What is history?. Everything that happens is a part of history. (We will discuss the major stuff)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Stirrings of Rebellion
Advertisements

Settling the Thirteen Colonies England began exploring eastern part of North America shortly after Columbus made his voyage Jamestown  1 st Permanent.
Crisis in the Colonies Chapter 5 U.S. History.
The Colonists Protest British Rule
Road to Revolution.
Chapter 5 Power Point Review Use this to help you study for your test and the midterm.
American Soldiers English Soldiers. The Causes of the American revolution British Government Versus British Colonists.
The American Revolution
Causes of the Revolution
The American Colonies Declare Independence
Causes of the American Revolution
Tensions Grow Between the Colonies and Great Britain
ReviewLessonsMapsGraphic OrganizerMapsGraphic Organizer.
Causes of the American Revolution. The French and Indian War
THIS IS With Host... Your VocabularyGeography European Exploration 13 Colonies Crisis in the Colonies Revolutionary War.
What do we call a first hand account? Primary source.
Committees created in Massachusetts in the 1760s to help towns and colonies share information about resisting the new British laws _______________.
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Round 1Round 2 Final Jeopardy.
Footsteps to Revolution The Causes of the American Revolution.
Chapter 2 “The English Colonies” Part 2 Ms. Monteiro.
The Jamestown Colony  Times were hard in England in the 1500s- Wanted to travel to America: to bring fish, furs and timber back to England ($) to bring.
What region was known for its whalers?. New England.
Chapter 5&6 review. Why did the French and Indian war begin?
Colonial History Colony: Group of people in a new land who are ruled by the government of their native land Settler Types: Seekers of religious freedom/separation.
Legal document that allowed British custom officials to inspect a ship’s cargo without giving a reason.
Mr. Violanti Fall, John Locke: Philosopher, Natural Rights (L,L,P) Montesquieu: Separation of Powers, 3 branch Rousseau: Social Contract Voltaire:
10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt 10 pt 15 pt 20 pt 25 pt 5 pt French.
Events Leading to American Self Government Submitted by Jennifer Ballew.
Unit 1 Review Powerpoint. Look at the Geography Powerpoint for map locations.
Mr. Violanti Fall, John Locke: Philosopher, Natural Rights (L,L,P) Montesquieu: Separation of Powers, 3 branch Rousseau: Social Contract Voltaire:
Chapter 3 The Road to Revolution. The Southern Colonies Jamestown – the first permanent English settlement in America Founded in 1607 on the James River.
Causes of the American Revolution By Mrs. Moscov.
CHAPTER 5 ROAD TO REVOLUTION. 5-1 Taxation Without Representation.
Colonial Times British Policies PoliticsFamous People Revolution French & Indian $100 $200 $300 $400 $500.
Crisis in the Colonies, 1745–1775
Conflict in the Colonies 6.1 Trouble on the Frontier.
Causes of the American Revolution. Mercantilism Description: Transfer of raw materials and manufactured goods between colonies and Mother country Cause:
What is history?. Everything that happens is a part of history. (We will discuss the major stuff)
The French and Indian War 1754 to 1763 war fought over the land in America between the English and French. It was called the Seven Years War in Europe.
Relationship Fails Vocabulary Why did the relationship between Britain and America fail? Por qué la relación entre Gran Bretaña y América no?
The Birth of a Democratic Nation Examine the causes of the American Revolution. 1.
Chapter 5 The Road to Revolution Vocabulary
What region was known for its whalers?. New England.
Causes of the American Revolution Part 2 Information is taken from Chapter 5 Section 3 and Chapter 6 Section 1.
Legal document that allowed British custom officials to inspect a ship’s cargo without giving a reason.
UNIT 4 STUDY GUIDE The American Revolution. Why was the French and Indian War fought? The French and Indian War was a land dispute between GB and France.
THIS IS With Host... Your Taxes, Taxes & More Taxes Definitions French & Indian War Famous People A Long Road Potpourri Final.
WHY DID EUROPEANS BEGIN EXPLORING? GOLD, GOD, & GLORY SOME HOPED TO INCREASE THEIR PROFIT THROUGH EXPLORATION. HOPED TO FIND ALL WATER ROUTE TO ASIA.
Topic 1Topic 2Topic 3Topic 4Topic
Chalkboard Challenge Chapter 5 Review 2 Brought to you by Mr. DeWitt and Mrs. Olsen.
What is history?. Everything that happens is a part of history. (We will discuss the major stuff)
© Mark E. Damon - All Rights Reserved Another Presentation © All rights Reserved
WHY DID EUROPEANS BEGIN EXPLORING? GOLD, GOD, & GLORY SOME HOPED TO INCREASE THEIR PROFIT THROUGH EXPLORATION. HOPED TO FIND ALL WATER ROUTE TO ASIA.
Fact or Fib: Colonization
Chapter 5: Road to Revolution
U.S. History Review Part 2.
CRT Review Road to Revolution.
The 13 Original Colonies Created by Mrs. Dunne.
France’s Empire -French areas of colonization
Causes of the American Revolution
Events Leading to the American Revolutionary War
Warm-up: Roller Coaster
Causes (STEPS) of the American Revolution
Proclamation of 1763 Declared by King George III
Social Science Vocabulary
What is Mercantilism Who is to benefit in a mercantilist system?
Warm-up: Roller Coaster
Causes and Events Leading to the American Revolution
Actions and Reactions British Actions Colonial Reactions
The Road to Revolution…
Presentation transcript:

