Period 3 Identifiers Flashcards
the “frontier” of colonial America; disputed territory between France and Britain; where the French-Indian War began
Ohio Valley
an alliance between the New York colony and the Iroquois people; later with the entire British Empire; became a model for relations between whites and Native Americans.
covenant chain
1754; proposal by Benjamin Franklin to form one colonial government; to deal with Indian policy, trade and defense of the colonies
Albany Plan of Union
the mid-1700s; an increase in colonial consumption due to the Industrial Revolution in England; raised living standards; led to personal and colonial debt
consumer revolution
land that is suitable for crop growth
arable
confirmed Indian control of the land west of the Appalachian Mountains; declared western frontier off-limits to colonial settlement; ignored by colonists.
Proclamation of 1763
censuring or criticizing severely.
excoriate
landowning protestors in North and South Carolina; 1769s to 1770s; demanded that western districts of colonies had more government help and representation
Regulators
when a minority group adopts qualities and/or habits of a majority group; Conestoga Indians in the mid-1700s.
assimilation
Prime Minister of Great Britain after the French/Indian War; passed the early taxation acts on the colonies in the 1760s
George Grenville
tax act that decreased the tax on molasses; increased penalties on colonial smuggling; New England merchants were enraged by this act
Sugar Act of 1764
a maritime (ships) trial presided over by an appointed judge; no juries; used on smugglers due to the Sugar Act
vice-admiralty courts
law that imposed taxes on all paper used in the colonies; never too effect due to colonial resistance; repealed a year later
Stamp Act of 1765
a law passed after a request by General Gage; required colonial governments to provide barracks and food for British troops
Quartering Act of 1765
a meeting of delegates from nine colonies in 1765; protested the loss of American “rights and liberties” due to the Stamp and Sugar Acts; only the colonies can tax themselves
Stamp Act Congress