For students from AP-A block and AP-B block, each class has divided into groups of individuals, events and issues. Please create a master list for each of these categories to use as a study guide for the exam on Friday.
Events: -1696: Parliament establishes Board of Trade -1701: Iroquois set policy of neutrality -1702-1713: Queen Anne's War -1713: Peace of Utrecht -1733: Molasses Act -1739-1742: War of Jerkins' Ear -1744-1748: King George's War -1754: Albany conference -1755: Braddock defeated by French and Indian allies -1756-1763: Seven Years' War -1759: Wolfe defeats the French at Quebec -1759-1761: Cherokee War against the English -1763: Treaty of Paris ends Seven Years' War -1763: Proclamation Line limits westaward expansion -1764: Sugar Act -1764: Currency Act -1765: Colonists resist stamp Act -1765: Virginia House of Burgesses issues Stamp Act resolutions -1766: Declaratory Act -1767: Townshend duties imposed -1768: British troops occupy Boston -1770: Boston Massacre -1770: Townshend duties repealed (except on tea) -1771: North Carolina Regulators defeated -1772: Gaspee incident in RI -1773: Boston Tea Party -1774: Intolerable Acts -1774: First Continental Congress -1775: Lexington and Concord -1775: Second Continental Congress] -1775: Iroquios Six Nations pledge neutrality -1776: Thomas Paine's Common Sense -1776: British evacuate Boston and seize New York City -1776: Declaration of Independence -1776: Eight States draft constitutions -1777: British occupy Philadelphia -1777: Americans win victory Saratoga -1777: Washington's army winters at Valley Forge -1778: War shifts to the South -1778: Savannah falls to the British -1778: French treaty of alliance and commerce -1779: Massachusetts state constitutional convention -1780: Massachusetts constitution ratified -1780: Charleston surrenders to the British -1780s: Destruction of Iroquois Confederacy -1781: Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown -1781: Articles of Confederation ratified by states -1783: Peace treaty with England signed in Paris -1783: Massachusetts Supreme Court abolishes slavery
Patricia that is a good list. I have the same topic as you but that is going to be a tough list to add to. You basically got everything! I'll be posting mine sometime tonight just to let everyone know. I got some stuf to do first and I have to try to find some new stuff to add to the list.
_________ George Washington | SamAdams | John Smith - virginiia | Thomas Jefferson | Benjamin Franklin | -------- You know these King George III | Pontiac _________| John Rolfe, - first successful cultivation of tobacco as a crop in theVirginia John Robinson John Winthrop - massachusetts/governer (idea - Religous Freedom) Lord Baltimore - maryland - (his idea was haven for catholics) Anne Hutchinson - Massachusetts - conetticut Roger Williams - Rhode island William Penn - pennsylvania James Oglethorp - Georgia - (haven for debtors) Jonathan Edwards - a preacher George Whitefield - preached for slavery Abigail Adams - wife of John Adams Thomas Hooker - Conneticut Peter Minuit - new york
-- Edited by Danny on Monday 21st of September 2009 03:37:12 PM
Sorry for the late posts guys! I had a very busy afternoon, Anyhow I took some of the ideas I had already had come up with in class that were similar to Patricia's, combined some of Patricia's ideas, and I just read and added about 10 more events to what hopefully can be the master list for events. Feel free to add to it!
Events -1696: Parliament establishes Board of Trade -1701: Iroquois set policy of neutrality -1702-1713: Queen Anne's War -1713: Peace of Utrecht -1718- French Settle New Orleans -1732 Benjamin Franklin Publishes First Poor Richard’s Almanac -1733: Molasses Act -1735 Zenger acquitted of seditious libel in New York -1739-1742: War of Jerkins' Ear -1744-1748: King George's War -1754: Albany conference -1755: Braddock defeated by French and Indian allies -1756-1763: Seven Years' War -1759: Wolfe defeats the French at Quebec -1759-1761: Cherokee War against the English -1763: Treaty of Paris ends Seven Years' War -1763: Proclamation Line limits westward expansion -1764: Sugar Act -1764: Currency Act -1765: Colonists resist stamp Act -1765: Virginia House of Burgesses issues Stamp Act resolutions -1766: Declaratory Act -1766 :Rent Riots by New York Tenant Farmers -1767: Townshend duties imposed -1768: British troops occupy Boston -1770: Boston Massacre: Troops kill four and wound eight -1770: Townshend duties repealed (except on tea) -1771: North Carolina Regulators defeated -1772: Gaspe incident in RI -1773 :Tea Act -1773: Boston Tea Party -1774: Intolerable Acts (Coercive Acts) -1774: Quebec Act attaches trans-Appalachian interior north of Ohio River to government of Quebec -1774: First Continental Congress meets -1775: Lexington and Concord -1775: Second Continental Congress meets -1775: Dunmore’s Proclamation of Virginia -1775: Prohibitory Act embargoes American goods -1775: King George III proclaims Americans in open rebellion -1775: Iroquois Six Nations pledge neutrality -1776: Thomas Paine authors Common Sense -1776: British evacuate Boston and seize New York City -1776: Declaration of Independence -1776: Eight States draft constitutions -1777: British occupy Philadelphia -1777: Americans win victory Saratoga -1777: Washington's army winters at Valley Forge -1778: War shifts to the South -1778: Savannah falls to the British -1778: French treaty of alliance and commerce -1779: Massachusetts state constitutional convention -1780: Massachusetts constitution ratified -1780: Charleston surrenders to the British -1780s: Destruction of Iroquois Confederacy -1781: Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown -1781: Articles of Confederation ratified by states -1783: Peace treaty with England signed in Paris -1783: Massachusetts Supreme Court abolishes slavery
-- Edited by Justin BRAGA on Monday 21st of September 2009 06:29:55 PM
-- Edited by Justin BRAGA on Monday 21st of September 2009 06:31:45 PM
people : - King George III - Gne. Edward Braddock - john hughes - Gen. Gage - Patrick Henry - King James II - George Greenwood - Thomas Jefferson - Benjamin Franklin - John Han****e - John adams - George Washington - Thomas Paine - Abigail Adams - Paul Revere - James Monroe - John Jay - Gen. Burgoyne - Gen. Cornwalis - Joseph Brandt - John Wilkes - Ebenezer MacIntosh - Bendict Arnold - Lord Dunmore - Sam Adams - Ethan Allen - Nathanial Greene and the Green Mountain Boys - William Howe - James Madison - William Whipple
Aubriee, I was wondering why you added William Whipple to the list. I know he signed the declaration, and all, but there was a total of 56 signers and I was just curious why you chose him. :)