What is history?

Everything that happens is a part of history. (We will discuss the major stuff)

What do we call the study of the people, land and resources of an area?

geography

What do we call a person who studies history?

historian

Who researches and finds information for historians?

Social scientists

What do we call a first hand account?

Primary source

Where did the first Native Americans come from?

Siberia in Asia

What do we call a second hand account?

Secondary source

Is the following a primary or secondary source – encyclopedia

secondary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – journal

primary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – letter

primary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – video tape

primary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – text book

secondary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – biography

secondary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – autobiography

primary

Is the following a primary or secondary source – song

primary

What type of source is the most reliable?

primary

What do we call what it looks like outside at this very moment?

weather

What do we call the average weather over a period of time?

Climate

What do we call the total way of life of a group of people?

culture

When did the first Native Americans come to North America?

During the last ice age

How did the first Native Americans get to the North America?

Across a land bridge

What 5 tribes made up the Iroquois Confederacy?

Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk (SCOOM)

What did the Iroquois call themselves?

Haudenosaunee

What do the Iroquois call corn, beans and squash?

3 sisters

What did the Iroquois live in?

longhouses

What did the Iroquois base their time upon?

Nature and the seasons

What is the America name for a family consisting of a mother, father and kids?

Nuclear family

What do we call the Iroquois nuclear family?

Fireside family

What is the American name for the family consisting of all the person’s relatives?

Extended family

What do we call the Iroquois extended family?

Longhouse family

What word means a person’s descent is traced through the female?

matrilineal

What do we call a bunch of longhouse families?

clan

What was the sixth nation to join the Iroquois Confederacy?

Tuscarora

Who were the founders of the Iroquois Confederacy?

Deganawida, Hiawatha

What are shells used for communication and trade called?

wampum

Who led the first exploration to sail around the world?

Magellan

What were the 3 reasons for Spanish colonization of the Americas?

God, Gold and Glory (3 G’s) – remember I might word these differently

Who explored the Mississippi River for France?

Marquette and Joliet

What do we call the transfer of goods and ideas between the new and old world?

Columbian Exchange

Who explored for both England and the Dutch?

Henry Hudson

Who explored the St. Lawrence River for France?

Jacques Cartier

What were the two main jobs for the French settlers?

Trapping and trading

What was the main occupation of the people of New Netherlands?

Fur trading

What European country originally controlled Canada?

France

How did Spanish settlement affect the Native Americans?

Death, slavery, Native Americans lost land

What European country controlled much of Central America and Mexico?

Spain

What European country controlled originally controlled New York State?

The Netherlands (also known as Holland or the Dutch)

What do we call a passageway through or around North America?

Northwest Passage

What Native American tribe became friends with the Dutch?

Iroquois

What Native American tribes became allies of the French?

Algonquins and Hurons

Bodies of Water

A - Pacific Ocean B - Gulf of Mexico C - Atlantic Ocean

Mountain Ranges

A - Appalachian Mountains B - Sierra Nevada C- Rocky Mountains D - Cascades

Physical Regions

A- Pacific Coast B – Rocky Mountain C- Interior Plains D - Appalachian Mountain E - Coastal Plains

Rivers

A - Missouri River B - Mississippi River C - Ohio River D - St. Lawrence River E - Rio Grande River

What region was known for its whalers?

New England

What are assemblies and legislatures?

Lawmaking bodies

Who was the founder of Maryland?

Lord Baltimore

What do we call people who agreed to work in exchange for their trip to the colonies being paid for?

Indentured servants

What goods were traded from Africa to the West Indies as part of the Triangular Trade Route?

slaves

What region grew wheat, barley and rye?

Middle Colonies

What types of goods were traded from England to the colonies as part of the triangular trade route?

