Unit 2 Flashcards

1
Q

An emotion packed Christian movement that swept through the colonies in the 1730s and 1740s. Spread the idea of religious freedom and tolerance and sparked the growth of new churches.

A

First Great Awakening

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2
Q

A leader of the First Great Awakening, authored “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.

A

Jonathan Edwards

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3
Q

A leader in the First Great Awakening; a preacher who made several tours through the colonies. His sermons were so profound that audience members often wept.

A

George Whitefield

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4
Q

By the mid-1700s both the British and the French held substantial land in North America. In 1753, the French began building forts to protect their claim on the Ohio River Valley. The governor of Virginia decided to send troops to the disputed area led by a 21-year-old officer named George Washington. Washington was defeated and sent back to the colonies

A

French and Indian War

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5
Q

One of the founding fathers of the United States, known for his unifying Albany plan

A

Benjamin Franklin

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6
Q

Tried to create a unified government for the 13 colonies during the French and Indian War.

A

Albany Plan

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7
Q

This was a cartoon created by Benjamin Franklin that represented the need for the colonies to join together for a common defense in order for their survival.

A

Join or Die

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8
Q

Written by Benjamin Franklin and contained many witty phrases and saying that are still a part of American culture today. Example “Content makes poor men rich; discontent makes rich men poor.”

A

Poor Richard’s Almanac

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9
Q

When a New York printer published criticism of the royal governor. He was found not guilty because his statements were true. He established the first important victory for freedom of the press in the English colonies of North America.

A

John Peter Zenger Trial

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10
Q

The Cherokee and the British became allies during the French and Indian War. The relationship soon began to deteriorate, and the two sides became hostile. In 1760, the Cherokees led by Attakullakulla laid siege to a fort in Tennessee. The colonial troops surrendered but the Cherokees killed 25 and enslaved 200 more. This led to the Cherokee War.

A

Massacre at Fort Loudoun

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11
Q

Ended the French and Indian War and defined the Appalachian Mountains as the boundaries for colonial settlement. It forbade any settlers from moving west of the Appalachian Mountains. Colonists often ignored this rule and crossed into the frontier creating conflict with Native Americans.

A

Proclamation of 1763

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12
Q

The French and Indian War ended with this document, however, long lasting repercussions made this war a significant cause of the American Revolution. Following the war, Great Britain expected the American colonies to pay for the war debt. The colonists were also barred from exploring the newly acquired land. Additionally, this treaty gave Great Britain primary ownership of North America.

A

Treaty of Paris 1763

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13
Q

British parliament passed this, declaring that only British ships would be allowed to bring goods in the colonies and the colonies could only export goods to Great Britain.

A

Navigation Acts

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14
Q

The economic policy of European countries through which nations attempt to gain wealth through trade with other countries and exporting more than they import. Europeans held that colonies in the New World existed to make the home country wealthy and powerful as a source of raw materials and markets for manufactured goods. This caused European countries to compete for land in the New World.

A

Mercantilism

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15
Q

Britain was in war debt and thought that colonists should pay part of the debt through taxes. This was one of the first acts they created. This was when Parliament put a duty (tax) on several products including molasses.

A

Sugar Act of 1764

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16
Q

Another one of Britain’s taxes that required colonists to quarter, or house, British troops and provide them with supplies.

A

Quartering Act

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17
Q

Also another one of Britain’s taxes that required colonists to buy special taxed stamps for all sorts of items including letters and newspapers. This Act especially impacted the colonists because their main communication was through letters and newspapers and now they had to pay to communicate.

A

Stamp Act

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18
Q

An act of the Parliament of Great Britain, which accompanied the repeal of the Stamp Act 1765 and the changing and lessening of the Sugar Act. Parliament repealed the Stamp Act because boycotts were hurting British trade.

A

Declaratory Act

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19
Q

Colonists began to boycott some of the taxes by refusing to use the items being taxed. These acts said that Britain would no longer tax products or activities inside the colonies. It would only tax items brought into the colonies.

A

Townshend Acts

20
Q

After the Townshend Acts were passed the colonists were very angry. On March 5th, 1770 an angry crowd gathered around a small group of soldiers. The soldiers fired into the crowd, killing five. John Adams defended the soldiers on trial. Only two were convicted and their punishment was to have their thumbs branded.

A

Boston Massacre

21
Q

Although most of the taxes from the Townshend Act had been repealed, the tax on tea remained. The Sons of Liberty was a group of colonial leaders that met in secret to plan ways to resist British control. The Sons of Liberty threatened merchants and ship captains who brought tea to the colonies. No tea was brought to the colonies except to one port city, Boston. On the night of December 16, 1773, a large group of men disguised as Indians dumped thousands of dollars’ worth of tea into the Boston Harbor.

A

Boston Tea Party

22
Q

In response to the Boston Tea Party, Parliament passed four laws meant to punish the colonists. The four laws were: closing of the Boston Harbor, two increased the power of the royal government, and the last strengthened the Quartering Act. Colonists were outraged and several colonial leaders met in Philadelphia for the First Continental Congress.

