Battles
The Two Sides
Famous People
Vocabulary
What caused it?
Random
Facts
Key Events
100

The battle that ended with the British surrendering

Yorktown

100

Name 2 Colonial Weaknesses


● Disorganized army

● Poorly trained troops and very

little supplies for the war.

● No navy

● Had difficulty raising the funds

needed for war.

100

leader of the Colonial Army

George Washington

100

Nickname given to British soldiers of the Revolution because of their bright uniforms.

Redcoats

100

British debt after this war led to the Revolution.

French-Indian War

100

3 inalienable rights listed in the Declaration of Independence.

Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness

100

Where the colonists revolted against a tax on their favorite beverage.

Boston Tea Party

200

The army came together under Washington’s leadership and believed more in his guidance even though it was freezing and the men were poorly equipped to handle it.

Valley Forge

200

__supported Great Britain because their jobs depended on it. Royal governors and agents of the Crown remained loyal. Others felt strong ties to their mother country and did not see a need for Revolution. Older conservatives disagreed to revolting against the Crown and wanted its protection.

Loyalists

200

Leader of the British Army

Lord Cornwallis

200

Strategy of refusing to purchase goods in the hopes of weakening the other party.

boycott

200

Name some of the acts passed by the British against the Colonists

Stamp Act

Intolerable Act

Coercive Act

Tea Act

Townshend Act

Sugar Act

200

This was a surprise attack on Christmas night that resulted in the capture of Hessian troops. It boosted morale for the Continental Army.

Washington Crosses the Delaware

200

On March 5, 1770, British soldiers killed five civilians and injured six others in Boston.

Boston Massacre

300

The shots fired started the first major Revolution against British rule in one of its many colonies that would be watching.

Lexington and Concord

300

__ supported independence for many reasons. First, they claimed “no taxation without representation.” They saw themselves too far removed from England to be subject to the King and Parliament. The Enlightenment ideals they believed in also convinced them they could form a better government.

Patriots

300

Wrote the Declaration of Independence.

Thomas Jefferson

300

Style of fighting used by the Continental Army which included

hit-and-run, surprise attacks, and ambushing the British.

Guerilla Warfare

300

What event happened when Colonists began throwing snowballs at British soldiers?

Boston Massacre

300

The act was a tax on all paper used for printed materials in the colonies. It required that all materials printed in the colonies be printed on paper embossed with an official revenue stamp. The printed materials in question included everything from newspapers, to magazines to legal documents.

Stamp Act

300

The first shots of the Revolution that were fired at Lexington & Concord and began the war. These shots became known as ___

Shot Heard ‘Round the World

400

This battle showed that the colonists could inflict heavy losses on the British.

Battle of Bunker Hill

400

Had a determination to win, knew the land, but was working with an inexperienced military and was politically disorganized.

Colonies

400

most famous traitor in American history. He was in control of West Point and planned to give it to the British when his plan was discovered.

Benedict Arnold

400

Having ships surround an area so that no goods or people can  pass through. 

blockade

400

Rallying cry for the Patriots.

"No taxation without Representation!"

400

Person who saved Washington and whipped the colonial army into shape

Who is Casimir Pulaski?

400

British recognized the sovereignty and independence of the United States.

Treaty of Paris of 1783

500

It was a major victory for the colonists and helped convince France that they could win the war.

Saratoga

500

Name the 13 colonies involved in the war

New Hampshire 

Massachusetts

Rhode Island

Connecticut

New York

Pennsylvania

New Jersey

Delaware

Maryland

Virginia

NC

SC

Georgia

500

French nobleman who helped the Revolution by fighting, leading troops, gaining greater French support and using his own fortune to aid the war.

Marquis de Lafayette

500

Sometimes called Loyalists because they remained loyal to the British and didn't support independence.

Tories

500

King of England during the Revolution

George III

500

Enlightenment thinker who argued for a democratic republic because England was too  far away to rule the colonies fairly.

Thomas Paine

500

Years of the Revolution

1776-1783

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