Manufactured goods

In the triangular trade system, what goods were sent from the West Indies to the colonies?

Sugar and molasses (and slaves from Africa)

What colonial region was educated through private schools?

Middle colonies

Which regions farmers were mostly subsistence farmers?

New England

Who was the founder of Georgia?

James Oglethorpe

What colonial region was educated through public schools? (So they can read hte3 Bible.)

New England

What do we call the series of trading routes found in colonial times?

Triangular trade

What colonial region educated their children through tutors?

southern

Who was the founder of Pennsylvania?

William Penn

What region was known for its shipbuilding?

New England

What colony was founded as a home for debtors?

Georgia

What was the name for the series of laws passed to control the slaves?

Slave codes

What colonies legislature was called the House of Burgesses?

Virginia

What do we call a person who learned a trade from a master craftsman?

apprentice

What religion was associated with Maryland?

Catholic

What was the name of the slave trip from Africa to the colonies?

Middle Passage

What was the theory called which said that a country became strong by increasing trade and building up its gold supply.

mercantilism

What do we call the rich area of the Southern Colonies?

tidewater

What colony did the Puritans and Pilgrims settle in?

Massachusetts

What are crops called which are sold for a profit?

Cash crop

What was the name for the document which the Pilgrims wrote telling how they were going to govern their settlement?

Mayflower Compact

What is the belief that one race is superior to another?

racism

Who was the founder of Rhode Island?

Roger Williams

What colonial region was known as the Breadbasket Colonies?

Middle Colonies

What women said God spoke directly to her?

Anne Hutchinson

What do we call the area next to the Appalachian Mountains?

backcountry

Who was the founder of the colony later known as New York?

Peter Minuit

What was the religion associated with Pennsylvania?

Quakers

What were the German speaking people of Pennsylvania known as?

Pennsylvania Dutch

In the triangular trade system, what goods were sent from the colonies to Africa?

Tools, fish, lumber, etc. (things found in the colonies)

Which region was home to plantations?

Southern Colonies

Which region had the longest growing seasons?

Southern Colonies

What region was the most religious?

New England (mostly Massachusetts)

What was the first permanent English settlement in the New World?

Jamestown

What word means a willingness to let others practice their own beliefs?

toleration

What region had rocky soil?

New England

What leader helped Jamestown to survive?

John Smith

Which region was known for its craftsmen?

Middle Colonies (especially the Pennsylvania Dutch)

What was the general name for goods such as lumber and iron, which were traded from the colonies to England?

Raw materials

Who was the founder of Connecticut?

Thomas Hooker

What were the main crops of the Southern Colonies?

Tobacco, indigo and rice

What type of labor dominated southern plantations?

slaves

What do we call goods entering a country?

imports

What do we call goods leaving a country?

exports

Where did the French and Indian War begin?

The Ohio River Valley.

What was the cause of the French and Indian War?

The cause of the French and Indian War was the fur trade with the Native Americans. It was also part of a series of wars that had been going on for the last 100 years between France and Britain.

What territory did France claim before the war began?

France controlled much of modern day Canada as well as the Mississippi River valley.

What tribes were allies of the French in the French and Indian War?

The Algonquins and Hurons.

What tribe was an ally of the British in the French and Indian War?

Iroquois

What advantages did the French have in the French and Indian War?

They fought like the Native Americans using the trees for cover. They also had only 1 government in North America which made decisions a lot easier to be made.

What disadvantage did France have in the French and Indian War?

The French had a lot less people in the colonies.

What advantages did the English have in the French and Indian War?

The British had the best army in the world. They also had many more people in the colonies to fight the war.

What disadvantages did the English have in the French and Indian War?

The English tried to fight the war as they would in the open fields of Europe. They did not take advantage of the cover offered and were easy targets for the French.

What was the last battle of the French and Indian War?

The Battle of Quebec

What was the name of the treaty at the end of the French and Indian War?

The Treaty of Paris

What did the Treaty of Paris say?

Most of the French land in the colonies was given to Britain.

Who proposed the Albany Plan of Union?

Ben Franklin

What was the purpose of the Albany Plan of Union?

To unite the colonies to plan for defense. It didn’t work because colonies didn’t want to give up any power.

What act forbid settlers to move west of the Appalachian Mountains?

The Proclamation of 1763 forbid settlers to move west of the Appalachian Mountains. Many settlers ignored this proclamation. Britain was trying to stop settler / Native American conflicts over land.

What act, passed in 1765, placed taxes on legal documents such as wills, diplomas, marriage papers, newspapers, playing cards and even dice?

The Stamp Act.