A

Intolerable Acts

23
Q

The policy of the British government during the colonial period in which trade rules were rarely enforced and the colonies were allowed to govern themselves. This created a sense of individualism and promoted the tradition of self-government and widespread land ownership that led to the American Revolution.

A

Salutary Neglect

24
Q

A group of radical colonial leaders that met in secret to plan ways to resist British control (patriots). They also led the Boston Tea Party.

A

Sons of Liberty

25
Q

In 1775, colonial citizen soldiers known as minutemen began to store weapons in Concord. British troops sent out to capture the weapons; however, Paul Revere and William Dawes warned the patriots of the British advance. In the city of Lexington, about five miles from Concord, seventy seven minutemen awaited the British advance. Soon after the British arrival, a shot rang out; this became the first shot of the American Revolution.

A

Battles of Lexington and Concord

26
Q

Located just outside the city of Boston. 10,000 American soldiers surrounded the city. This battle was when the British forces, led by General Howe, advanced up the hill 3 times. The first two times were unsuccessful, however, the third time was successful because the colonists ran out of ammunition. Although the British won the conflict, it was a moral victory for the patriots.

A

Battle of Bunker Hill

27
Q

The colonist of the American revolutionary period who supported the British cause.

A

Loyalist

28
Q

People who supported the colonies breaking away from British rule.

A

Patriot

29
Q

Wrote many pamphlets and books. It used logic and emotion to support the argument for independence and raise the morale of the Continental Army.

A

Thomas Paine

30
Q

Paine’s pamphlet that stimulated broad support for independence.

A

Common Sense

31
Q

Thomas Paine later wrote a series of essays in his ongoing support of the American Revolution.

A

The Crisis

32
Q

An American statesman and one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. As a politician in colonial Massachusetts, Adams was a leader of the Sons of Liberty.

A

Sam Adams

33
Q

A merchant, statesman, and prominent Patriot of the American Revolution. He served as president of the Second Continental Congress and was first and third Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He is remembered for his large and stylish signature on the United States Declaration of Independence.

A

John Hancock

34
Q

An American Founding Father, the principal author of the Declaration of Independence, and the third President of the United States. He was a spokesman for democracy, and embraced the principles of republicanism and the rights of the individual with worldwide influence. At the beginning of the American Revolution, he served in the Continental Congress, representing Virginia, and then served as a wartime Governor of Virginia.

A

Thomas Jefferson

35
Q

A brilliant piece of writing that was constructed on ideas from the Enlightenment. It uses step by step logic to explain the reasons why the colonists wanted to break away from Britain and lists their complaints against the king. It embodies the ideas that “all men are created equal” and are entitled to the “right of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

A

Declaration of Independence

36
Q

A British fort in northern New York. Ethan Allen led a group of patriots called the Green Mountain Boys and captured the British fort during a surprise attack. It gave the Continental Army much needed cannons, which they took back to Boston.

A

Fort Ticonderoga

37
Q

During the winter of 1777-1778, Washington was forced to encamp his men with little to no supplies in this place which became a rallying cry for Americans and their will to be independent.

A

Valley Forge

38
Q

A leader of the Continental Army in the American Revolution, president of the Continental Congress, and was chosen as the first President of the United States.

A

George Washington

39
Q

A war hero and leader in the Continental Army. He felt undervalued by Congress and deserted the patriot cause and joined the British.

A

Benedict Arnold

40
Q

A French noble who volunteered and became a high ranking officer in the Continental Army

A

Marquis de Lafayette

41
Q

A German military man who helped train the volunteer forces for the patriots during the American Revolution.

A

Friedrich von Steuben

42
Q

Known as the “swamp fox” led small bands of guerilla warfare soldiers to slow the advance of the British.

A

Francis Marion

43
Q

German mercenaries serving in the British forces during the American Revolution.

A

Hessians

44
Q

30,000 British troops landed in New York in June of 1776. They defeated Washington and his army and forced him to flee frantically. On Christmas night, 1776, Washington led a surprise attack against German Hessians and was victorious. Later, Washington led another surprise attack on British forces. Both of these two battles were successful.

A

Battles of Trenton and Princeton

45
Q

John Burgoyne, a British general, had a plan to end the Revolutionary War once and for all. He planned to lead an attack from three sides and surround Washington’s army. The plan backfired when one of the forces made a detour to capture Philadelphia. This battle was the turning point battle of the Revolutionary War because France decided to become an ally.

A

Battle of Saratoga

46
Q

A decisive victory in South Carolina for the Patriot militia over the Loyalist militia in the Southern campaign of the American Revolutionary War. The battle took place on October 7, 1780, North Carolina in rural Cherokee County, South Carolina, where the Patriot militia defeated the Loyalist militia commanded by British Major Patrick Ferguson.

A

Battle of Kings Mountain

47
Q

General Cornwallis led the entire British army to a coastal Virginian city. He was expecting for British warships to reinforce him there, but he did not know that the French Fleet was on its way. George Washington surrounded the city by land. The British were forced to surrender. The final battle of the Revolutionary War.

A

Battle of Yorktown