Revolutionary People & Events
Salutary Neglect? You mean smuggling?
So you want a Revolution?
Articles of Confederation
Creating the Constitution
100

Inventor, Diplomat, Delegate to the 1st and 2nd Continental Congress, Philadelphia Gazette

Who is Ben Franklin

100

This was a direct tax, on legal documents, newspapers, playing cards, and so forth as a way to raise revenue in the colonies for the protection of a standing British army.

What is The Stamp Act

100

The Battle of Saratoga is considered to mark the turning point of the Revolutionary War because it ensured this happened.

What is securing French financial and military support.

100

Concern over the state of Massachusetts inability to put down an insurrection by this man led many state leaders to believe that the Articles needed to be "revised"

Who is Daniel Shays

100

This state's plan called for a strong federal government, which included a bicameral legislative branch with proportional representation, an executive branch, and a judicial branch.

What is Virginia.

200

Widespread religious movement that appealed to a sense personal liberty and religious tolerance.

What is the Great Awakening

200

This was the one British import tax on the colonies that was not repealed in the Townshend Acts.

What is the tax on tea.

200

In early 1776, this made public a persuasive and impassioned case for independence, which had not yet been given wide-spread, serious intellectual consideration in either Britain or the American colonies.

What is Thomas Paine's "Common Sense".

200

In order to Amend (change) the Articles of Confederation, this many states needed to agree to the amendment.

What is all the states (13/13)

200

This provided additional representation in the House of Representatives of slave states compared to the free states

What was the three-fifth's compromise.

300

This patriot group was instrumental in the boycott movements, and the spearhead of domestic production efforts.

Who are the Daughters of Liberty.

300

Hated judicial institutions set up by the British to cut down on colonial smuggling and reinforce British authority over the trade between the colonies and Britain.

What are vice-admirality courts

300

This meeting took place in Philadelphia, on May 10, 1775, with representatives from 12 of the 13 colonies, after the Battles of Lexington and Concord.

What was the 2nd Continental Congress.

300

This was act was considered to be the greatest accomplishment of the Confederated Congress under the Articles of Confederation in terms of organizing new US territories.

What is the Northwest Ordinance of 1787

300

Roger Sherman, a Connecticut Delegate, proposed the "Great Compromise" which created this. 

What is a bi-cameral Congress (2-house legislature), one chamber based on population, the other on equal representation

400

The Ottawa chief who, in response to colonist encroachment on Native lands, organized an alliance of tribes to raid and attack British forts and colonial outposts in North Western territories.

Who is Pontiac

400

This action gave Parliament the full authority to make laws for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever".

What is Declaratory Act

400

This Prussian officer is credited with the "making" of Washington's army at Valley Forge into an actual, disciplined fighting force.

Who is Baron Von Steuben

400

For a "major decision" to be settled by the Confederation Congress (i.e. pass a law), the Articles required that this number of states be in agreement.

What is 9/13 states (or 2/3s)

400

During the fight for ratification, Federalists promised to add this, in order to gain the support of the Anti-federalists.

What was a Bill of Rights.

500

An early American advocate for women's rights, this woman's essays (most notably "On the Equality of the Sexes") were important to the post-Revolution "Republican Motherhood" movement (a movement which aimed to produce intelligent and virtuous citizens required for the success of the new nation).

Who is Judith Sargent Murray.

500

As part of the Coercive Acts (aka the "Intolerable Acts") of 1774, this particular section protected British officials from being tried in colonial courts by sending them back to Britain or Canada for trial.

What is the Administration of Justice Act

500

The First Continental Congress passed and signed this as part of it's Declaration and Resolves, especially as an agreement of "non-importation, non-consumption, and non-exportation".

What is the Continental Association.

500

A meeting of 5 of the states in 1786, primarily to address the issue of trade among the states; though it was here where Hamilton formally calling for a special convention to amend the weak Articles of Confederation, which he would get in 1787. 

What was the Annapolis Convention

500

Under the "Commerce Compromise", the Constitution would state that Congress could regulate interstate commerce and foreign trade and tax imports (tariffs). However, they could not do this.

What is they could not tax exports.

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