Big Changes
Laws, Taxes, and Protests
State Governments Under the Articles
Constitutional Convention
Compromises
100

This 18th-century religious movement encouraged colonists to have a personal connection with God.

What is the Great Awakening?

100

Colonists used this form of protest—refusing to buy British goods—to oppose unfair taxes.

What is a boycott?

100

Most new state governments divided power among three branches, including an executive branch led by this person, who enforced the law.

What is a governor?

100

Delegates met to fix this weak system of government that had governed for 10 years.

Articles of Confederation

100

Northern states wanted Congress to regulate this, while Southern states feared taxes on exports and losing the ability to acquire slaves.

What is trade?

200

This European movement inspired colonists to use reason and science to question government and authority.

What is the Enlightenment?

200

This law required colonists to pay for official stamps on documents like newspapers and legal papers.

What is the Stamp Act?

200

Most new state governments divided power among three branches, including this branch that interpreted laws and handled disputes.

What is the judicial branch?

200

Because they built the framework for a new government, the delegates are often called this.

What are Framers?

200

Roger Sherman’s plan that created a two-house Congress to satisfy both large and small states.

What is the Great Compromise (or Connecticut Compromise)?

300

Enlightenment thinker John Locke believed all people were born with these three natural rights.

What are life, liberty, and property?

300

Writs of assistance allowed British officials to do this.

What is search homes and businesses for smuggled goods?

300

This 1786–1787 uprising of angry Massachusetts farmers convinced many Americans that a stronger national government was needed.

What is Shay's Rebellion?

300

The delegates were instructed to revise the Articles but instead decided to write this.

What is the U.S. Constitution?

300

This agreement counted every five enslaved people as three free persons for both taxes and representation in Congress.

What is the Three-Fifths Compromise?

400

The war between Britain and France (and their Native American allies) for control of North America was called this.

What is the French and Indian War?

400

Parliament repealed the Stamp Act but immediately passed this law to remind the colonies that Britain had the right to tax the colonies “in all cases whatsoever.”

What is the Declaratory Act?

400

This section of the state constitutions guaranteed specific freedoms, such as trial by jury and property ownership, inspired by the Magna Carta and an earlier English version.

What is the bill of rights?

400

This plan, proposed by James Madison, favored large states and based representation on population.

What is the Virginia Plan?

400

This compromise created the system that elects the president and vice president.

What is the Electoral College?

500

After the war, King George III issued this proclamation forbidding colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains.

What is the Proclamation of 1763?

500

These 1774 laws were meant to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party, and pushed colonists to meet and declare independence. 

What are the Coercive Acts (Intolerable Acts)?

500

Under the Articles of Confederation, the national government was weak because it lacked two key powers — to (1) ______ its citizens and to regulate (2)_______.

(1) tax

(2) trade

500

This plan, proposed by William Paterson, favored small states and gave each state one vote.

What is the New Jersey Plan?

500

The compromise that combined Madison and Paterson's plans created Congress, which was separated into an upper house, called (1)_______ and a lower house, called (2) _______.

(1) the Senate

(2) the House of Representatives

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