front 1 Columbus and other early explorers searched for a direct all-water route to Asia because they p. 19 | back 1 hoped to gain easier access to highly valued Asian goods. |
front 2 When Columbus landed in America, the chief reason that he thought he landed in "the Indies" was p.21 | back 2 his firm belief that he had sailed far enough westward to reach them. |
front 3 By the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494), Spain had authority to exploit all of p. 22 | back 3 South America except Columbia |
front 4 The king who brought the Protestant Reformation to England by declaring himself head of the English Church in order to divorce his first wife was p.30 | back 4 Henry VIII |
front 5 The earliest British colonies were initially financed by p.32 | back 5 Joint-stock companies |
front 6 The Mayflower Compact was an early example of the idea that p. 35 | back 6 a society should be based on a set of rules chosen by its members. |
front 7 The eventual success of the Virginia settlement depended largely upon the p.33 | back 7 cultivation of tobacco. |
front 8 Rhode Island, distinguished for its religious freedom and rigid separation of church and states, was founded by p.38 | back 8 Roger Williams |
front 9 ____________________traders were most likely to see Indians as essential trading partners. p.41 | back 9 French |
front 10 The proprietor of the colony founded as a haven for Quakers was p.42-43 | back 10 William Penn |
front 11 The "headright" was commonly used in the southern colonies and some of the middle colonies to p. 58 | back 11 award tracts of land to new arrivals in the colonies. |
front 12 In some colonies, landowners paid an annual tax called a ____________, as a way for European nations to derive income form their colonies. p.58 | back 12 quitrent |
front 13 One inducement for the shift toward slave labor in the late 1600s was that p.60 | back 13 fewer indentured servants were arriving at the same time that it became easier to import slaves. |
front 14 _______________ servants agreed to work for a stated period in return for their transportation to America. p.58 | back 14 Indentured |
front 15 Colonial regulations governing the behavior of blacks p. 63 | back 15 gave blacks no civil rights and had severe punishments. |
front 16 The main supporters of Virginia's royal governor, Sir William Berkeley, during Bacon's Rebellion were the p.61-62 | back 16 well-established, powerful planters. |
front 17 The Anglican Church was "established" in certain colonies, which meant that p.64 | back 17 its ministers were supported by public funds. |
front 18 Which of the following statements about Charleston in the early 1700s is true. p.63 | back 18 It was unrivaled in its shipbuilding production |
front 19 In the 1680s, James II tried to unify royal control of the northern colonies by creating the p. 82 | back 19 Dominion of New England |
front 20 James Oglethorpe received a charter to establish ____________, the final English colony, as a refuge for honest people imprisoned for debt. p. 65 | back 20 Georgia |
front 21 In 1771, frontier Regulators from ____________________, protesting their lack of representation in their colonial assembly , were defeated in a pitched battle with government troops. p. 65 | back 21 North Carolina |
front 22 The "enumeration" principle in the Navigation Act of 1660 required that p.84 | back 22 certain commodities like sugar, tobacco, and indigo could not be shipped outside the British Empire. |
front 23 A fundamental goal of mercantilism was to p.83 | back 23 acquire raw materials from the colonies and have the colonies import manufactured goods from the mother country. |
front 24 The Great Awakening tended to emphasize p.86-87 | back 24 an emotional and revivalistic style of religion. |
front 25 A key contribution to American political thinking was the Enlightenment ideas of John Locke relating to p. 88 | back 25 personal property. |
front 26 All of the first three colonial wars (King William's, Queen Anne's, and King George's) p.90 | back 26 arose over essentially European issues and involved relatively little colonial participation. |
front 27 In 1758 ___________ took over the British leadership of the French and Indian War, pouring soldiers and money into North America. p.93 | back 27 William Pitt |
front 28 Under the Treaty of Paris (1763) ending the French and Indian War. p.94 | back 28 France lost all her possessions on the mainland of North America. |
front 29 In governing their American empire after 1763, the new problems which faced the British was | back 29 greatly increased expenses of administering a far larger and more complex empire. |
front 30 Americans were most alarmed by the Sugar Act of 1764 because it p.100 | back 30 asserted Parliament's right to tax Americans for revenue purposes. |
front 31 The purpose of the British army's march on Concord, Massachusetts, in April 1775 was to p.114 | back 31 seize the war supplies stored there. |
front 32 The author of the tract, Common Sense, which boldly called for complete independence and attacked not only King George III, but also the idea of monarchy itself, was p.117 | back 32 Thomas Paine. |
front 33 ) Battles in and around ________ in August and September of 1776 were ignominious defeats for Washington's forces and seemed to presage an easy British triumph in the war. p.120-121 | back 33 New York City |
front 34 In May 1775 shortly after it convened, the Second Continental Congress p.115 | back 34 formed the Continental Army under the leadership of George Washington. |
front 35 ) In which of the following was there a mutual agreement that the signatories would aid each other in the war or the event of war with Great Britain, while also recognizing the United States as a sovereign and independent state? p.123 | back 35 Treaty of Alliance between France and the United States |
front 36 The British defeat at Yorktown resulted largely from the p.127 | back 36 French fleet winning control of Chesapeake Bay and preventing Cornwallis from escaping from the peninsula by sea. |
front 37 The union of American states under the Articles of Confederation was a p.130 | back 37 league of friendship, in which the states were sovereign and the national government had only weak delegated powers. |
