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Jeopardy!

Jeopardy!. Begin. Colonies. Great Awakening. Articles Of Confederation. French and Indian War. Acts. Colonial Governments. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $100. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $200. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $300. $400. $400. $400. $400. $400.

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Jeopardy!

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  1. Jeopardy! Begin

  2. Colonies Great Awakening Articles Of Confederation French and Indian War Acts Colonial Governments $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500

  3. Colonies Part Deux Road To Revolution Road To Revolution II English Policies Colonial Society Constitution $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $600 $600 $600 $600 $600 $600 $800 $800 $800 $800 $800 $800 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000

  4. FINAL JEOPARDY Great Britain’s Economic Colonial Policy

  5. Final Jeopardy Prime Minister Robert Walpole’s policy in dealing with the American colonies. He was primarily concerned with British affairs and believed that unrestricted trade in the colonies would be more profitable for England than would taxation of the colonies. C1-$100 Salutary Neglect

  6. Colonies - $100 King Charles gave the Puritans a right to settle and govern this colony. The colony established political freedom and a representative government C1-$100 Massachusetts Bay Colony

  7. Colonies - $200 • This colony’s success revolved around the raising and exporting tobacco C1-$200 Virginia

  8. Colonies - $300 This colony would provide a haven for Quakers and allowed religious freedom C1-$300 Pennsylvania

  9. Colonies - $400 Formed as a colony where Catholics would be free from persecution. C1-$400 Maryland

  10. Colonies - $500 Formed by Roger Williams to provide a haven for all persecuted religions, including all Christian denominations and Jews C1-$500 Rhode Island

  11. Great Awakening - $100 Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God was one of his fiery sermons about sin and the torments of hell C2-$100 Jonathon Edwards

  12. Great Awakening - $200 Ordered by Lord Baltimore after a Protestant was made governor of Maryland at the demand of the colony's large Protestant population. In 1649, this act guaranteed religious freedom to all Christians. C2-$200 Maryland Act of Toleration (Act of Religious Toleration)

  13. Great Awakening - $300 Founded the colony of Maryland and offered religious freedom to all Christian colonists. He did so because he knew that members of his own religion (Catholicism) would be a minority in the colony. C2-$300 Lord Baltimore

  14. Great Awakening - $400 This group of people focused on the following ideas during their talks • The consequences of leading a sinful life • The sovereignty and power of God • Repenting of one’s sins in order to be saved from eternal damnation • Looking to the Bible as the final source of authority C2-$400 Preachers Ministers

  15. Great Awakening - $500 The "First Great Awakening" can be seen as a direct response to which major intellectual movement C2-$500 Enlightenment

  16. Articles of Confederation - $100 The national government had limited money because of the inability to C3-$100 Tax

  17. Articles of Confederation - $200 This end to the Revolutionary War was a great achievement C3-$200 Treaty of Paris

  18. Articles of Confederation - $300 This process to amend the Articles of Confederations made needed adjustments impossible C3-$300 A Unanimous Vote

  19. Articles of Confederation - $400 Defined the process by which territories could become states C3-$400 Northwest Ordinance of 1787

  20. Articles of Confederation - $500 This event demonstrated that the national government was weak to enforce domestic insurgences C3-$500 Shay's Rebellion

  21. French and Indian War - $100 Treaty between Britain, France, and Spain, which ended the Seven Years War (and the French and Indian War). France lost Canada, the land east of the Mississippi, some Caribbean islands and India to Britain C4-$100 Treaty of Paris

  22. French and Indian War - $200 This nation was essentially kicked out of North America leaving Britain as the dominate power C3-200 France

  23. French and Indian War - $300 When he was 22 years old he and his fellow Virginians suffered a crushing defeat in the first battle of the War C3-$300 George Washington

  24. DAILY DOUBLE

  25. French and Indian War - $400 During the French and Indian War, Benjamin Franklin wrote this proposal for a unified colonial government, which would operate under the authority of the British government C3-$400 Albany Plan of Union

  26. French and Indian War - $500 As a result of the British victory in the war, they raised these in the colonies C3-$500 Taxes

  27. Acts - $100 This 1765 Act imposed a tax on documents and printed items such as wills, newspapers, and playing cards C4-$100 Stamp Act

  28. Acts - $200 Passed at the same time that the Stamp Act was repealed, this 1766 Act declared that Parliament had the power to tax the colonies both internally and externally, and had absolute power over the colonial legislatures. C4-$200 Declaratory Act

