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(Revolutionary War (long essay 7) (Saratoga (war) (Benedict Arnold…
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Massachusetts Bay
City Upon a Hill
By the end of the 1630s, as part of a "GREAT MIGRATION" of Puritans out of England, nearly 14,000 more Puritan settlers came to Massachusetts, and the colony began to spread.
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Anne Hutchinson
She was the defendant in the most famous of the trials intended to suppress religious dissent in the Massachusetts Bay Colony
Dominion of New England
King James II attempts to consolidate all of the New England colonies (that includes: Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and New Hampshire) into one large colony.
Coercive Acts
British Parliament in 1774 after the Boston Tea Party. They were meant to punish the Massachusetts colonists for their defiance of throwing a large tea shipment into Boston Harbor in reaction to being taxed by the British.
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Independence
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Common Sense (best seller book, movement for indepence)
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Spain
Treaty of Tordessilass
commitment between Spain and Portugal. created a Papal line of Demarcation, which divided the New World: east of the line for Portugal and west of it for Spain.
Jamestown
Spain, a long-standing rival with England, began watching the new English colony in Virginia soon after the settlement was established
Columbian Exchange
16th-century Spanish colonizers introduced new staple crops to Asia from the Americas, including maize and sweet potatoes, and thereby contributed to population growth in Asia.
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French
Pontiac's Rebellion
Pontiac’s Rebellion was a war waged by Indians of the Great Lakes region against British rule after the French and Indian War.
The Indians, who had formed alliances with the defeated French, were dissatisfied with treatment from British officials.
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Treat of Paris (1763)
kingdoms of Great Britain, France and Spain, with Portugal in agreement. The British won over France and Spain. The treaty gave control of the northern part of North America which is now Canada to Britain. France was left with two small islands, Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, for its cod fishery.
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Religion
Enlightenment
Revolution in thought in the eighteenth century that emphasized reason and science over the authority of traditional religion.
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Great Awakening
Fervent religious revival movement in the 1720s through the 1740s that was spread throughout the colonies by ministers like New England Congregationalist Jonathan Edwards and English revivalist George Whitefield.
common cause
common cause
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Creating Race and Class in the American Revolution, American nationalism from white American idealism
refusal to extend to African Americans and Indians the benefits of emerging concepts of liberal subjectivity in the form of citizenship
Blacks and Native Americans were not "citizens", only "whites" were,
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Saratoga, British vs Colonists
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Long essay 2
1620 Pilgrims sail on Mayflower to America
1622 Uprising led by Opechancanough against Virginia
1624 Virginia becomes first royal colony
1629–1642Great Migration to New England
1630 Massachusetts founded
1632 Maryland founded
1634 General Court of Massachusetts established
1636 Roger Williams banished from Massachusetts to Rhode Island
1637 Anne Hutchinson placed on trial in Massachusetts Pequot War
1638 The Oath of a Freeman
1639 Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
1642–1649 English Civil War
1649 Maryland adopts an Act Concerning Religion
1662 Half-Way Covenant proclaimed by Puritans in Massachusetts
1691 Virginia outlaws English Indian marriages
1624 Dutch West India Company settles Manhattan
1651 First Navigation Act issued by Parliament
1664 English seize New Netherland, which becomes New York
1669 The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina
1670 First English settlers arrive in Carolina
1675 Lords of Trade
1675– King Philip’s War
1676