Postcolonial Society
The Northwest
Transportation Revolution
Northeastern Farms
Industrial Revolution
100

T/F: Most farms in New England and middle states diversified their crops and farms rather than focusing on one item.

True

100

Who is probably the archetype for early American pioneers pushing past the Appalachian Mountains? (initials are D.B.)

Daniel Boone

100

The construction of the Erie Canal is most closely associated with which state? (Tennessee, New York, Oklahoma, Virginia)

New York
100

_____ became the great New England cash crop because of the rocky soil throughout the region.

Beef

100

From what country did America take/steal the idea for a water-powered machine that could spin yarn and thread?

England

200

According to the first census in 1790, ___% of Americans lived on farms and in rural villages.        (28, 42, 74, 94)

94%

200

After the Treaty of Paris (1783) and before the Louisiana Purchase (1803), the _______ River served as the western border of America's territorial land holdings.

Mississippi

200

The first road built by America to link two areas inland was called the _______ Road (starts with an N) and linked Washington, D.C. with Wheeling, West Virginia.

National

200

T/F: The rise of the livestock industry in New England led to massive deforestation in the region.

True

200

What was the name of the "family system" where mill owners built whole villages surrounded by company-owned farmland that they rented to the husbands and fathers of their female mill workers?

(Massachusetts System, Connecticut System, Rhode Island System)

Rhode Island System

300

Name the three foreign currencies circulating in the United States in the early days of our country.

Spanish, English, French

300

Frontier people were so drunken, messy and wild that Eastern elites often referred to them as "our white _____" (comparing them to how poorly we thought of Native Americans)

Savages

300

Which American entrepreneur is associated with the first commercial steamboat called The Clermont?

(Eli Whitney, Robert Fulton, John Deere, Cyrus McCormick)

Robert Fulton

300

What is the term for the growing rural social class that "defined itself against poorer laborers and those who did not adapt to the new market society"?

Middle Class

300
The ______ Mill Girls became synonymous with young, unmarried women working in these new New England textile factories.

Lowell

400

By 1815, we had roughly 24 urban centers in America and the largest was ______.

New York City
400

In 1790 only 10,000 Americans lived west of the Appalachians...but by 1820 the number had risen to _____ million.

Two

400

Before the boom of internal improvements, a Senate report showed we could spend $9 to move a ton of goods _____ miles across the Atlantic Ocean but only 30 miles inland. (750...1,000...1,500...2,000)

1,500

400

As America progressed, an appreciation for refinement and cleanliness grew. Eventually the practice of chewing and spitting tobacco was banned in _______. (stores, churches, schools)

Churches

400

T/F: The mill girls in these new factory towns typically sent their wages home to their parents and/or paid for their brothers' college educations.

False

500

Which founding father promoted the idea of the "yeoman farmer"...someone who was prosperous, independent and living in rough equality with neighbors who shared the same status?

Jefferson

500

By 1820 the term "backcountry" was replaced by the word ______ to refer to the Northwest Territory and the general land west of the Appalachian Mountains.

Frontier

500

By 1840, travel time between big northeastern cities had been reduced  from 1/4 to ____ of what it had been in 1790. (1/5...1/9...1/11...1/15)

1/11

500

The market and housework grew hand in hand: Among the first mass-produced commodities in the United States was the household ______. (Sink, Broom, Iron, Mop)

Broom

500

The _______-out system refers to the method of merchants subcontracting needlework into homes or small tailor shops.

Putting