  29. Acts - $300 These harsh acts, passed in 1774 as a response to the Boston Tea Party, included the Boston Port Act, shut down Boston Harbor; and the Massachusetts Government Act, which disbanded the Boston Assembly C4-$300 Coercive Acts / Intolerable Acts / Repressive Acts

  30. Acts - $400 March 24, 1765 - Required the colonials to provide food, lodging, and supplies for the British troops in the colonies. C4-$400 Quartering Act

  31. Acts - $500 A series of British regulations which taxed goods imported by the colonies from places other than Britain, or otherwise sought to control and regulate colonial trade. Increased British-colonial trade and tax revenues. C4-$500 Navigation Acts

  32. Colonial Governments - $100 The first agreement for self-government in America. It was signed by 41 men and set up a government for the Plymouth colony. C4-$100 Mayflower Compact

  33. Colonial Governments - $200 Helped found and govern Jamestown. His leadership and strict discipline helped the Virginia colony get through the difficult first winter. C4-$200 John Smith

  34. Colonial Governments - $300 This Pilgrim document is most useful in studying the development of democratic institutions in the early colonial period C4-$300 Mayflower Compact

  35. Colonial Governments - $400 This was British legal doctrine governing the inheritance of property that required a man’s real property pass in its entirety to his oldest son C4-$400 Primogeniture

  36. Colonial Governments - $500 This was the first written constitution in North America. The origins of constitutional government in colonial America C4-$500 Fundamental Orders of Connecticut

  37. Colonies Part Deux- $200 The survival of the Jamestown colony can be most directly attributed to the development of this crop Tobacco

  38. Colonies Part Deux- $400 Conflict between large plantation owners and settlers on the western frontier describes a problem in this colony in the late 1600s Virginia

  39. Colonies Part Deux- $600 This was the first elected legislative assembly in the New World which came to represent the official legislative body of the colony of Virginia House of Burgesses

  40. Colonies Part Deux- $800 The rehabilitation of prisoners was the primary reason for the creation of this colony Georgia

  41. Colonies Part Deux- $1000 Which colony required each community of 50 or more families to provide a teacher of reading and writing Massachusetts

  42. Road to Revolution- $200 This set a boundary along the crest of the Appalachians beyond which the English colonists were forbidden to settle. Proclamation of 1763

  43. Road to Revolution- $400 Great Britain’s victory in the French and Indian War caused the British government to increase these revenue generating measures Taxes

  44. Road to Revolution- $600 This pamphlet defended the idea of American Independence on the grounds that people should not pledge allegiance to a king and a corrupt government Common Sense

  45. Road to Revolution- $800 As a result of the passage of the Intolerable Act, the colonist formed this legislative body that planned through the permanent committees of correspondence, which kept the local colonial governments in communication with one another as their common opposition to Britain grew. First Continental Congress

  46. Road to Revolution- $1000 A radical political organization for colonial independence which formed in 1765 after the passage of the Stamp Act. They incited riots and burned the customs houses where the stamped British paper was kept. After the repeal of the Stamp Act, many of the local chapters formed the Committees of Correspondence which continued to promote opposition to British policies towards the colonies. The leaders included Samuel Adams and Paul Revere. Sons of Liberty

  47. Road to Revolution II - $200 The colonials hated the British soldiers in the colonies because the worked for very low wages and took jobs away from colonists. On March 4, 1770, a group of colonials started throwing rocks and snowballs at some British soldiers; the soldiers panicked and fired their muskets, killing a few colonials. This outraged the colonies and increased anti-British sentiment. Boston Massacre

  48. Road to Revolution II - $400 British ships carrying tea sailed into Boston Harbor and refused to leave until the colonials took their tea. Boston was boycotting the tea in protest of the Tea Act and would not let the ships bring the tea ashore. Finally, on the night of December 16, 1773, colonials disguised as Indians boarded the ships and threw the tea overboard. Boston Tea Party

  49. Road to Revolution II - $600 It met in 1776 and drafted and signed the Declaration of Independence, which justified the Revolutionary War and declared that the colonies should be independent of Britain. This legislative body lead the United States through the beginnings of the Revolutionary War Second Continental Congress

  50. Road to Revolution II - $800 This was the British response to the Colonist’s rallying cry of “taxation without representation” Virtual Representation

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