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102 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Lord (Fredrick) North

Prime minister of England
Coercive Acts
-Massachusetts Govt Act
-Quartering Act
-Quebec Act: British took land from Americans and gave it to French
Boston Tea Party
In protest the Americans poured all the tea in the river
Gaspee incidents
The colonists took over a British ship and looted and burned the boat
Boston Massacre
When the colonists threw snowballs at British soldiers & harassing them and the broths began to shoot the colonists
Albany plan of union
The colonists wanted to create unity amongst the colony and Ben Franklin helped/supported
Salutary nwglect
When Britain would purposefully let America become distant and independent and then come back and enforce rules
Townshend acts
Intolerable acts on taxes (tea, paper, etc)

People would smuggle to avoid the taxes and then Britain repealed but left stamp act
Potiacs rebellion
One of the last Indian attacks to try to preserve their own land

Lost
Proclamation of 1763
After French and Indian war, British placed boundaries on American colonists saying they couldn't pass the Appalachian mountains (too much power to colonists)
Sons/daughters of liberty
Rebels opposed to stamp act and dumped tea and FSU'd
Declaratory act
Document that said Britain had control of the colonies
Whigs
Revolutionaries OPPOSED to British crown BEGAN in England
Port act
After Boston tea party they closed the ports and until they paid for the damage
Committees of correspondence
Committee to have better communication against the British
Deism
God had role created us but not in everyday life
Massachusetts circular letter
Samuel Adams James Otis hoping for people to boycott goods
John Locke
Natural law and natural rights
Writs of assisstance
Order by king/governor to allow govt officials allowing to carry out anything they'd want to do (govt order)
Crispus attucks
First guy to die in boston massacre
Administration of justice acts
Soldiers tried in British courts not America
Treaty of Paris
Ends French and Indian war
General Braddock Joseph
Sent to Virginia with strong detachment of British regulars
Set out to capture Fort Duquesne

