Round 1Round 2 Final Jeopardy Section 1 Section 2 Section 3 Misc. Section 4 Section 5 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Round 2 Final Jeopardy Scores.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Thirteen English Colonies
Advertisements

The Southern Colonies Chapter 3 Section 1.
THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES
The Thirteen English Colonies There are 3 regions.
Reviewing in Colonial Notes packet Pages 18,19,23,26.
Colonial America Essential Question: What was life like in the British Colonies?
The English Establish 13 Colonies Mrs. Kercher.
America’s Beginnings   Part I  Europeans Establish Colonies.
COLONIAL AMERICA I.The ___________________ Empire and her colonies. A. Under the system of _____________________, the objective for a colony is to supply.
13 Colonies Notes The New England Colonies
Colonial Regions Environment, Culture, and Migration.
American Colonial Period: Settling America. Native Americans Relations with European Settlers: - varied from place to place – sometimes coexisting and.
Bell Work 8/18 1. Explain what is meant by “Eastern Seaboard:”
Thirteen English Colonies
Chapter 4 Notes. Puritans Did not want to separate entirely from the Church of England. Wanted to reform the church of England. They wanted to do away.
New England Colonies.
Page 11. * Pennsylvania * Maryland was established by Lord Baltimore as a safe colony for English Catholics. The main city is Baltimore.
Colonization and Settlement WWW. Charter A charter is an agreement made between investor and colonist on the way the colony will operate and who will.
Colonial America. First Settlement, 1607 Jamestown, Virginia 104 citizens from England settled Most died within the first 5 years (They didn’t know how.
Jeopardy PeopleColonies IColonies II Colony Names Etc… Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Colonies Review.
Jeopardy! British Settlement in America. Era of Exploration The New England Colonies The Middle Colonies The Southern Colonies Colonial Society/Life 100.
The Thirteen English Colonies
Unit 3 Part II The American Colonies. What is a colony? A group of people in one place who are ruled by a parent country elsewhere.
Chapter 3 The Road to Revolution. The Southern Colonies Jamestown – the first permanent English settlement in America Founded in 1607 on the James River.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Round 1Round 2 Final Jeopardy.
13 Original Colonies. Key Term 1.Diversity: The English colonies were settled by various ethnic groups including English, Dutch, Scot-Irish, and African.
Chapter 4 Section 2. Bellwork Please label the 13 Colonies Write in pencil only! If you know the founder please fill it in Do NOT color the map today!
3-3 Notes: Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies.
1750 British North America 13 Colonies divided into New England, Middle, Chesapeake and Deep South Characterized by? Are British colonies more similar.
The Original 13 Colonies Life and Work in the Colonies.
The Southern Colonies Chapter 4, Section 3 Go get your Chart!
COLONIAL AMERICA. Britain owned 13 colonies on the east coast of North America. Colonial America is the time period from 1607 to Atlantic Ocean.
Section 2: Government, Religion, and Culture
THE 13 ORIGINAL COLONIES. Different Types of Colonies Operated by joint-stock companies. Jamestown Charter Colonies Under direct authority and rule of.
MOTIVATIONS AND CHARACTERISTICS OF SETTLEMENT The Regions of Colonial English North America.
Aim: How did the English start to build an empire in North America? Do Now: What English settlements have we learned about so far?
The Founding of the American Colonies. New England Colonies.
People Religion In the colonies New England Middle.
Colonization.
The Colonies Grow. Navigation Acts ► England views colonies as economic resource ► Mercantilism: Colonial raw materials used to make goods sold back to.
TermsPeoplePlaces Main Ideas Misc
Why did people settle the New World?. Who do you think this picture is of? When do you think this source was created? How may this image tells more than.
Colonial Regions. The Three Regions  New England Colonies  Middle Colonies  Southern Colonies.
The Northern Colonies  Geography  COLD CLIMATE  THIN, ROCKY SOIL (no large scale agriculture)  Economy  SMALL-SCALE FARMING  FISHING  LUMBER.
Colony: Quick info! Archer
Reasons for Coming 1. Chance to own land & start new life 2. Business - looking for profit 3. Freedom of religion 4. People who were in jail.
Life in Colonial America Chapter Two, Section Two 2-2 Pages
20 pt 30 pt 40 pt 50 pt 10 pt 20 pt 30 pt 40 pt 50 pt 10 pt 20 pt 30 pt 40 pt 50 pt 10 pt 20 pt 30 pt 40 pt 50 pt 10 pt 20 pt 30 pt 40 pt 50 pt 10 pt Creating.
The Colonies Northern (New England): New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut Middle: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware Southern:
Crops grown mainly to be sold for profits __________
Colonial America 3 Life in the Colonies.
The 13 colonies How America started.
The English Colonies Chapter 3.
The Thirteen American Colonies
The 13 English Colonies Ch 1-4.
The 13 Colonies and their Identities
Colonial America Part II: English Colonies!.
The Southern Colonies Chapter 3 Section 1.
New England Colonies John Winthrop- first governor of Massachusetts
New England Colonies: Settled – to practice religious freedom Industry – lumber, shipbuilding, international trade Culture – small towns, small family.
History, Geography, Government, Economy, and Culture.
Chapter 4 The Thirteen English Colonies
Jeopardy Slave Trade Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200
Chapter 4 The Thirteen English Colonies
Jeopardy Hosted by Mrs. Iliou .
Social Studies Thirteen Colonies.
8th Grade U.S. History Chapter 4.
The Thirteen Colonies How did variations in climate as well as the different values/beliefs of the settlers contribute to the differences between the three.
The 13 Original Colonies.
Presentation transcript:

Round 1Round 2 Final Jeopardy

Section 1 Section 2 Section 3 Misc. Section 4 Section 5 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Round 2 Final Jeopardy Scores

$100 The group of people who left England for Massachusetts because they felt England had “fallen on evil times”

$100 Puritans Scores

$200 Why did people follow Roger Williams from Massachusetts to Rhode Island?

$200 They wanted greater religious freedom Scores

$300 Why was the Wampanoag leader Metacom upset?

$300 Settlers were building on Wompanoag lands Scores

$400 Puritan town meetings were significant because they encouraged the growth of these ideas

$400 Democratic ideas. Scores

$500 What kind of society did the Puritans want to build?

$500 A society based on biblical teachings. Scores

$100 How was Pennsylvania founded?

$100 William Penn acquired a charter from the king then bought the land from natives. Scores

$200 What is a proprietary colony?

$200 Scores A colony that is controlled by a few people who rent and divide lands. In return, they pay a yearly fee to the king.

$300 What was the result of the trade rivalry between the Netherlands (Dutch) and England?

$300 England invaded New Netherland and changed it to New York. Scores

$400 What factor(s) influenced the development of counties rather than towns in the Middle Colonies?

$400 People lived farther apart. Scores

$500 Describe the relationship between geography and economy in the Middle Colonies.

$500 Fertile soil and longer growing seasons allowed for large profitable farms that produced cash crops. Scores

$100 What was the slave code?

$100 A way of treating people like property. Scores

$200 A group of Eight_____set up the colony of South Carolina.

$200 English Nobles Scores

$300 This group first settled the colony of Maryland to escape persecution in England.

$300 Catholic Scores

$400 What was the result of the Southern Colonies’ reliance on slave labor in the 1700’s? (Think about population)

$400 There were more Africans than Europeans in many areas. Scores

$500 Name two cash crops from the Southern Colonies.

$500 Scores Tobacco, Rice, Indigo

$100 Describe an import.

$100 Scores Items brought into a country.

$200 What is a group of people who have the power to make laws?

$200 Scores Legislature.

$300 Which religious movement helped spread tolerant ideas through the colonies?

$300 Scores The Great Awakening.

$400 Which of these was not a job women could hold in the colonies? A)Butcher B)Lawyer C) Printer D) Nurse Which of these was not a job women could hold in the colonies? A)Butcher B)Lawyer C) Printer D) Nurse

$400 Scores B. Lawyer

$500 What was the reason England passed the Navigation Acts?

$500 Scores To tighten control over colonial trade.

$100 What was the difference between slaves and indentured servants? What was the difference between slaves and indentured servants?

$100 Scores Indentured servants received “freedom dues” at the end of a contract period of 4 to 7 years

$200 Which colony group had schoolteachers for Towns that had 50 or more families? Which colony group had schoolteachers for Towns that had 50 or more families?

$200 New England Scores

$300 Describe the way in which colonial governments Limited women’s rights. Describe the way in which colonial governments Limited women’s rights.

$300 Scores Married women needed her husbands permission to sign a contract.

$400 What affect did the Enlightenment have on life in the English colonies in the 1700’s?

$400 Scores Many colonists read and discussed new ideas.

$500 Name two things Benjamin Franklin invented.

$500 Bifocals, odometer, lightning rod. Scores

$100 What colony was made up of lands that the Duke of York gave to friends?

$100 New Jersey Scores

$200 What three regions were involved in Triangular Trade.

$200 New England, West Indies, West Africa. Scores

$300 Which group of people enjoyed the least amount of freedom in the colonies?

$300 Africans Scores

$400 What is a royal colony?

$400 Scores A colony under direct control of the king.

$500 How was Benjamin Franklin a model of the Enlightenment spirit?

$500 Scores He used reason to improve the world around him.

Final Jeopardy Question Scores

What were the five requirements to vote in the colonies?

White, male, Christian, landowner, over the age of 21. Scores