What are barracks?
A building or group of buildings used to house soldiers.
What are 3 examples of a secondary source?
Textbooks
Biographies
Encyclopedias
Documentaries
Newspaper Articles
What is this a picture of?
The Boston Tea Party.
What is a DBQ claim?
A statement of your position on the question of the DBQ.
What is the title of this document?
Quartering Act (1765, 1774)
What does it mean to quarter soldiers?
When the government forces people to provide housing, food, and other support to soldiers.
What are 3 examples of a primary source?
Letters
Diaries
Photographs
Speeches
Artifacts
What is the title of this graph?
Imports from Britain, 1764-1776.
What do you use the documents to do?
Use them as evidence to support your claim.
Who wrote the document from Parliament to the Colonists?
George Grenville.
What is a DBQ?
A document based question.
If you are studying the American Revolution, would this picture be a primary or secondary source?
A primary source.
Looking at the graph, how sides were there during the American Revolution in the colonies?
There were 3.
What is the first thing your should do when analyzing a document?
Read it carefully.
Who was the quartering act for?
The colonists.
What is secondary source?
A source created by someone who did not experience first-hand or participate in the events or conditions being researched.
Is this a primary or secondary source?
Secondary.
Which act had the biggest decrease in imports?
The Intolerable Acts 1774
What are 3 details that would be important in the document?
Dates
Title
Who wrote it
What is it about
What is the main thing the colonists are required to do?
Build barracks and house the soldiers.
What is a primary source?
An original document or object that was created during the time under study.
It provides first hand evidence about a topic because it comes directly from the people who experienced or witnessed the events.
Is this a primary or secondary source?
Secondary.
According to the graph, what side did the colonists chose the least?
The loyalists.
What helps you get a clearer picture of what's going on in the document?
Asking questions,
“What is the purpose of this document?” or “Why did the author write this?
According to the document, what does Great Britain have the power to do? Why?