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UNIT I

UNIT I. IDENTIFICATIONS. Chapter 2 pp. 44 - 54. Indians becoming Catholic Impact of French Trading New France The Dutch in the New World English settlements in the New World. Chapter 2 pp. 55 - 64. Jamestown Settlement Reorganization of Jamestown Tobacco

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UNIT I

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  1. UNIT I IDENTIFICATIONS

  2. Chapter 2 pp. 44 - 54 • Indians becoming Catholic • Impact of French Trading • New France • The Dutch in the New World • English settlements in the New World

  3. Chapter 2 pp. 55 - 64 • Jamestown Settlement • Reorganization of Jamestown • Tobacco • Religion in the Chesapeake Region • Free Labor in the Chesapeake

  4. Chapter 2pp. 64 - 72 • Religious Life in the New England Colonies • New England Colonial Governments • Puritan Dissention • The English Civil Wars

  5. Chapter 2 pp. 72 - 80 • The Restoration Era • Carolina Colonies • New York Settlement • Pennsylvania Quakers • Settling New Jersey

  6. Chapter 3pp. 84 - 92 • Gender, Race and Economic Differences in the English Colonies • Forms of Governments • English Mercantilism Goals • The Navigation Acts

  7. Chapter 3 pp. 93 - 101 • Struggles with Indians • King Philip’s War • Virginia’s Frontier • English New World Economic and Governmental Reforms

  8. Chapter 3 pp. 101 - 109 • The Glorious Revolution in America • The Salem Witch Trials • Parliamentary Acts in the Colonies • The Mixed and Balanced English Constitution

  9. Chapter 3 pp. 109 - 116 • The Pueblo Revolt • New France • British Expansionism • Wars in the New World (1689 – 1716)

  10. Chapter 4 pp. 120 – 128 • Anglicization of the English Colonies • Rise of Old South • Mid-Atlantic Colonies • The Weak Economy of New England

  11. Chapter 4pp. 128 - 137 • Zenger Case • The Success of the Enlightenment in America • The Failures of the Enlightenment in America • The Great Awakening Revivals • Higher Education

  12. Chapter 4 pp. 137 - 147 • Rise of Democratic Ideals • Salve Revolts • King George’s War • The Albany Congress

  13. Chapter 4 pp. 147 - 157 • Early French and Indian War • Late French and Indian War • Results of the French and Indian War • Peace of Paris (1763)

  14. Chapter 5 pp. 160 - 170 • George Grenville’s Policies • The Sugar Act • The Currency Act • The Stamp Act Congress • Charles Townshend Policies

  15. Chapter 5 pp. 170 - 180 • Seeds of Colonial Resistance • The Boston Massacre • Creation of the Committee of Correspondences • Dissention in Rural America • The Defense of Slavery

  16. Chapter 5 pp. 180 - 190 • The Tea Crisis • The Coercive Acts • Creation of the First Continental Congress • Creation of the Second Continental Congress • Common Sense

  17. Chapter 6 pp. 194 - 204 • Battle of Saratoga • Virginia Constitution • Pennsylvania Constitution • Massachusetts Constitution • Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union

  18. Chapter 6 pp.  204 - 216 • Effects of the Loyalists • Indian Involvement in the Revolution • New Congressional Actions • Battle of Yorktown

  19. Chapter 6 pp.  216 - 228 • Slavery Immediately After the Revolution • Problems of Westward Expansion • The Northwest Ordinance • Discontent with the A.O.C • Results of the Philadelphia Convention

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