Concord
... the surrender ceremony, Cornwallis’s sword was accepted by General Benjamin Lincoln while a British band played “The World Turned Upside Down.” This was the last major battle of the war, although some minor skirmishes took place for the next two years, until the Treaty of Paris ended the war in 1783 ...
... the surrender ceremony, Cornwallis’s sword was accepted by General Benjamin Lincoln while a British band played “The World Turned Upside Down.” This was the last major battle of the war, although some minor skirmishes took place for the next two years, until the Treaty of Paris ended the war in 1783 ...
AmericanIndependenceandRevolutionaryPeriodinPicturesand.pps
... Port of Boston is closed until the debt is paid British soldiers were immune from local trials Reformed Massachusetts government ...
... Port of Boston is closed until the debt is paid British soldiers were immune from local trials Reformed Massachusetts government ...
File
... superior force, which also quit Canada. Thus the 1813 campaign ended with the Americans in possession of Ft AMHERSTBURG on the Detroit R, and the British holding the 2 American forts, Niagara and Michilimackinac. The following year the Americans again crossed the Niagara, seized Ft Erie on July 3, a ...
... superior force, which also quit Canada. Thus the 1813 campaign ended with the Americans in possession of Ft AMHERSTBURG on the Detroit R, and the British holding the 2 American forts, Niagara and Michilimackinac. The following year the Americans again crossed the Niagara, seized Ft Erie on July 3, a ...
Francis Scott Key
... Why Did The British • British troops Stop? entered New York State from Canada to capture Plattsburgh, a key city on the shore of Lake Champlain. • An American naval force on Lake Champlain defeated the British, and they retreated to Canada. • The British decided that to continue fighting would cost ...
... Why Did The British • British troops Stop? entered New York State from Canada to capture Plattsburgh, a key city on the shore of Lake Champlain. • An American naval force on Lake Champlain defeated the British, and they retreated to Canada. • The British decided that to continue fighting would cost ...
Jefferson and Pinckney as Founding Fathers
... • Active lawyer in Virginia from 1768 to 1773. • Delegate from Virginia at Second Continental Congress from 1775 to 1776 • United States Secretary of State under George Washington from 1790 to 1793 • President of the United States from 1801 to ...
... • Active lawyer in Virginia from 1768 to 1773. • Delegate from Virginia at Second Continental Congress from 1775 to 1776 • United States Secretary of State under George Washington from 1790 to 1793 • President of the United States from 1801 to ...
Chapter 5: Cause and effects (influence)
... o The war ended in 1763 with a treaty that ended nearly all French control in N. America. o The war ended with the French but different American Indian tribes continued to fight the British over this territory. And the relationship of the Colonists’ and England changed in these ways… o After three ...
... o The war ended in 1763 with a treaty that ended nearly all French control in N. America. o The war ended with the French but different American Indian tribes continued to fight the British over this territory. And the relationship of the Colonists’ and England changed in these ways… o After three ...
The Revolutionary War Test / Chapter 5, Section ¾
... 12. What pamphlet sold 500,000 copies written by Thomas Paine? Commons Sense 13. Which man was sent (late) to represent Georgia at the Second Continental Congress as an unofficial delegate? Lyman Hall 14. Why did the French and Indian War lead to the Revolutionary War? Britain was heavily in debt af ...
... 12. What pamphlet sold 500,000 copies written by Thomas Paine? Commons Sense 13. Which man was sent (late) to represent Georgia at the Second Continental Congress as an unofficial delegate? Lyman Hall 14. Why did the French and Indian War lead to the Revolutionary War? Britain was heavily in debt af ...
Revolutionary War - West Point High School
... the British. They were also supported by the Gloucester and Virginia militia, led by John Page, Warner Lewis, and John Mercer. The notorious British Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton was commanding at the British post in Gloucester and upon learning of the attack, rode out with his British dragoons to cove ...
... the British. They were also supported by the Gloucester and Virginia militia, led by John Page, Warner Lewis, and John Mercer. The notorious British Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton was commanding at the British post in Gloucester and upon learning of the attack, rode out with his British dragoons to cove ...
File
... People accused of a crime have a right to trial by a jury of their equals. People accused of a crime will be imprisoned until proven innocent. People have only those individual rights granted to them by the king. People must be born in a country to have the rights of a citizen. ...
... People accused of a crime have a right to trial by a jury of their equals. People accused of a crime will be imprisoned until proven innocent. People have only those individual rights granted to them by the king. People must be born in a country to have the rights of a citizen. ...
Chapter 5 (Notes)
... of the Seven Years’ War, to enforce/control and for protection Colonists doubted the army’s value however Continued squatting and harassment by the colonists renewed tensions between the natives and the English Pontiac’s War begins on May 7, 1763 – Pontiac attacks British fort at Detroit and other f ...
... of the Seven Years’ War, to enforce/control and for protection Colonists doubted the army’s value however Continued squatting and harassment by the colonists renewed tensions between the natives and the English Pontiac’s War begins on May 7, 1763 – Pontiac attacks British fort at Detroit and other f ...
revolution
... • Sam Adams and others had been convinced that when war came, the British would attempt to isolate New England from the other colonies. The most obvious method of doing so was to send an army southward from Canada over the 'superhighway' of the era — up the Richelieu River to Lake Champlain, then to ...
... • Sam Adams and others had been convinced that when war came, the British would attempt to isolate New England from the other colonies. The most obvious method of doing so was to send an army southward from Canada over the 'superhighway' of the era — up the Richelieu River to Lake Champlain, then to ...
Reading Notes 7 - sternsocialstudies
... • 7.6 The Tide Begins to Turn • 1. As the war progressed, how did Washington revise his military strategy? • Washington avoided large battles that might put his army at risk. Instead, he fought a defensive war that was designed to tire out the British. • 2. Why did the American cause look more hop ...
... • 7.6 The Tide Begins to Turn • 1. As the war progressed, how did Washington revise his military strategy? • Washington avoided large battles that might put his army at risk. Instead, he fought a defensive war that was designed to tire out the British. • 2. Why did the American cause look more hop ...
Latin American Independence
... Fidel and Raul Castro along with their followers went after the government led by Batista seeking economic equality for all They ran Batista out of the country and set up a communist government with ties to the Soviet Union. The Castro family has been a thorn in the U.S. side for years. ...
... Fidel and Raul Castro along with their followers went after the government led by Batista seeking economic equality for all They ran Batista out of the country and set up a communist government with ties to the Soviet Union. The Castro family has been a thorn in the U.S. side for years. ...