apush review

0.0(0)
learnLearn
examPractice Test
spaced repetitionSpaced Repetition
heart puzzleMatch
flashcardsFlashcards
Card Sorting

1/373

encourage image

There's no tags or description

Looks like no tags are added yet.

Study Analytics
Name
Mastery
Learn
Test
Matching
Spaced

No study sessions yet.

374 Terms

1
New cards
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Established in 1629 by the Puritans. Governor John Winthrop called it a "city upon a hill." Established for religious purposes.
2
New cards
Puritans
Religious dissidents who traveled to the New World to develop a purer church than the Church of England.
3
New cards
Indentured Servents
Exchanged work for passage to the New World.
4
New cards
London Company
Permitted by King James I to establish Jamestown for economic reasons.
5
New cards
Powhatan Confederacy
Native American alliance who had early conflict with the Jamestown settlers. Eventually, they developed a trade alliance and provided the colonists with corn. Pocahontas married John Rolfe to ensure future peace.
6
New cards
House of Burgesses
Created in 1619 by the Virginia colony. First representative government in any British colony.
7
New cards
William Bradford
Leader of the Seperatist pilgrims who landed on Plymouth Rock.
8
New cards
Mayflower Compact
1620. Provided the pilgrims with a representative government once they reached land.
9
New cards
Roger Williams
Preached separation of church and state, and argued that Mass. Bay Colony was too similar to the Church of England. He was exiled for spreading dissent and went to Rhode Island.
10
New cards
Thomas Hooker/John Davenport
Founded the colony of Connecticut. Hooker had been forced out of Mass. Bay Colony.
11
New cards
Anne Hutchinson
Exiled from Mass. Bay Colony for claiming personal revelations with God. Established Portsmouth.
12
New cards
George Calvert
Settled Maryland in 1632 as a refuge for English Catholics.
13
New cards
Mercantilism
Economic theory: state must be as self-sufficient as possible, export more than input, government regulation of commerce, colonies, tariffs, monopolies.
14
New cards
Navigation Acts
Passed in 1660. Forced colonies to trade solely with Great Britain, increased tensions.
15
New cards
Triangular Trade Route
Slaves taken from Africa and brought to the colonies, raw materials from colonies went to Britain, finished products sold back to the colonies.
16
New cards
Middle Passage
African slave route in which many died from horrible conditions.
17
New cards
Salem Witch Trials
Hysteria in Salem, Mass. over alleged witches. Many executed on false claims.
18
New cards
Salutary Neglect
British policy of relaxing enforcement of trade regulations in the colonies.
19
New cards
Dominion of New England
Revoked the charters of many colonies and placed control under Edmund Andros, the governor.
20
New cards
Bacon's Rebellion
Nathaniel Bacon and a group of landowners opposed Sir Berkeley's authority and burned Jamestown to the ground. Failed, but limited royal governor's power and increased the slave trade.
21
New cards
Stono Rebellion
Occurred in Charleston, South Carolina. Slaves took up arms and killed plantation owners, but were quickly subdued. Results: slaves treated even more harshly.
22
New cards
Colonial Assemblies
Rose in the early 1700s. Increased colonial independence, scaring the British.
23
New cards
Molasses Act
Increased British control on colonial goods.
24
New cards
First Great Awakening
Religious revival in the colonies in 1720-1740. Ministers preached horrible images of sinners burning in hell and gained popularity off of fear. Famous among them were Jonathon Edwards and George Whitefield.
25
New cards
French and Indian War
Conflict between French with Indian allies and the British with colonial support. Decreased French influence in colonies.
26
New cards
Stamp Act
Enacted a tax on all paper products exported from the colonies. Created strong tension and was repealed.
27
New cards
Townshend Acts
British act forced colonies to pay taxes on most goods from England. Fiercely resisted and repealed in 1770.
28
New cards
Boston Massacre
British soldiers fought into an agitated colonial crowd, killing five people. Incited enormous tensions.
29
New cards
Sons of Liberty
Radical group that resisted British policy in Boston in 1760-1770. Organized the Boston Tea Party.
30
New cards
Committees of Correspondence
Started in Mass. and spread. Circulated grievances against the British and united the colonies.
31
New cards
First Continental Congress
Met in Philadelphia in 1774. Colonists vowed to resist British efforts to tax them further without proper representation.
32
New cards
Albany Congress
Met in 1754 to coordinate policies concerning future western expansion and dealings with Native Americans.
33
New cards
Edward Braddock
British general sent to defeat the French at Fort Duquesne. He was defeated and killed, which then signaled the start of the French and Indian War.
