1-50 Flashcards

1
Q

Gold was one reason Europeans came to America, new job opportunities and more money opportunities. Glory was the second reason Europeans came to America. After traveling to America, they were hoping to conquer the land for themselves. Lastly, Europeans came to America hoping to spread the word of God and seek religious freedom

A

The Three G’s

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2
Q

a group of investors who pool their money together in the hopes of making more money. They often funded settlers into the New World in an attempt to ease the overcrowding in Europe. These companies arose out of the growing middle class in Europe.

A

Joint Stock Company

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3
Q

a joint stock company that funded a group of settlers to go into the New World to establish a permanent colony in Virginia (Jamestown).

A

Virginia Compnay

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4
Q

granted permission to settle Jamestown and thus started English rule over much of North America.

A

The FIrst Virginia Charter

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5
Q

initially unsuccessful because many settlers refused to work. John Smith came and became the leader coining the phrase: “He who works not, eats not” Smith led raids on local native tribes for food. This angered Powhatan, the local chief.

A

Jamestown

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6
Q

the river that Jamestown was founded on. This river supplied food, water, and shelter for the people living in Jamestown and served as a vital part to their everyday lives.

A

The James River

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7
Q

came to Jamestown and became the leader coining the phrase “He who works not, eats not.” Smith led raids on the local native tribes for food. This angered Powhatan, the local chief. Much of our knowledge of the settlement of Jamestown comes from his book A Historie of Virginia.

A

John Smith

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8
Q

Due to an injury, John Smith had to return to England. Without leadership and the natives’ help, Jamestown ran out of food for the winter of 1610. By the end of the winter only 60 colonists were left alive.

A

The Starving Time

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9
Q

the chief of the Powhatan federation that occupied the lands surrounding Jamestown at the time of its settlement. He was the father of Pocahontas.

A

Powhatan

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10
Q

the daughter of Powhatan who allied with John Smith to promote peace between the Powhatan tribe and the English. She later married John Rolfe, an English settler who took control after John Smith got sick.

A

Pochontas

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11
Q

led Jamestown after John Smith’s departure. Rolfe introduced tobacco to Jamestown which led to its profitability. Married Pocahontas.

A

John Rolfe

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12
Q

brought to the colony by John Rolfe, was important because it was the ticket to the colony’s survival after the “starving time.” Made Jamestown profitable.

A

Tabacco

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13
Q

the economic policy of European countries through which nations attempt to gain wealth through trade with other countries and exporting more than they import. Europeans held that colonies in the New World existed to make the home country wealthy and powerful as a source of raw materials and markets for manufactured goods. This caused European countries to compete for land in the New World.

A

Mercantilism

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14
Q

During the early years of Jamestown, the colony developed a representative government that marked the start of a representative government in the New World.

A

House of Burgesses

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15
Q

In 1620, the pilgrims left England to escape religious persecution and settled in the New World to form this colony.

A

Plymouth Colony

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16
Q

the first governor in the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts. This guy wrote Of Plymouth Plantation, and it is regarded as the most authoritative account of the Pilgrims and the early years of the colony which they founded.

A

William Bradford

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17
Q

About the time Jamestown was founded, a group of people wanted to separate from the Church of England. These people were later called pilgrims.

A

Seperatists

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18
Q

In 1620, about 100 pilgrims sailed for the New World in this ship.

A

Mayflower

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19
Q

Before coming ashore, 41 males signed this agreement which was the first form of government in the New World and promised “just and equal” laws.

A

Mayflower Compact

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20
Q

The first winter for the Plymouth Colony was very difficult. Native Americans began aiding the colonists by giving them food. Squanto showed the colonists how to farm and fish, thus helping the colony survive.

A

Squanto

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21
Q

Puritans began having disagreements with the Church of England. In 1630, 900 Puritans left England led by John Winthrop and settled in New England and formed the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Their goal was to form a theocracy. Some individuals disagreed with the strict religious codes of the Puritans and were exiled or left to form other New England colonies.

A

John Winthrop/Massachusetts Bay Colony

22
Q

allowed the Puritans to begin settling in New England. This changed the landscape of the English colonies.

A

Charter of the Massachusetts Bay Colony

23
Q

there was no separation between the church and the government.

A

Theocracy

24
Q

were composed of several rich business owners and merchants in England. Puritans held very strict religious beliefs and did not practice religious tolerance for others. They left England to “purify” the church. Also known as non-separatists.

