Native American Interactions
Colonial Conflicts
Democratic Landmarks
Colonies and Their Regions
Religion and Economics
100

This European community's settlers most categorically rejected North American Indian culture and worldviews

Puritans

100

This rebellion in Virginia resulted in the increase in black slavery and decrease in indentured servitude.

Bacon’s Rebellion

100

This was the first representative assembly in North America, created in Virginia (1619).

House of Burgesses

100

He claimed that the Puritans should, “build a city upon a hill,” and became governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630.

John Winthrop

100

In 1649, this became the first law granting a degree of religious toleration in the colonies.

Maryland Act of Toleration

200

French and Dutch colonial relationships with American Indians were based primarily on trade alliance for this good

Furs

200

This was the first major slave rebellion in the South that resulted in further restrictions on slaves.

Stono Rebellion

200

This type of meeting became a “seed of democracy” in early New England.

Town Hall Meetings

200

This colonial region was the most ethnically, religiously, and demographically diverse

Middle

200

A company made up of a group of shareholders. Each shareholder invests some money in the company and, in turn, receives a share of the company's profits.

Joint stock company.

300

This American Indian confederation, reaching from the St. Lawrence Valley to the eastern Great Lakes, successfully resisted both native and colonial challenges during the 18th century

the Iroquois

300

Used to attract settlers to Virginia and to address the labor shortages on the many plantations.

Headright System

300

This 1736 court case set a trend for more freedom of the press in the colonies.

John Peter Zenger Trial

300

The diversified economy of this region relied primarily on fishing, shipbuilding, and commerce.

New England

300

During the era before the French and Indian War, this resulted in the colonies being left alone to develop their own economic and political institutions.

Salutary Neglect

400

Families could be broken up at any time so slaves relied on these kinship networks.

"Surrogate Families"

400

The unique idea of owning humans as property, able to be bought, sold, given away, and/or inherited, that developed in the Americas.

Chattel Slavery

400

Although technically not a constitution, this was a landmark agreement among Pilgrims and non-Pilgrims for majority rule.

Mayflower Compact

400

The primary staple crops produced in this region included wheat, barley, and oats.

Middle colonies

400

A series of mercantilist acts that specified that trade of goods to and from the colonies must be carried on English or colonial-built ships operated by Englishmen or colonial crews. These goods must also pass through English ports according to these acts.

Navigation Acts

500

Outlawed reading and writing, regulated the behaviors of the enslaved behaviors and punishments thus giving great power to those who enslaved others.

Slave Codes

500

These two conflicts in Virginia foreshadowed the reservation system. The indigenous people involved in these conflicts also helped the colonists of Jamestown survive.

First Powhatan War of 1614 and Second Powhatan War of 1644

500

This 17th century document was the first written constitution in American colonial history.

Fundamental Orders of Connecticut

500

This organization led by Edmund Andros was overthrown by New Englanders in 1689 due to its elimination of colonial assemblies. It is also the organization that led what historians refer to as the “1st American Revolution.”

Dominion of New England

500

This individual openly promoted the idea of an individual personal relationship with God without the guidance of church leaders, and was later expelled from the Massachusetts Bay colony. This individual also believed in Antinomianism, the ideas that faith alone, not deeds, is necessary for salvation.

Anne Hutchinson

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