AMERICAN SIDE
Joseph Galloway
Member of 1st continental congress and called for ignoring British rule and started own power
Rationalism
The belief that rational thought and not religion (natural laws)
John Adams
Adams put out letter to get colonists to boycott British goods
Germans
6%, Protestant
Scots–Irish
7%; resented in Ireland; came to America, squatters, quarreled with colonists and Indians; hot–headed and independent
Paxton Boys
to protest the Quaker’
peaceful treatment of the Indians
Social Pyramid
Rich plantation owners, small farmers, landless whites, indentured servants, slaves
Most honored profession
Clergy – priests
Leading industry
Agriculture; Tobacco
Triangular Trade
New England (rum), Africa (slaves), and West Indies (molasses)
Most Important Manufacturing Activity
Lumbering
Molasses Act, 1773
Only trade with Britain, lead to smuggling
I.Two “Established Churches” (tax–supported)
Anglican and the Congregational
The Great Awakening
Religious beliefs fading, worry that people wouldn't be saved, led to a revival
Jonathan Edwards
Preacher; his methods sparked debate among peers; lead listeners to tears about eternal damnation
George Whitefield
Preacher; Imitators copied his emotional shaking sermons and his heaping of blame on sinners.
Painters
John Trumbull, Charles Willson Peale, Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley
Architecture
imported from new world and made to fit the colonies needs
Literature
slave, Phillis Wheatley, wrote poems; Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard’s Almanack
John Peter Zenger
charged with libel, won, freedom of press
Two–House Legislature
Upper house– crown, Lower house – elected by the people
1598, Edict of Nantes
allowing limited toleration to the French Huguenots
Samuel de Champlain
an intrepid soldier and explorer, the “Father of New France.” Friendly with Huron Indians, defeat the Iroquois Indians
New France's Resource
Beaver
Robert de LaSalle, 1682
Louisiana was founded, to halt Spanish expansion into the area near the Gulf of Mexico.
King William’s War and Queen Anne’s War
Colonists vs French and Indians; gace Acadia to England; gave limited trading rights with Spanish America
The War of Jenkins’s Ear
This war soon merged with the War of Austrian Succession–to be called King George’s War in America. England vs. French and Spain. Louisbourg back to France
French and Indian War
England and Prussia vs. France, Spain, Austria, and Russia
Albany Congress
In 1754, 7 of the 13 colonies met for an inter–colonial congress held in Albany, New York
Gen. Edward Braddock
lead a bunch of inexperienced soldiers with slow, heavy artillery; defeat after defeat
William Pitt
soft–pedaled assaults on the French West Indies; replaced old, cautious officers with younger, daring officers
1759 Battle of Quebec
when Montreal fell in 1760, that was the last time French flags would fly onAmerican soil
Peace Treaty at Paris in 1763
France out of North America; Britain leading naval power; great power in North America
Ottawa Chief Pontiac
1763, led a few French–allied tribes in a bloody campaign through the Ohio Valley
Proclamation of 1763
prohibiting any settlement in the area beyond the Appalachians
Acadians
Forced to leave Canada; new dialect, Cajun
Mercantilism
A country’s economic wealth could be measured by the amount of gold or silver in its treasury.
Navigation Laws
restricted commerce from the colonies to England (and back) to only English ships, and none other.
Salutary Neglect
not enforcing the Navigation Laws, lead to smuggling
Disadvantages of Mercantilism
Americans couldn’t buy, sell, ship, or manufacture under their most favorable conditions
Sugar Act of 1764
increased duty on foreign sugar imported from the West Indies
Quartering Act of 1765
certain colonies to provide food and quarters for British troops
Stamp Act of 1765
mandated the use of stamped paper or the affixing of stamps, certifying payment of tax
Virtual Representation
every Parliament member represented all British subjects (so Americans were represented)
Stamp Act Congress
largely ignored in Britain, but was a step toward inter–colonial unity
Declaratory Act, 1766
proclaiming that Parliament had the right “to bind” the colonies “in all cases whatsoever”
Townshend Acts in 1767
light taxes on lead, paper, paint, and tea
Boston Massacre
March 5, 1770; 60 people, 10 Redcoats, 11 wounded or killed; Crispus Attucks
Boston Tea Party
III.On December 16, 1773, some Whites, led by Samuel Adams, disguised themselves as Indians, opened 342 chests and dumped the tea into the ocean
Intolerable Acts 1774
The Boston Port Act closed the harbor in Boston. Self–government was limited by forbidding town hall meetings without approval. The charter to Massachusetts was revoked.
Quebec Act
it guaranteed Catholicism to the French–Canadians, permitted them to retain their old customs, and extended the old boundaries of Quebec all the way to the Ohio River
First Continental Congress
September 5th to October 26th, 1774; came up with a list of grievances, which were ignored in Parliament.
Lexington and Concord
April 1775; the British commander in Boston sent a detachment of troops to seize supplies and to capture Sam Adams and John Hancock
Hessians
German mercenaries
Baron von Steuben
German, whipped colonists into shape
November 1775, Lord Dunmore's Proclamation
declaring freedom for any enslaved black in Virginia who
joined the British Army
Second Continental Congress
met in Philadelphia on May 10,
1775, with no real intention of independence, but merely a desire to continue fighting in the hope that the king and Parliament would consent to a redress of grievances.
May 1775, Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold
surprised and captured the
British garrisons at Forts Ticonderoga and Crown Point
June 1775, Bunker Hill
King declared colonies in rebellion
October 1775
British burned Falmouth (Portland), Maine
Thomas Paine's Common Sense
urged independence
Republicanism
a “republic” where representative senators, governors, and judges should have their power from the consent of the people
Richard Henry Lee
On June 7, 1776, urged for complete independence, an idea that was finally adopted on July 2, 1776.
Thomas Jefferson
Declaration of Indepence; list of grievances and natural rights; July 4th, 1776
Whigs
Patriots
Tories
Loyalists
Delaware River at Trenton on December 26, 1776
surprised and captured a thousand Hessians who were sleeping off their Christmas Day celebration
Battle of Brooklyn Heights
Surrounded, escaped in fog, left campfires burning as a ruse, all escaped successfully
General Burgoyne capture Hudson River valley in 1777
Benedict Arnold assembled a "navy" to fight off British on Lake Champlain.
The Battle of Saratoga, on October 17, 1777
France sensed America might actually win and came out to officially help America
Gen. Benedict Arnold turned traitor
1780, lured by gold, plotting with the British to sell out
West Point.
1777, "bloody year"
Indians went on a scalping spree
Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 1784
the first treaty between the U.S. and an Indian nation.
Under its terms, the Indians ceded most of their land.
Treaty of Paris of 1783
Britain formally recognized U.S. independence and granted generous
boundaries
Olive Branch Petition
July 1775
Admiral de Grasse
assault on Cornwallis at Yorktown; surrendered October 19, 1781
Writs of Assistance 1763
a way around paper search warrents
Articles of Confederation
1781
Radical Whigs

alert of any threats against their rights