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Test Review PowerPoint. The test will be on Wednesday for Blue day classes and Thursday for White day classes There will be 30 multiple choice questions worth 3 points each (90 points total) and a short answer section worth a total of 10 points. Christopher Columbus
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Test Review PowerPoint • The test will be on Wednesday for Blue day classes and Thursday for White day classes • There will be 30 multiple choice questions worth 3 points each (90 points total) and a short answer section worth a total of 10 points
Christopher Columbus • “Discovered” the Americas in 1492 • Landed 1st on the island of Hispaniola (today it’s the Dominican Republic and Haiti • The Spanish killed off all of the native Arawaks within about 60 years • Settlement of America • Europeans settled all along the east coast • The Virginia Company • Granted a charter by the king of England to search for silver and gold • Jamestown • First successful colony in America… came to find silver and gold and later became a successful tobacco growing colony • John Smith • Led the expedition to Jamestown and his leadership was influential in saving the colony from near certain death • House of Burgesses • Gov’t in Jamestown • Made laws, raised taxes • First representative government in America!!!!
Jamestown relations with Native Americans • Both good and bad • Chief Powhatan of the Algonquin Indians saw benefits in friendly relations • Later, the two sides fought • Powhatan’s daughter, Pocahontas, marries colonist John Rolfe, which brings a short lived peace • Bacon’s Rebellion • Poor farmers rebelled against a gov’t that favored the wealthy • They got their taxes reduced and more land on the frontier • Georgia as a colony • Proprietary colony to protect South Carolina from the Spanish in Florida • Haven for English debtors and religious refugees • Development of slavery in America • Slave labor was needed to produce cash crops on southern plantations • Native Americans and indentured servants were unsuccessful so they took slaves from Africa • Middle Passage • The boat ride from Africa to America… slaves were packed into cargo holds and chained down for three months!!! Many of them died
The Pilgrims • Religious refugees from England… sailed on the Mayflower • The Puritans • Came from England for religious freedom • Massachusetts Bay Colony • Puritan immigrants, including John Winthrop, came to the New World to escape religious persecution • Received a charter from the king of England • Early gov’t in America • Mayflower Compact • Gov’t of the Pilgrims • First democracy in America!!! • Representative Government in Massachusetts • Town Meetings to discuss ideas • Limited Democracy: • Only white, 17 years old, male landowners were generally allowed to participate in the political process
Roger Williams & Anne Hutchinson • Challenged the Puritan church in New England • This led the Puritan church to banish them!!! • Rhode Island • Created to escape the intolerance of Puritan society for different religions. • Connecticut • Had the first Constitution in America • The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut… established a representative gov’t • King Philip’s War • Puritan’s fought the native Americans led by Metacom (aka King Philip)… the Puritan’s won • Salem Witch Trials • People in Salem, Mass. were falsely accused of being witches • Navigation Acts • Refused to pay British taxes so the king revoked the charter
What is a colony? A group of people living in a small area away from their own country Settlement of America New England • Cold, infertile but the population grew quickly • Manufacturing, ship-builders, fishermen Middle Colonies • Land was good for farming: wheat, corn, and other grains Southern colonies • Warm and humid climate; long growing season • Ideal for producing crops on a large scale on plantations • Because of the need for labor, indentured servants and later slaves were brought in to work on the plantations
MERCANTILISM • Economic policy in which a nation accumulates wealth by exporting more goods than it imports • The more colonies you own = the more resources you have!!! • It is better to export than to import
The Enlightenment • A movement headed by thinkers who believed that all problems could be solved using human reason • Influenced by the Scientific Revolution: • Observation and experimentation were used to learn about the physical world • Political thinkers like Voltaire and Rousseau of France and John Locke of Great Britain • Looked for natural laws that could be applied to government
John Locke • Believed in natural rights given to all Humans by God • Life, Liberty, Property • Social Contract Theory: a government exists to protect its peoples natural rights… if it doesn’t protect them, the people have should overthrow it and institute a new one Benjamin Franklin • Successful printer with a hunger for knowledge • He wrote books, almanacs, conducted scientific experiments, and had several inventions • One of the founding fathers… helped America become independent • He was integral in getting the French to join the Revolutionary War on the side of the Patriots • After the war, Franklin negotiated the peace treaty with the British • He gained more land for the United States because he cut the French out of the negotiations
The Great Awakening • Religious movement that rejected the Enlightenment • Believed that personal religious experience was important in seeking God’s salvation • Jonathan Edwards & George Whitefield were two its leading preachers Effects of the Great Awakening • Inspired a feeling of individual power in people • Led to a rise in democratic belief in the colonies • If a person could choose how they worshipped then they could choose their own form of gov’t!!!!!
Navigation Acts(part of the policy of Mercantilism) • England was exploiting the colonies to make as much money as they could for themselves • The Navigation Acts goal was to keep all American goods in English hands • The Navigation Acts were difficult to enforce • Colonists could make more money by selling goods to other countries besides England Salutary Neglect • Salutary = Beneficial • As long as the colonists sent raw materials to Britain and the colonists continued to buy British made finished goods then Britain would not closely supervise the colonies • It cost a lot of money to enforce the Navigation Acts • This freedom gave the colonists a taste for independence!!!