What was the colonists reaction to the Stamp Act?

Riots broke out in cities like New York. Mobs harassed British tax officials by throwing rocks and tarring and feathering them. They hanged or burned effigies of the British officials.

A huge complaint the colonists had was that of “No taxation without representation!” What did this mean?

“No taxation without representation” arose because the colonists did not elect anybody to the British Parliament. The colonists claimed that Parliament could not tax them because they were represented in Parliament.

What was the Stamp Act Congress?

The Stamp Act Congress was when 9 colonies sent delegates to discuss what to do about the Stamp Act. They decided to boycott British goods.

What does boycott mean?

Boycott means to refuse to buy certain goods. It was a very common and successful means of colonial protest. The boycott caused the Stamp Act to be repealed.

What does repeal mean?

Repeal means to cancel. The Stamp Act was repealed after the colonial boycott.

In 1767 the Townshend Acts were passed. What did the Townshend Acts tax?

The Townshend Acts taxed glass, paint, lead, paper and tea. These were very important colonial goods.

What was the colonists reaction to the Townshend Acts?

The colonists responded to the Townshend Acts by getting merchants to sign nonimportation agreements. Nonimportation agreements said that these people would stop importing British goods that were taxed by the Townshend Acts.

The Sons of Liberty and the Daughters of Liberty were also formed. These were groups of men (and women) who protested British actions.

Writs of assistance were another thing established under the Townshend Acts. What were writs of assistance?

Writs of assistance allowed a customs officer to search a ship without giving a reason. Writs of assistance were often used by the British to harass Sons of Liberty and other people thought to be against the British actions.

This person was a failure on business. He lived in Boston where he was a leader of the Sons of Liberty. He organized the committees of correspondence. Who was he?

Sam Adams

What were the committees of correspondence?

The committees of correspondence were a group of people who wrote letters telling people in other colonies what was going on in the writers colony. They were started by Sam Adams in Boston.

This lawyer from Massachusetts was Sam Adams cousin. His knowledge of British law was very helpful to the colonists. Who was he?

John Adams

The Quartering Act was passed in What did the Quartering Act say?

The Quartering Act said that colonists had to house and feed British soldiers.

The Boston Massacre happened on March 5, What was the Boston Massacre?

In the Boston Massacre, British soldiers shot and killed 5 colonists. They were mostly Sons of Liberty. The colonists provoked the British into firing. The Sons of Liberty used this event to get people mad at the British.

Britain repealed much of the Townshend Acts in It did keep the tax on tea. This small tax was designed to show the colonists that Parliament did have the right to tax the colonies.

Parliament gave the British East India a monopoly of the tea trade with the Tea Act in This put many colonial merchants out of work. It was a very small tax but the colonists believed in “no taxation without representation.” What did this lead to?

The Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party. 342 crates of tea were dumped into Boston harbor. There were similar responses in several other locations. Colonists throughout the colonies agreed to boycott tea, often making their own substitutes.

Britain was not happy with the Boston Tea Party. It responded with the Intolerable Acts which were designed to punish the colonists of Massachusetts. What were the Intolerable Acts?

The Intolerable Acts shut down the port of Boston. Ships could not come into or leave the port which made it very difficult for the citizens of Boston to get supplies. Other colonies sent supplies by land.

A new Quartering Act was also passed. This made colonists who weren’t too happy with the British house British soldiers. This raised tensions in Boston. Town meetings were also limited to 1 a year. This was designed to keep the people of Massachusetts from organizing against the British.

The Intolerable Acts also said that British officials would be sent back to British to stand trial if they committed a crime. It was widely believed that these people would face no punishment in England since witnesses could not afford to go to Britain to testify.

How did the colonists react to the Intolerable Acts?

The committees of correspondence sent supplies to help Boston. The First Continental Congress also met in Philadelphia in What was the first Continental Congress?

The First Continental Congress was a meeting of 12 of the colonies. It agreed to boycott British goods. Each colony was urged to set up its own militia or volunteer army.

What was the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World?”

This referred to the Battle of Lexington and Concord. Colonial minutemen (soldiers who could be ready at a moments notice) stood up to the British. Why did this battle take place?

The British were trying to destroy guns and ammunition at Concord and capture leaders of the Sons of Liberty. The British were unsuccessful and were attacked on the way back to Boston, being defeated by the Minutemen.

It was called the “Shot Heard ‘Round the World” because news of this battle spread to all corners of the Earth.

Who was the great speaker for Virginia? He had a fiery temper and was a member of the House of Burgesses.

Patrick Henry. He was known for saying “Give me liberty, or give me death!”