A

Puritains

25
Q

The Puritans came to the New World in order to freely worship, however, they did not tolerate other religions. In 1692, hysteria about witches swept through Salem, Massachusetts. The events that followed became known as the Salem Witch Trials and many people began to form new colonies.

A

Salem Witch Trials

26
Q

were an assembly of townspeople that decides local issues.

A

Town meeting

27
Q

was expelled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony because she didn’t follow the Puritan’s religious rules. She left and formed a colony in Rhode Island.

A

Anne Hutchinson

28
Q

disagreed with the treatment of Native Americans, so he founded the colony of Providence, Rhode Island.

A

Roger Williams

29
Q

also disagreed with the teachings of the Puritans and formed the colony of Connecticut.

A

Thomas Hooker

30
Q

was a document written to govern the colony of Connecticut. It set up the government structure and powers of various officials.

A

The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut

31
Q

New York began as the Dutch colony. It began a huge economic success and attracted diverse colonists from all over the world. The English took over the colony peacefully in 1664 and renamed it New York.

A

New Netherlands

32
Q

(Peg-leg Pete) was the leader of New Amsterdam who surrendered the colony peacefully to the English.

A

Peter Stuyvesant

33
Q

New Netherlands practiced the Patroon System in which the landholder had special privileges and rights to large areas of land.

A

Patroon system

34
Q

A haven for Quakers and the tolerance that drew many different groups to the colony. Women were not overlooked in education or in the community and Native Americans were meant to be treated fairly

A

Colony of Pennsylvania

35
Q

led a group of Quakers to the New World and founded the colony of Pennsylvania as a haven for Quakers and a colony that practiced religious tolerance.

A

William Penn

36
Q

were a religious group that believed in equality, tolerance, and peaceful co-existence for everyone, including women and Native Americans. Women were considered to have spiritual equality with men.

A

Quakers

37
Q

was the capital city of Pennsylvania and attracted people from all over the world. “The city of brotherly love”

A

Philadelphia

38
Q

was founded as a haven for English debtor colonies because English prisons were overflowing with debtors.

A

Georgia

39
Q

was the founder of the Georgia colony.

A

James Oglethorpe

40
Q

Georgia was known as a Buffer Colony to keep Spain from expanding north from Florida.

A

Buffer colony

41
Q

?: Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
?: Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania,
?: Georgia, Maryland, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina.

A

Thirteen Original Colonies
New England
Middle
Southern

42
Q

was a document that allied many colonies in New England in a defensive stance against the Native Americans.

A

The New England Articles of Confederation

43
Q

signed a contract to work from 4 to 10 years in exchange for a passage to the New World. At the end of their contract, they earned their freedom and rights of other citizens. Slaves were often purchased from Africa or enslaved from native tribes for life.

A

Indentured Servants

44
Q

In the 1660s, wealthy Virginia farmers bought most of the good farmland near the coast. Many indentured servants led by Bacon moved inland to find farmland. However, the settlers that moved inland began fighting with the Indians. The British Governor William Berkeley refused to aid the settlers and Bacon led a group of settlers in revolt against Jamestown and burned it to the ground.

A

Bacon’s Rebellion

45
Q

was the journey that all slaves had to make to reach the colonies from Africa to the New World during the Atlantic Slave Trade. Over 20% died or committed suicide on this journey. Triangle trade

A

Middle Passage

46
Q

Slaves transported through the Atlantic Slave Trade were often captured during tribal warfare in Africa and sold to European slave traders in exchange for weapons and manufactured goods on the West coast of Africa. Enslaved people would then be transported to the New World on slave ships.

A

Origins of slavery

47
Q

Slaves resisted their captivity in overt ways (active rebellion and fighting back) and passive ways (breaking tools, working slowly, pretending to not understand requests.

A

Overt ways/passive ways

48
Q

France claimed their land on the Ohio River Valley in the ___________. This was established primarily as a series of trading posts to help enrich the French fur trade and NOT as a permanent settlement.

A

New France Colony

49
Q

were people who were persecuted by Catholics and many of them emigrated from France.

A

Huguenots

50
Q

Florida was the primary settlement, Catholic religious system; forced to obey Spanish king laws and were not allowed to make any of their own

A

Spanish settlements