34
New cards
William Pitt
British general put in charge of the war. He promised reimbursement for colonial support.
35
New cards
George Grenville
British prime minister who taxed the colonies to relieve massive British debt.
36
New cards
Currency Act of 1764
Made it illegal to print paper money in the colonies.
37
New cards
Sugar Act
Increased penalty for smuggling goods and put a tax on all molasses brought into the colonies.
38
New cards
Quartering Act
Forced colonists to provide housing and food to British troops stationed in the colonies.
39
New cards
Samuel Adams
Led the Sons of Liberty. Proclaimed taxation without representation was tyranny.
40
New cards
Declaratory Act
Gave Parliament the unquestionable right to tax and pass legislation in the colonies.
41
New cards
John Dickinson
Wrote "Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania." Parliament had the right to regulate colonial trade, but could not use that power to raise revenue.
42
New cards
Lord North
Prime minister who came to power in 1770, repealed all Townshend Acts except the tax on tea to keep the colonists under British control.
43
New cards
Tea Act
Legalized the tax on tea and made it cheaper to purchase in the colonies.
44
New cards
Boston Tea Party
65 men dressed as Indians snuck onto a British ship and dumped 350 chests of tea into the harbor.
45
New cards
Intolerable Acts
Took effect in 1774 to punish the colonists for the Tea Party. Closed the port of Boston, gave the Assembly to royal control, and canceled all town meetings.
46
New cards
Quebec Act
Increased religious freedom of French Catholics, angering the colonists.
47
New cards
Declaration of Rights and Grievances
Written by John Adams. Stated that the colonists would not reject moves to regulate their commerce, but would resist moves to tax them without consent.
48
New cards
Suffolk Resolves
Colonies would continue to boycott British goods and supported a colonial government until the Intolerable Acts were rescinded. Began to train local militias.
49
New cards
Common Sense
Written by Thomas Paine. Incited resentment to the British and was a call to arms towards the colonists.
50
New cards
Second Continental Congress
Authorized creation of a colonial army. Delegates still hoped to find an alternate way for peace with British.
51
New cards
Battle of Yorktown
Turning point in the Revolutionary War. British were defeated in Virginia.
52
New cards
Treaty of Paris
Treaty that ended the Rev. War. Britain recognized American independence and gave them territories from the App. Mtns. to the Miss. River.
53
New cards
Articles of Confederation
Established the first government of the United States. Federal government was much weaker than the state, and was largely unsuccessful.
54
New cards
Northwest Ordinances
Authorized sale of lands in NW territory to raise money for the federal govt. Laid out plans for these territories to eventually become states.
55
New cards
Lexington and Concord
First two battles of the Rev. War. Colonists resisted and British pressed on to destroy colonial supplies.
56
New cards
Ethan Allen
Captured Fort Ticonderoga from the British with his Green Mtn. Boys.
57
New cards
George Washington
Commander of the Continental Army because of his experience. First president of the US who sought to establish respect for the presidency.
58
New cards
Olive Branch Petition
Final plea for peace sent to George III, who refused to even receive the document.
59
New cards
Declaration of Independence
Signed on June 7, 1776 officially stating colonial independence from Britain.
60
New cards
Bunker Hill
Bloody defeat for the colonists, but also incurred many losses for the British.
61
New cards
Battle of Trenton
Washington defeated Hessian troops on Christmas night, boosting colonial morale.
62
New cards
Saratoga
British were defeated during their plan to take Albany, one of the turning points of the war.
63
New cards
Valley Forge
Brief cease fire during winter, troops were plagued by malnutrition and desertion
64
New cards
Yorktown
British general Cornwallis was defeated here by French and colonial forces. Last battle of the Rev. War.
65
New cards
Shay's Rebellion
Farmer rebellion against the government because of inflation and debt. They were put down, but displayed the need for a stronger govt.
66
New cards
Virginia Plan
Proposed a bicameral legislature with reps determined by a state's population.
67
New cards
New Jersey Plan
Proposed a unicameral legislature with each state having one vote.
68
New cards
Great Compromise
CT plan, proposed a bicameral legislature with one house determined by population and one house having equal representation.
69
New cards
Electoral College
Procedure for electing the president and VP by number of electors, not popular vote.
70
New cards
Three Fifths Compromise
Slaves would count as 3/5 of person to determine a state's representation in the House.
71
New cards
Federalists
