Constitutional Convention
Road to Revolution
Declaration of Independence
Articles of Confederation
Big Ideas/
Influential Thinkers
100

Where did the Constitutional Conventiono meet in the summer of 1787?

Philadelphia

100

What did King George III want from the American colonies?

Money

100

Who is the main writer of the Declaration of Independence?

Thomas Jefferson

100

Name something the Articles of Confederation did successfully.


Created a government that united the original 13 states.

100

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

What Enlightenment ideal from John Locke is referenced in the Declaration of Independence?

Natural Rights

200

The Constitution is knows as this, because it features compromises between different states on many key controversial issues.

A bundle of compromises.

200

The colonies opposed taxation by Great Britain because they had no _____________ in the British government. 

Representation

200

When was the Declaration of Independence adopted by the Second Continental Congress?

July 4, 1776

200

What was the main idea in the founders' heads when they went to create the foundational government of the new United States?

Don't let the government be too strong!

200

That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the __________

Dec of Independence

Consent of the Governed
300

A legislative body with two houses is known as:

Bicameral

300

One tax colonists opposed vehemently opposed levied taxes on paper goods, legal documents, and newspapers; it was the: 

Stamp Act

300

What was the purpose of the Declaration of Independence?

To formally declare our separation from Britain and independence as a free, autonomous nation.

300

What are two failures of the Articles of Confederation?

No executive, no courts, no power to tax, Shays Rebellion, no national currency, one vote per state, 

300

Hobbes' idea that a citizen gives up certain freedoms to the government in exchange for government protection of citizens' rights.

Social contract theory

400

This compromise resulted in our current Congressional system with two houses representing their states in different ways: through equal representation in the Senate and representation determined by population in the House.

Connecticut Compromise/The Great Compromise

400

The Intolerable Acts were a series of punitive measures following this event that closed the port of Boston, placed MA under military rule, and made British officials immune to prosecution.

The Boston Tea Party

400

Name the three unalienable rights listed in the Declaration:

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

400

How did the Articles of Confederation instruct the government to make money?


Request it from the states.

400

Difference between a direct democracy and a republic

Direct democracy - citizens get individual votes, participate directly

Republic - vote for representatives

500

This compromise allowed the South to county 60% of their slave population toward numbers for representation as long as they paid taxes on those slaves and agreed to the establishment of one national debt.

The 3/5 Compromise

500

This event was a deadly confrontation that took place on March 5, 1770 between British soldiers and a crowd of colonists, sparking outrage in the colonies and marking a key moment in the lead-up to the American Revolution.

The Boston Massacre

500

What was the primary nation the new United States hoped would help them win a revolution against Great Britain?

France

500

Which body/branch of government did the Articles of Confederation create? 

Congress

500

The Baron de Montesquieu espoused ideas that our Founding Fathers embraced concerning these.

Checks and balance/Separation of powers