HIT
Exploration
Colonization
Independence
Vocabulary
100

A historian who is asking questions such as: Who created it? When? Why? From what perspective or point of view? What did they know? is doing this

What is Sourcing? 

100

primary reason for exploration

What is finding a faster route to Asia for spices and other luxury goods?  

100

This colony was the first permanent English colony

What is Jamestown?

100

This war started as a territorial war over the Ohio River Valley

What was the French and Indian War or the Seven Years War?

100

Examples would include tobacco, cotton, indigo, and grain

What are cash crops?

200

Examples of these would include: Photographs, autobiographies, letters, emails, diaries, artifacts, live recordings, newspapers, text messages

What are primary sources?

200

Reasons for exploration (PERS)

What are Political, Economic, Social, and Religious reasons?

200

This document, signed in 1620, created a self-government in the colony of Plymouth

What is the Mayflower Compact?

200

This said that colonists must provide shelter to the British soldiers in the colonies

What is the Quartering Act?

200

When citizens elect a smaller group of people to make laws and decisions for them, they are participating in this type of government

What is representative government?

300

The 1800s would include dates in this century

What is the 19th century?

300

The exchange of plants, animals, diseases, and technologies between the Americas and the rest of the world following Columbus's voyages.

What is the Colombian Exchange?

300

Due to the abundance of grain crops grown here, these colonies were nicknamed the Breadbasket Colonies.

What are the Middle Colonies?

300

This group of acts, including the Boston Port Act, the Administration of Justice Act, and the Massachusetts Government Act, was meant to punish the colonists for the Boston Tea Party

What are the Intolerable Acts or Coercive Acts?

300

Rights given at birth that cannot be taken away

What are unalienable rights?

400

A prejudice in favor of or against one thing, person, or group

What is bias? 

400

This native american cultural region's tribes hunted, grew the three sisters, and lived in wigwams or longhouses

What are the Northeast Woodlands tribes?

400

Trading between West Africa (enslaved people), the Americas (cash crops, raw materials), and Europe (manufactured goods)

What is the triangular trade?

400

This group sent an Olive Branch Petition to the king, created a Continental army, appointed George Washington as commander in chief, and signed the Declaration of Independence

What is the Second Continental Congress?

400

An English policy of not strictly enforcing laws in its colonies because of the distance between the mother country and the colonies

What is salutary neglect?

500

Analyzing other sources to see if they say the same thing

What is corroboration?

500

A water route from the Atlantic to the Pacific through northern Canada. Sought by navigators (does not exist)

What is the Northwest Passage? 

500

The founders of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Maryland were all seeking this

What is religious freedom?

500

This battle was considered the turning point of the American Revolution

What is the Battle of Saratoga?

500

The Enlightenment thinker created the idea of natural rights and the social contract between the government and its people

Who is John Locke?

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