front 38 The most significant change in the new state governments was the p.130 | back 38 removal of outside control, making them more responsive to public opinion. |
front 39 What happened to social reform when many states wrote constitutions during the Revolution? p.131 | back 39 Many states seized the occasion to introduce important political and social reforms. |
front 40 ) Under the Articles of Confederation there was a failed attempt to raise revenue and pressure the British by a(n) p.144 | back 40 tariff |
front 41 ) “A little rebellion” is “medicine necessary for the sound health of government.” This statement was made by p.145 | back 41 Thomas Jefferson on Shays's Rebellion. |
front 42 The text notes that during and after the Revolution, slavery p.132 | back 42 died where it was not economically important. |
front 43 The Great Compromise settled the issue of representation in Congress by allowing p.148 | back 43 each state two Senators and a number of Representatives that depended on its population. |
front 44 It was difficult to amend the Articles of Confederation because amendments had to be approved by p.145 | back 44 unanimous consent of the states. |
front 45 The procedure specified for ratifying the Constitution p.149 | back 45 depended upon approval of the Constitution by special conventions in the various states. |
front 46 The principle of the Three-Fifths Compromise was that p.148 | back 46 three-fifths of the slaves would be counted in determining each state's representation and share of direct federal taxes. |
front 47 Examining the debate over ratifying the Constitution, the text concludes that the p.152 | back 47 ) Federalists used their superior political organization and persuasive abilities to great advantage. |
front 48 Which of the following committed the United States to be “friendly and impartial” in the wars that raged in Europe in the late 1800s? p.158 | back 48 Washington's Proclamation of Neutrality, 1793 |
front 49 Much Anti-Federalist opposition to the Constitution disappeared when p.152 | back 49 the Federalists promised amendments to guarantee the civil liberties of the people. |
front 50 In his "Farewell Address," George Washington indicated his p.163 | back 50 belief that political parties were harmful and divisive. |
front 51 One of the main differences between Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton was that Hamilton p.173 | back 51 thought commercialization and centralization was best for the country. |
front 52 In the election of 1800,p.172 | back 52 Jefferson was finally chosen president by the House of Representatives. |
front 53 In Marbury v. Madison, Chief Justice John Marshall cleverly established the power of the Supreme Court to p.176 | back 53 invalidate federal laws held to be in conflict with the Constitution. |
front 54 For Jefferson, one of the most important reasons for the Louisiana Purchase was that it p.177-178 | back 54 secured access to the mouth of the Mississippi River. |
front 55 One of the purposes of the Lewis and Clark expedition was to p.182 | back 55 establish official relations with Native American tribes. |
front 56 “The Pretension advanced by Mr. Madison that the American Flag should protect every Individual sailing under it is too extravagant to require any serious Refutation.” This statement by a British foreign secretary is about the American response to p.188 | back 56 impressment. |
front 57 ) Under ________, exports were totally prohibited and only foreign vessels were allowed to import goods to America. | back 57 the Embargo Act |
front 58 ) The "Burr Conspiracy" was an unsuccessful attempt p.183-186 | back 58 to separate a part of the West from the United States. |
front 59 ) Congress repealed ________ in 1809 because it harmed American commerce rather than that of the British and French. p.190 | back 59 the Embargo Act |
front 60 One of the major reasons for American entry in the War of 1812 was the p.196 | back 60 American belief that the British were inspiring Native American resistance to American expansion |
front 61 ) According to the _____________, trade with Great Britain and France was forbidden and could only resume by presidential proclamation when either power ceased violating the rights of Americans. p.190 | back 61 Non-Intercourse Act |
front 62 Tecumseh's brother, Tenskwatawa (or "The Prophet") p.196-197 | back 62 declared Native Americans should reject white ways, clothes, and liquor. |
front 63 The War Hawks called for war against Great Britain because they p. 198 | back 63 wanted to defend the national honor and save the republic from British domination. |
front 64 The British changed their strategy against the United States in 1814 because p. 202 | back 64 the war in Europe, which had diverted their attention earlier, was now over. |
front 65 The Treaty of Ghent (1814) ending the War of 1812 p.203 | back 65 simply reestablished the status quo ante bellum |
front 66 The major U.S. city sacked and burned by the British in 1814 was p.202 | back 66 Washington |
front 67 The Transcontinental Treaty of 1819 p. 206 | back 67 transferred Florida to the United States for $5 million and settled the southern boundary of the Louisiana territory to the Pacific. |
front 68 The battle of New Orleans in 1815 resulted in the p.204-205 | back 68 emergence of Andrew Jackson as a military hero. |
front 69 The first American factory was developed by p.225 | back 69 Samuel Slater to spin cotton thread. |
front 70 Most workers in the earliest textile factories were p.228 | back 70 women and children |
front 71 Under the Waltham System, p.228-229 | back 71 young farm women worked and lived under strictly supervised conditions |
front 72 In the early nineteenth century, business became corporations by obtaining a charter p. 231 | back 72 through a special act of a state legislature |
front 73 As a result of the cotton gin p.233 | back 73 cotton production soared and the Southern economy boomed |
front 74 By far the most important indirect effect of industrialization occurred when the p. 232 | back 74 South began to produce cotton to supply the new textile mills of New England and Great Britain. |
front 75 the Republic of Liberia in western Africa p.234 | back 75 was founded by the American Colonization Society was was the eventual home to 12,000 American blacks. |