Colonial New England
American Revolution
U.S. Constitution
Manifest Destiny
Causes of the Civil War
100

This religious group founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, seeking to create a "city upon a hill."

Puritans 

100

This slogan summarized colonial opposition to being taxed by Parliament without elected representatives.

No taxation without representation 

100

The first ten amendments to the Constitution are collectively known by this name.

Bill of Rights

100

This term described the belief that the United States was destined to expand across North America.

Manifest Destiny

100

This 1820 agreement admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state while establishing a geographic line for slavery's expansion.

Missouri Compromise 

200

This colony, founded by Roger Williams, became known for religious freedom and tolerance.

Rhode Island

200

These two Massachusetts towns were the sites of the first battles of the American Revolution.

Lexington and Concord 

200

This system divides power among the legislative, executive, and judicial branches.

Separation of Powers 

200

This 1803 land purchase from France nearly doubled the size of the United States.

Louisiana Purchase

200

This principle, central to the Kansas-Nebraska Act, allowed settlers to decide whether slavery would be permitted in their territory.

Popular Sovereignty 

300

In 1620, the Pilgrims arrived in North America aboard this ship.

Mayflower

300

This 1774 gathering brought delegates from twelve colonies together to coordinate a response to British policies.

First Continental Congress

300

This plan, introduced by William Paterson, proposed equal representation for each state in Congress.

New Jersey Plan

300

This trail helped thousands of settlers travel west to the Pacific Northwest.

Oregon Trail

300

In this 1857 Supreme Court case, Chief Justice Roger Taney ruled that Congress lacked authority to prohibit slavery in the territories.

Dred Scott vs. Sandford 

400

This document, signed aboard the Mayflower, established a form of self-government for the settlers.

Mayflower Compact

400

This pamphlet by Thomas Paine argued that monarchy was inherently corrupt and that independence was the logical next step.

Common Sense

400

This Virginian is often called the "Father of the Constitution."

James Madison 

400

This war between the United States and Mexico resulted in the U.S. gaining vast southwestern territories.

Mexican-American War 

400

During debates with Stephen Douglas in 1858, this Illinois politician argued that the nation could not remain permanently divided over slavery.

Abraham Lincoln 

500

King Philip's War took its name from this Wampanoag leader known to his people by a different name.

Metacom

500

This group of colonial activists organized resistance to the Stamp Act and often coordinated boycotts of British goods.

Sons of Liberty 

500

These essays, written largely by Hamilton, Madison, and Jay, sought to persuade New Yorkers to ratify the Constitution.

Federalist Papers 

500

This 1848 treaty ended the Mexican-American War and transferred California and other territories to the United States.

Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

500

This abolitionist newspaper editor published The Liberator and called for the immediate end of slavery.

William Lloyd Garrison

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