Lost Colonies and Cash Crops
Taxed and Confused
Revolution, Not a Sprint
Articles? More Like Particles
Fed Up with the Federalists
✨🎉
Final Jeopardy
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100

This vanished English settlement is known as the “Lost Colony.”

Roanoke

100

This war left Britain in debt and led it to tighten control and raise money from the colonies.

French and Indian War

100

This Congress created the Continental Army and chose George Washington to lead it.

Second Continental Congress

100

Under the Articles of Confederation, the government could not do this to raise reliable money.

Tax citizens directly

100

This group of advisers and department heads helped the president run the new executive branch.

Cabinet

200

This group founded Jamestown mainly to make money from the New World.

Virginia Company

200

This British policy limited colonial settlement west of the Appalachians, angering colonists who wanted land.

Proclamation Line

200

This pamphlet, written by Thomas Paine, argued that independence and a republic made more sense than monarchy.

Common Sense

200

This law created a process for western territories to become new states.

Northwest Ordinance

200

Hamilton had a plan to build national credit by doing this.

Assumption of state debts 

300

This Jamestown leader pushed a “work or starve” approach to help the colony survive.

 John Smith

300

This slogan argued that Parliament should not tax colonists who had no elected voice in that lawmaking body.

“No taxation without representation”

300

This document stated and justified independence using ideas like natural rights and government by consent.

Declaration of Independence

300

This uprising by Massachusetts farmers increased support for a stronger national government.

Shays’ Rebellion

300

This protest against a federal tax showed the new government could enforce its laws.

Whiskey Rebellion

300

This agreement officially recognized U.S. independence and ended the Revolutionary War.

Treaty of Paris

400

In the Chesapeake, this cash crop pushed settlers to clear more land and increased demand for labor.

Tobacco

400

These harsh laws after Boston pushed colonies to work together in actions like the First Continental Congress.

Intolerable Acts

400

This early battle showed the Patriots could fight the British, even though the Patriots did not win.

Battle of Bunker Hill

400

This meeting was a small gathering, but it helped lead to the Constitutional Convention.

Annapolis Convention

400

These laws were criticized for limiting speech and targeting immigrants, leading to responses like the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions.

Alien and Sedition Acts

500

These two figures challenged Puritan leaders and became symbols of religious dissent and new ideas about religious freedom.

Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson

500

The colonist used this symbol/image that warned that they could strike back if threatened.

Rattlesnake

500

DAILY DOUBLE

This major victory convinced France the Americans could win, leading to an alliance.

Battle of Saratoga

500

DAILY DOUBLE

This compromise determined how a state's population would count towards voting ultimately giving more power to Southerns states and increasing tension over slavery.

Three-Fifths Compromise

500

This election revealed that a tie within the same party could force the House of Representatives to decide the president.

Election of 1800