APUSH Unit 2 Review

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46 Terms

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Jamestown (1607)

First permanent English settlement in North America, founded in Virginia.

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John Smith

Leader who helped Jamestown survive with strict discipline.

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Headright System

Land grant program that attracted settlers by offering land for paying passage to Virginia.

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Indentured Servitude

Labor system where people worked for several years in exchange for passage to the New World.

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House of Burgesses (1619)

First representative assembly in the colonies (Virginia).

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Mayflower Compact (1620)

Agreement for self

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Puritans / Massachusetts Bay Colony

Religious group seeking to purify the Church of England; settled Massachusetts Bay.

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John Winthrop / “City upon a Hill”

Puritan leader who envisioned Massachusetts as a model Christian society.

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Roger Williams

Founded Rhode Island after being banished; promoted religious freedom and separation of church and state.

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Anne Hutchinson

Challenged Puritan leaders; banished for antinomian views.

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Salem Witch Trials (1692)

Trials in Massachusetts that reflected religious hysteria and social tensions.

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William Penn / Pennsylvania

Founded as a Quaker colony with religious toleration, pacifism, and fair treatment of Natives.

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Maryland Act of Toleration (1649)

Law granting religious freedom to all Christians in Maryland.

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Bacon’s Rebellion (1676)

Rebellion in Virginia against Governor Berkeley; exposed tensions between frontier settlers and elites.

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King Philip’s War (1675–1678)

Native-led war against New England colonists, devastating Native power in the region.

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Pequot War (1637)

Conflict between New England settlers and the Pequot tribe; resulted in destruction of the Pequot.

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Mercantilism

Economic policy where colonies supplied raw materials and markets for the mother country.

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Navigation Acts

English trade laws designed to enforce mercantilism.

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Triangular Trade

Trade system connecting Europe, Africa, and the Americas.

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Middle Passage

Forced transatlantic journey of enslaved Africans.

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Salutary Neglect

British policy of weak enforcement of laws; allowed colonies more autonomy.

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First Great Awakening (1730s–1740s)

Religious revival movement emphasizing emotion and personal salvation.

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Jonathan Edwards

Preacher of the Great Awakening; known for fiery sermons like “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.”

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George Whitefield

Itinerant preacher of the Great Awakening who attracted large crowds.

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Enlightenment

Intellectual movement stressing reason, science, and natural rights.

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John Locke

Enlightenment thinker who argued for natural rights: life, liberty, and property.

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Zenger Trial (1735)

Legal case that established precedent for freedom of the press.

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Stono Rebellion (1739)

Slave uprising in South Carolina; led to stricter slave codes.

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New England Confederation (1643)

Early colonial alliance for defense and cooperation among New England colonies.

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Dominion of New England (1686–1689)

Attempt by King James II to centralize colonial control under one governor; unpopular and overturned.

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Glorious Revolution (1688)

Overthrow of King James II; led to greater colonial self

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Half

Way Covenant (1662)

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Salem Covenant Community / Town Meetings

Puritan system of local governance and religiously

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Chesapeake Colonies

Maryland and Virginia; economies based on tobacco and plantation agriculture.

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New England Colonies

Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire; economy based on trade, fishing, small farms.

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Middle Colonies

New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware; diverse population and economy (“breadbasket” colonies).

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Southern Colonies

Carolinas and Georgia; plantation economy with rice, indigo, and later cotton.

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Plantation System

Large

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Slave Codes

Laws that defined the status of enslaved people and restricted their rights.

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Chattel Slavery

System in which enslaved people were treated as property, passed down through generations.

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Colonial Assemblies

Elected bodies in the colonies that made local laws; example of self

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Proprietary Colonies

Colonies owned by individuals granted land by the king (e.g., Pennsylvania, Maryland).

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Royal Colonies

Colonies under direct control of the English crown.

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Charter Colonies

Colonies governed by joint

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Atlantic World

Refers to the interactions between Europe, Africa, and the Americas through trade, migration, and ideas.

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Anglicization

The process of colonies adopting English cultural, political, and economic practices.