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Jeopardy. Patriots’ Actions. People. Places. Acts. Mixed Bag. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $500. Q $500. Q $500. Q $500. Q $500.
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Jeopardy Patriots’ Actions People Places Acts Mixed Bag Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
$100 Question from “People” These two men were the Patriot leaders who the British wanted to capture when they marched to Lexington.
$100 Answer from “People” Samuel Adams and John Hancock
$200 Question from “People” He led settlers over the Proclamation Line of 1763 to form the new colony of Kentucky.
$200 Answer from “People” Daniel Boone
$300 Question from “People” They were the two Patriots who rode to either Lexington or Concord and who aren’t as famous as Paul Revere, but they played a huge part, too.
$300 Answer from “People” William Dawes and Samuel Prescott
$400 Question from “People” He was the leader of the Lexington minutemen when the British attacked on April 19, 1775.
$400 Answer from “People” John Parker
$500 Question from “People” He was the commander of the British sentries on the night of the Boston Massacre – and he didn’t yell, “Fire!”
$500 Answer from “People” Thomas Preston
$100 Question from “Places” This is where Lexington and Concord are located.
$100 Answer from “Places” Massachusetts
$200 Question from “Places” The Proclamation Line ran along this natural feature.
$200 Answer from “Places” Appalachian Mountains
$300 Question from “Places” This is the city where the First Continental Congress met in 1774 to discuss the colonies’ problems with Britain.
$300 Answer from “Places” Philadelphia
$400 Question from “Places” This is the colony that didn’t attend the First Continental Congress when it met in 1774 to discuss the problems with Britain.
$400 Answer from “Places” Georgia
$500 Question from “Places” This was the open area in the middle of Boston where the British built their camps when they couldn’t find colonists’ homes to stay in.
$500 Answer from “Places” The common or green (These mean the same thing.)
$100 Question from “Acts” This act put on the colonists made them pay a tax on newspapers, documents, almanacs, playing cards, and other paper items.
$100 Answer from “Acts” Stamp Act
$200 Question from “Acts” This act tried to keep the colonists and the Native Americans separate so that Britain wouldn’t have to worry about fights or wars breaking out.
$200 Answer from “Acts” Proclamation of 1763
$300 Question from “Acts” This act taxed lead, paper, paint, glass, and tea – all products that colonists used constantly, so no wonder they were mad.
$300 Answer from “Acts” Townshend Acts
$400 Question from “Acts” This act allowed British soldiers to move into colonists’ homes to live while they were in America. The colonists hated this!
$400 Answer from “Acts” Quartering Act
$500 Question from “Acts” This act was put on by Britain after the Boston Tea Party. It closed the port of Boston so they couldn’t get supplies they needed or make money by selling their goods.
$500 Answer from “Acts” Intolerable Acts (Remember, “intolerable” means something that you can’t stand.)
$100 Question from “Patriots’ Actions” The colonists did this to protest British taxes – they refused to buy British goods, such as tea.
$200 Question from “Patriots’ Actions” This is what the Sons of Liberty did to punish British tax collectors; it sometimes even caused death.
$200 Answer from “Bonding” Tar and Feathering
$300 Question from “Patriots’ Actions” These were groups of people who wrote letters to other colonies to keep them up to date about Britain’s actions. Remember, there were no TVs, radios, phones, or email back then.
$300 Answer from “Patriots’ Actions” Committees of Correspondence
$400 Question from “Patriots’ Actions” It’s the way that William Dawes got passed the British sentry when he went on his ride to Lexington to warn people that the British were coming.
$400 Answer from “Patriots’ Actions” Dawes acted as if he were drunk.
$500 Question from “Patriots’ Actions” This is what the mob in Boston did to cause the Boston Massacre.
$500 Answer from “Patriots’ Actions” They threw snowballs and rocks, and they called the sentry names, like “lobsterbacks.”
$100 Question from “Mixed Bag” What are the two names used for the colonists who didn’t want to separated from England?
$100 Answer from “Mixed Bag” Loyalists or Tories
$200 Question from “Mixed Bag” This word means to officially take away – it’s what Britain did when they took away the Stamp tax and the Townshend Acts.
$200 Answer from “Mixed Bag” Repeal
$300 Question from “Mixed Bag” This is why one-third of the British soldiers were killed on their retreat from Concord back to Boston.
$300 Answer from “Mixed Bag” The British wore bright red uniforms, the militia men hid behind trees, fences, walls, and buildings, and it was too hard for the British to shoot back when they were trying to retreat.
$400 Question from “Mixed Bag” The firebrands and other Patriots could have been punished or even hanged for betraying Britain and disobeying its rules. What term is used for betraying your country?
$400 Answer from “Mixed Bag” Treason
$500 Question from “Mixed Bag” How many lanterns did Paul Revere’s friend hang in the steeple of the Church on the night he went on his famous ride, and what did that signal mean?