Relacionar Columnas APUSH Study Matching GameVersión en línea Test your knowledge of APUSH concepts with this fun matching pairs game! por Hannah Schmidt 1 Enlightenment 2 Tea Act 3 George 3rd 4 Patrick Henry 5 Salutary Neglect 6 Lord Frederick North 7 Parliament 8 Whigs 9 Townshend Act 10 Quebec Act 11 Stamp act 12 Proclamation of 1763 13 Sugar Act 14 Declaratory Act 15 Coercive Act 16 Writs of Assistance 17 Committees of Correspondence 18 Deism 19 Samuel Adams 20 Pontiac's Rebellion 21 Jean-Jacques Rousseau 22 Massachusetts Circular Letter 23 James Otis 24 Sons and daughters of liberty 25 John Locke 26 Stamp Act 27 John Dickenson “Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer” 28 Intolerable Acts 29 Rationalism 30 Quartering Act The stamp act required stamps be placed on official documents this was the first direct tax for raising revenue from the british onto the colonies Contributed to loss from great britain Established catholicism as official religion of Quebec, extended their boundary to ohio river, set up a government with no representative assembly Created/laid out (mostly) the ideas and groundwork of the enlightenment Part of the enlightenment movement. He focused more on individuality rather than the natural equality of human beings Beliefs, thoughts, decisions should be based off of reason and knowledge rather than on religious belief or emotional beliefs Major leader of protest orchestrated against the british parliament and government (apart of sons of liberty) Series of laws passed by british parliament in the idea of punishing the colony of massachusetts bay for the boston tea party Asserted that parliament had no right to tax Americans, as they were not represented by that legislative body Turning a blind eye to colonies (abandoned) The thoughts of that people could make their own decisions on their government, religion, politics etc An armed conflict between the British Empire and Native peoples following the 7 years war were repealed b/c of the damaged trade and the little revenue they yielded still allowed for a small tax on tea A religious attitude The loyalists or supporters of the government from Great Britain. Tended to be the wealthy A series of 4 laws passed by the British parliament to punish the colonists of Massachusetts Bay for the Boston Tea Party The king of the monarchy of Great Britain advocated for colonial approval of taxation if no representation in congress British form of government The british produced a boundary marked in the appalachian mountains therefore not allowing the colonists to settle in those areas (caused tension) Was a leader in the movement of American Independence (Big advocate), helped make the first continental congress colonists continued to boycott British tea but British passed the Tea Act in 1773, which made the tea cheaper than the Dutch. Americans still refused Greenville was replaced and the stamp act was repealed. reminded colonists that parliament had the right to tax colonists in “all cases what so ever” Advocates in the american independence movement and revolution tended to take a more violence approach to prove their point during this time Protests for the lack of colonial representation in parliament (TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION) Duties of foreign sugar and luxuries (stricter enforcement of the navigation acts and stop smuggling) Promoted manufacturing in the 13 colonies and advised colonists not to buy goods imported from Britain Required that stamps be placed on official documents (First Direct Tax) General search warrant issued by superior provincial courts to assist the British government in enforcing trade and navigation laws Required the colonists to provide food and living quarters for British Soldiers 1 Virginia and New Jersey plan 2 Albany Plan of Union 3 The revolution of 1800 4 Kentucky and Virginia Resolution 5 Joseph Galloway 6 Constitutional Convention 7 Economic sanctions 8 Pinckney Treaty 9 Declaration of the causes and necessities for taking up arms 10 Checks and Balances 11 The Federalist Paper 12 Olive Branch Petition 13 Land Ordinance of 1785 14 Alien and Sedition Acts 15 Valley Forge 16 Annapolis Convention 17 First Continental Congress 18 Declaration of rights and grievances 19 Continentals 20 Jay Treaty 21 Citizen Genet Affair 22 Northwest Ordinance of 1787 23 Suffolk Resolves 24 Second Continental Congress 25 Peace of Paris 26 John Jay 27 Treaty of Greenville 28 Public Land Act 29 Connecticut Plan; Great Compromise 30 Minutemen To justify to the American people and to the world the necessity for armed resistance Paper currency issued by the Continental congress to help fund the American Revolutionary War Opposed the federal alien and sedition acts, which extended the powers of the federal government provides each branch of government with individual powers to check the other branches and prevent any one branch becomes to powerful Established orderly procedures for dividing and selling federal lands at moderate prices. Meant to encourage western settlement Established a framework for governing the Northwest Territory, admitting new states, and protecting the civil liberties of settlers rejected the Massachusetts government act and resulted in a boycott of imported goods from Britain unless the Intolerable acts were repealed Written by Jay, Madison, and Hamilton to preserve the union, reconcile differences among states, promote common welfare, etc Claimed colonists were equal to all british citizens protested taxation without representation and without colonial representation in parliament Authorizing Americans to attack British commercial vessels and Spanish New Orleans laid out the process by which lands west of the Appalachian Mountains to be surveyed and sold Dispute between having more representatives for bigger states and less for smaller states/ having equal representatives A plan to place the British North American colonies under a more centralized government (7 colonies joined this) democratic republican party candidate vice president thomas jefferson defeated federalist candidate president John adams. Was a political realignment A naturally defensible plateau where the army could train and recoup from the year’s battle (many soldiers died in the harsh winters) One of the farmers of the constitution, author of 5 of the federalists papers, and the first chief justice of the U.S Declared that colonists should have the same rights as english men helped lead us to independence Group of leaders who worked to create the declaration of independence and the revolution Sought to settle issues between America and Great Britain that had been left unresolved since American Independence Providing the states with equal representation in the senate and proportional representation in the HOR His plan of union was to politically unite Great Britain and its North American Colonies Raised residency requirements for citizenship from 5 to 14 years, authorized President to deport aliens and permitted their arrest, imprisonment attempts to get an actor to change its behavior through disruption in economic exchange A formal meeting held in 1787 for the purpose of creating a constitution for the US regulate trade between states during a time of political turbulence and economic strain Natives surrender claims to the ohio territory and promised to open it up to settlement Adopted by congress and sent to the king as a last attempt to prevent a formal war being declared A small hand-picked elite force of men Opened lower Mississippi River and NOLA to American trade, made the 31st parallel official Florida's northern border This ended the American revolution and formally recognized the United States as independent nation (also used in the 7 years war,etc) 1 Right of deposit 2 XYZ affair The pinckney treaty gave american merchants “rights of deposit” in new orleans, granting them use of the port to store goods for export Impressment was occurring Adams sent a delegation to negotiate with the French. People known as x,y, and z bribes and adam still no to going to war