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Jamestown, Virginia

Out of Many AP edition Chapter 3

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Chapter 3: Planting Colonies in North America Outline? ? ??????????Communities Struggle with Diversity in Seventeenth-Century Santa Fe o???The Pueblo Indians of New Mexico rose in revolt in August 1680, taking Santa Fe and trapping 3,000 survivors in the Palace of Governors of Santa Fe, sending two crosses?white for surrender and survival, red for defiance and death. o???In 1609, colonists founded La Villa Real de la Santa Fe de San Francisco, the ?royal town of the holy faith of St. Francis,? and began to convert the Pueblo people into Christians, Spanish subjects, and a labor force for the colonial elite.

Characteristics of British Colonies

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Complete your column as a group, then selected experts, share with the other groups Characteristics of British Colonies Characteristic NEW ENGLAND MIDDLE COLONIES SOUTHERN COLONIES (including Chesapeake) Colonies Massachusetts / Plymouth Rhode Island Connecticut New Hampshire Maine New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Reason for settlement: (religion, profit, philanthropy, etc) Common Geographic characteristics Predominant Nationality ? ethnic groups Religious Toleration: To what extent and for what reasons MD Toleration Act- Carolinas established religious toleration to attract immigrant settlers to the region Characteristic

Past and Present Bank 3

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42 Copyright ? 2011 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All rights reserved. America: Past and Present, 9e (Divine et al.) Chapter 3 Putting Down Roots: Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society 3.1 Multiple-Choice Questions 1) The character of the first English settlements in the New World A) remained remarkably similar throughout the seventeenth century. B) differed from colony to colony because of government rules. C) differed substantially from colony to colony from the very beginning of colonization. D) was determined primarily by the religious preference of each colony. E) was not significantly influenced by geography. Answer: C Diff: 2 Page Ref: 55 [Conceptual] 2) By 1700, the population of New England had reached ________ people.

APUSH Brinkley Test Bank Ch. 2

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42 Copyright ? 2011 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458. All rights reserved. America: Past and Present, 9e (Divine et al.) Chapter 3 Putting Down Roots: Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society 3.1 Multiple-Choice Questions 1) The character of the first English settlements in the New World A) remained remarkably similar throughout the seventeenth century. B) differed from colony to colony because of government rules. C) differed substantially from colony to colony from the very beginning of colonization. D) was determined primarily by the religious preference of each colony. E) was not significantly influenced by geography. Answer: C Diff: 2 Page Ref: 55 [Conceptual] 2) By 1700, the population of New England had reached ________ people.

Brinkley APUSH Ch. 2

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Chapter Two Transplantations and Borderlands Multiple Choice Questions 1. Seventeenth-century English colonial settlements A. were essentially business enterprises. B. were tightly controlled by the English government. C. were effectively isolated from contact with other nations. were well-planned and generally quite successful from the start. maintained the political and social institutions of England. Ans: A Page: 27 2. The site chosen for the Jamestown settlement included all of the following EXCEPT A. it was low and swampy and subject to outbreaks of malaria. B. it was inland so as to offer security from natives. C. it bordered the territories of powerful Indian tribes. it was surrounded by thick woods. it was inaccessible by ship. Ans: E

APUSH Review

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Sheet1 AP United States History - Review Charts Decades Political Economic Social Technological Roots & Links 1600 New France (Canada) Jamestown John Smith Powhatan Pocahontas Charter Samuel de Champlain Joint Stock Company Virginia Company Coureaurs de bois Primogeniture Roanoke Colony Elizabeth I Enclosure Movement 1610 Lord De La Warr First Anglo-Powhatan War House of Burgesses John Rolfe Tobacco Headright System 1620 William Bradford Squanto Mayflower Compact Puritans Separatists Calvinism Church of England 1630 Massachusetts Bay Colony Pequot War John Winthrop Lord Baltimore Roger Williams Reverend Thomas Hooker Fundamental Orders Indentured Servants Plantation Patroonship Anne Hutchinson Great Migration Antinomianism Congregational Church

Colonial Period Timeline

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US Government Packet Project for Unit 2 Michelle Huddleston Colonial Period Timeline 1215 King John of England signed the Magna Carta which limited the kings power and protected people from unjust government 1300-1500 400 years pass 1607 Virginia became the first of the 13 American colonies. 1611 Laws of Divine, Morall, and Martial Law were established by Governor Sir Thomas Dale in Jamestown, Virignia. 1620 Mayflower Compact was the first plan for American self-government and was signed by the 41 pilgrim men 1625 Petition of Right limited the king from taxing people without the approval of the Parliament 1636 Great Fundamentals was the first system of laws in the English colonies 1688

AP US History study guide

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?? ?? THE GIANT AHAP REVIEW OUTLINE! Horace Greeley High School Europeans Colonize North America (1600 ? 1640) *English Interest in Colonization* - By the sixteenth century, many countries, including Spain, France and the Netherlands, had established colonies in the New World. Until the foundation of Jamestown, however, the English didn?t have any successful permanent colonies in North America. - Prior to Jamestown, Sir Walter Raleigh of the Sea Dogs formed a joint stock company and received a charter to found a colony on Roanoke Island in 1584. It failed, and he tried again in 1585 and 1587. Both were failures, and the fate of the 1587 colony remains a mystery (all colonists disappeared).

Building the new nation

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Building the new nation The pioneers were first people that came to American, They came for freedom and to get rich. The continent was rich in the most valuable resource ? land. As many as 60 million buffalo thundered over its vast. The came looking for gold and silver expecting an Eldorado John Rolfe an English farmer and entrepreneur came to Jamestown. Rolfe brought seeds of a particular strain of sweet tobacco, previously grown only by the Spanish The plants grew well in the rich soil of Virginia, springing up in the gardens and the marketplace of Jamestown. Tobacco was sought in England where it was shipped to. The colony was soon the leading tobacco supplier to all of Europe. John Ralph married Pocahontas. The marriage interracial marriage in American history

APUSH test Key terms

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Key Terms 17th and Early 18th Century Roanoke Virginia Company Jamestown ?Starving Time? House of Burgesses Mayflower Compact Powhatan Confederacy Royal Colony Charter Colony Joint-Stock Company Proprietary Colony Puritans Massachusetts Bay Colony Great Migration Plymouth Bay Colony Maryland Connecticut Rhode Island Pequot War Anne Hutchinson Roger Williams Maryland Toleration Act Fundamental Orders of Connecticut New Amsterdam, New York New Jersey Carolina King Philip?s War Bacon? Rebellion Pennsylvania Dominion of New England Glorious Revolution in England Delaware Georgia Harvard College Halfway Covenant Salem witchcraft trials Scotch Irish Great Awakening College of William and Mary

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