French Settlement in America • The French settled in Quebec… north of New England • Founded by French explorer Samuel de Champlain • France claimed territory all the way down to the Gulf of Mexico and called it Louisiana… in honor of King Louis XIV
The conflict begins… • The French and Indian War • Fought between the British and French over territories in the Americas • British & the colonists vs. the French & Native Americans • George Washington led colonial British troops in the first battle of the war • Lasted nine years and ended with the Treaty of Paris 1763… the British & colonists won • The British gained all of New France and all territory in the west up to the Mississippi River
The Seeds of Revolution • The Proclamation Line of 1763 kept the colonists from settling territory west of the Appalachian mountains… the same land they just fought for!!! • Britain needed money to help repay war debts that built up during the war with France during the 1750’s and 1760’s • They imposed new taxes on the colonists because they claimed the war was fought to protect the colonists
Events leading to independence • Currency Act of 1764 • Prohibited the colonies from printing their own money • Hurt the colonists because they couldn’t pay debts to British creditors • Proclamation of 1763 • Kept the colonists from settling land west of the Appalachian mountains • Upset them because they just fought a war to gain this land • Sugar Act of 1764 • Lowered the tax on molasses but increased enforcement of the taxes • Stamp Act of 1765 • Tax on all printed goods… newspapers, books, etc. • Quartering Act of 1765 • Required colonists to provide housing and supplies for British soldiers • Townshend Acts • Levied duties (taxes) on everyday items such as glass, led, paint, and tea • Sons of Liberty • Groups of men who protested British taxes
Events leading to independence • Boston Massacre • In March 1770, a group of colonists threw rocks and snowballs at British soldiers… the soldiers fired on them killing five of them • Tea Act • A tax on colonial tea merchants… but the British East India Tea Company did not have to pay a tax • Boston Tea Party • Colonists dressed as Native Americans dumped tea overboard to protest the tea taxes • Coercive Acts of 1774 • Closed Boston harbor after the Tea Party and strengthened the power of the governor of the colony • Committees of Correspondence • Network of protesting colonists providing leadership and cooperation to fight the unfair treatment by the British • First Continental Congress • An organized group of colonists who sent delegates to Philadelphia to discuss how to fight the British treatment • Led by Patrick Henry… “Give me liberty or give me death!!!” • Encouraged colonists to move toward becoming an independent nation • Minutemen… aka militia (pg 108) • Part-time soldiers who were also full-time farmers • They were ready to fight in a minutes notice… hence the name Minutemen!!!!
The move toward an American nation!!! Patriots vs. Loyalists • Loyalists felt the British gov’t was legitimate • Patriots felt the British were taxing the colonists unfairly… “No taxation without representation!!!” • Patriots wanted to declare independence from Britain but many colonists were either Loyalists or were neutral Shots fired!!! • Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts • Fighting begins between the colonists and Britain and soon spreads to other parts of the colonies Thomas Paine - Common Sense • He wrote a pamphlet that attacked the English king • Said a tiny island like Britain so far away had no business governing a large continent like America… it didn’t make sense!!! • This inspired many colonists to want to declare independence
The Declaration of Independence • On July 4, 1776 the colonies accepted the Declaration of Independence • It defined the basic principles on which the American government and society would be based • It had a list of grievences (things the British gov’t. did that upset the colonists) • It is based on John Locke’s theory of natural rights: life, liberty, and property • The Social Contract Theory: a gov’t existed to protect the rights of the people… if it did not protect those rights, the people had the right to abolish it and institute a new one
The American Revolution • The war lasted for seven years and there were several key battles you must know… The Battle of Saratoga • This was one of the biggest American victories in the war • It became the turning point in the war when French agreed to help the colonists gain their freedom from Britain Valley Forge • Washington and his soldiers spent the winter at Valley Forge… it was a long, cold, difficult winter and many in the army nearly quit • Baron von Steuben – a Prussian military officer who helped Washington turn his undisciplined troops into professional soldiers The Battle of Yorktown • The final battle of the Revolutionary War • Washington was able to pin the British between his army and the French navy • Lord Cornwallis was forced to surrender
Alliance with France • The alliance with France was a huge advantage for the colonists • France gave money, troops and use of their navy to help to defeat the British • This also helped because the British had to defend itself in Europe as well as in North America Marquis de Lafayette • He was a French general who helped the Patriots during the war • He was experienced at fighting the British and used that knowledge to the advantage of the Patriots
The Treaty of Paris (1783) • The treaty officially ended the Revolutionary War. • It was signed by Great Britain, France, Spain, and the United States • Great Britain recognized the independence of the United States • The northern border of the United States was set primarily along the great lakes • The Mississippi River was set as the western border of the United States • Florida was given back to the Spanish by the British. • Great Britain would remove its troops from the United States territory • The rights and property of American Loyalists was returned
The Impact of the Revolution • The traditional ideas about women were now challenged • The principle of equality as included in the Declaration of Independence provided an argument for the Anti-Slavery cause • The Iroquois and other Native American tribes were destroyed, and were continually persecuted by the Americans for decades to come • The greatest effect of the war was the diffusion around the world of the idea that “all men are created equal”