Political party that favored a larger national govt supported by commercial interests. Opposed by Jeffersonians.
72
New cards
Alien and Sedition Acts
Proposed by Pres. John Adams which gave the pres. the power to expel "dangerous" aliens and outlaw "scandalous" publications against the govt.
73
New cards
Anti-Federalists
Favored a smaller govt because of fear of another tyranny. They pushed for a Bill of Rights.
74
New cards
Bill of Rights
First 10 amendments of the US. Free speech, freedom of religion, right to bear arms, no quartering of troops, warrants needed to search, trial by jury, due process of the law, no cruel and unusual punishment, unlisted rights were protected, powers not given to federal govt belonged to the states.
75
New cards
Alexander Hamilton
Most attractive man in history. Wanted the US to be a manufacturing society and believed in mercantilism. Wanted a strong govt and a broad interpretation of the constitution. Wrote the Report on the Public Credit saying the US had to redeem notes issued by the Articles of Confed. Proposed a national bank to provide loans to businesses.
76
New cards
Thomas Jefferson
Wanted an agricultural society, free trade, weak govt, and strict interpretation of the govt.
77
New cards
Declaration of Neutrality
Allowed American merchants to trade with both sides of the conflict between Europe and France.
78
New cards
Whiskey Rebellion
Pennsylvania farmers rebelled against a tax Hamilton placed on whiskey.
79
New cards
Jay's Treaty
Britain had the right to remove French supplies from American ships, but had to leave certain forts in the NW territory.
80
New cards
XYZ Affair
American delegates went to France to negotiate. They were met by officials who demanded a bribe before they could see Talleyrand which the delegates refused. This damaged French relations.
81
New cards
Kentucky and Virginia Resolves
States had the right to not enforce laws that were unconstitutional.
82
New cards
Marbury v Madison
Established judicial review, Supreme Court had the right to review all federal laws and decisions and decide whether or not they were unconstitutional.
83
New cards
Louisiana Purchase
Purchased an enormous amount of land from Napoleon of France that doubled the size of the United States.
84
New cards
Lewis and Clark
Discovered the western part of the country and determined economic possibilities there.
85
New cards
War of 1812
War between Britain and America over British seizure of US ships, British alliances to Indians, and other tensions. Nothing was gained, but the treaty simply restored diplomatic relations.
86
New cards
American System
Proposed by Henry Clay. Sought to make America economically independent by increasing industrial production and creating a Second National Bank.
87
New cards
Missouri Compromise
Missouri would enter as a slave state and Maine would enter as a free state. Laid groundwork for balance between free and slave states.
88
New cards
Twelfth Amendment
Electoral College votes for the President and the VP separately.
89
New cards
Judiciary Act
Created a large number of new federal courts. Repealed immediately after Jefferson took office.
90
New cards
Embargo of 1807
American ships could not enter the seas until England and France stopped harassing American ships.
91
New cards
Non-Intercourse Act
Opened trade with all countries except England and France because of interference.
92
New cards
War Hawks
Young Republicans who supported war with Britain in the hopes of gaining new territories and more economic opportunities.
93
New cards
Tecumsah
Indian leader allied with the British who was killed in an early battle of the War of 1812.
94
New cards
Treaty of Ghent
Ended the War of 1812. Did not address problems of impressment or trading rights, but simply restored diplomatic relations between the US and GB.
95
New cards
Hartford Convention
Meeting of Federalists who discussed their suspicion of politicians from the West, their dislike of war, and possibilities of nullification and secession. Soon after, the Federalists lost influence and began to disappear.
96
New cards
Era of Good Feelings
Years from 1816-1823 after the Federalists disappeared when the US experienced little political tension. James Monroe was president during this time.
97
New cards
American System
Proposed by Henry Clay, supported by Monroe. Goal was to increase US economic independence by manufacturing goods within the country rather than relying on exports. Also supported creation of a Second National Bank.
98
New cards
Tariff of 1816
Raised tariff rates to 22% to provide protection for American business interests and revenue for improving the transportation system.
99
New cards
Monroe Doctrine
Stated that European powers were not to colonize any more countries in the Western Hemisphere.
100
New cards
Removal Act of 1830
Authorized the removal of all Native American tribes east of the Mississippi into the West. Started the Trail of Tears, which killed thousands.