United States History chapter 5
Fort Ticonderoga
British stronghold; captured by patriots
Quebec Act
Canceled the American colonies' western land claims by extending the borders of Quebec southward to the Ohio River and westward of the Mississippi
"Minutemen"
Colonial militia soldiers were called this because they had to be ready to fight upon a minute's notice
George Washington
Commander in chief of the Patriots
Second Continental Congress
Convened in Philadelphia on May 10, 1775 discussing plans to maintain peace in the months ahead
First Continental Congress
Convened in Philadelphia on September 5, 1774 to discuss what action should be taken in the impending crisis of the Coercive Acts and the Quebec Act.
Stamp Act Congress
Convened on October 7, 1765, in New York City; adopted a resolution "in opposition to the Tyrannical Acts of the British Parliament," in which the colonists petitioned the king (1) to defend their rights as Englishmen to resist taxation without due representation, (2) to restore their royal charters, (3) and to restore the land grants given to the original colonies
General Thomas Gage
Had replaced Hutchinson as royal governor of Massachusetts; imported bricklayers and carpenters from Nova Scotia to erect winter quarters for his troops
Laissez faire
Hands off
Committees of Correspondence
Helped form by Sam Adams; committee of 22 men who kept neighboring towns informed of problems with England and let America's position be known to the world. Its members included Patrick Henry, Richard Henry Lee, and Thomas Jefferson.
Because it was half-hearted, the colonists got around it by smuggling
How did the British government's loose enforcement of the trade laws encourage colonists to resist new restrictions?
16,000 pounds of tobacco per year
How ministers were paid in colonial Virginia
Pontiac's Conspiracy
Led by Pontiac; an uprising that cost many lives on the frontier and proved that it would take thousands of British troops to effectively protect colonists from future Indian uprisings
Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Dr. Samuel Prescott
Men who rode through the night to warn their countrymen that the British were coming
Boston Massacre
On March 5, 1770, an unknown person gave orders for the Boston soldiers to fire; three Bostonians lay dead, and two others were mortally wounded.
William Pitt the Elder
One of Parliament's most respected elders; rejected the idea of "virtual representation"
John Hancock
Patriot leader in lexington
Ethan Allen
Patriot who formed a frontier militia known as the "green mountain boys"
John Dickinson
Pennsylvania lawyer who drafted the resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress, wrote a pamphlet entitled "Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies."
East India Company
Required to sell its tea through middlemen in England. In 1773, it was allowed to ship its tea directly to the colonies.
Sons of Liberty
Society organized by Sam Adams and others; it held parades and protests, destroyed the hated stamps, and forced stamp distributors to resign
Molasses Act
Taxed raw sugar, rum, and molasses imported to the colonies from the non-British West Indies
Charles Townshend
The Chancellor of the Exchequer (official in charge of the treasury)
Gaspé Incident
The Gaspé, a British customs schooner, ran aground near Providence, Rhode Island, boatloads of colonists attacked the schooner, removed its crew and set it afire. Although hundreds had witnessed the incident, no one admitted to being able to identify any of the culprits.
Boston Port Bill, Administration Act, Massachusetts Government Act, Quartering Act
The acts that comprised the Coercive Acts
Breed's Hill
The actual location of the Battle of Bunker Hill
September 5, 1774 in Philadelphia
The location and convening date of the First Continental Congress
Board of Trade
The most important British agency; it had the power to annul laws passed by colonial legislature, to hear appeals from the colonies, and to influence trade policies adopted for the colonies
"The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved"
The pamphlet written by James Otis
Mercantile theory
The real measure of a nation's wealth was the amount of gold and silver it possessed.
The Proclamation Act, Rigid enforcement of the trade laws, the Sugar Act of 1764, the Currency Act of 1764, the Stamp Act of 1765, the Quartering Act of 1765
The six parts of Grenville's program
Woolens Act, Hat Act, Iron Act
The three acts that regulated colonial industry
1) to defend their rights as Englishmen to resist taxation without due representation 2) to restore their royal charters 3) to restore the land grants given to the original colonies
The three parts of the Stamp Act Congress petition
Sir William Howe, Sir Henry Clinton, and John Burgoyne
Three British commanders who joined General Gage in Boston
Patrick Henry, Richard Henry Lee, Thomas Jefferson
Three famous members of the Committee of Correspondence in Virginia
Writs of assistance
Used to help authorities enforce trade laws in the colonies; general search warrants giving British officials authority to search virtually any place at any time for contraband (smuggled goods).
Bunker Hill
Where the British had won the first major battle in the War for Independence
Concord
Where the War for Independence had begun
Because the colonies were only there to help Britain gain wealth
Why was the mercantile theory unfair to the American colonies?
Navigation acts
1660- All goods imported to or exported from the colonies must be carried on ships owned by British subjects; at least 3/4 of every ship's crew must be English. 1663- European products headed for the colonies must first be shipped to England and then rechanneled to the colonies.
Samuel Adams
1722-1803
Lemuel Haynes
21 year old black American minuteman of Massachusetts; became a great revival preacher in New England
Boston Tea Party
A band of citizens disguised as Indians boarded the tea-laden ships in Boston Harbor and, under cover of darkness, dumped 340 chests of tea into the harbor.
George III
A descendant of the German Hanovarian line who came to the throne of England; determined to reverse the trend toward increasing Parliamentary power in England, and he vowed to bring the American colonies into subjection
Parson's Cause
A dispute between England and the colonists of England's right to legislate in the colonies; money was scarce, so ministers were paid in tobacco; when there was a crop shortage and the price of tobacco raised, the House of Burgesses ruled that the clergy should be temporarily paid in money at a rate well below the inflated market price of tobacco; ministers insisted they were being treated unfairly and talked to the king and hid privy council who set aside the decision of the House of Burgesses.
Townshend Acts
A series of a
Intolerable Acts
A series of acts also called the Coercive Acts: The Boston Port Bill (closed the port of Boston until the East India Company could be reimbursed for the destroyed tea), the Administration Act (intended to make British officials in Massachusetts bolder in enforcing law, guaranteed that if they were accused of legal offenses against colonists they would be tried in England rather than Massachusetts, where a fair trial would be unlikely) , the Massachusetts Act (severely limited the powers to the royal governor), and the Quartering Act (provided that British troops be housed not only in taverns and deserted buildings but also in occupied dwellings).
Edmund Burke
A young Irishman who would soon become one of Britain's greatest statesmen and political thinkers; defended the colonies
Patrick Henry
A young lawyer who defended the House of Burgesses; made a speech to the House of Burgesses on March 28, 1775
Declaratory Act
Adopted in 1766, declaring that the colonies were "subordinate" to England and that Parliament had the power to pass laws to "bind the colonies in all cases whatsoever."
Pontiac
An Ottawa chief who led a confederation of tribes in a bloody uprising
Lexington
Battle here on April 19, 1775; shot heard round the world
George Grenville
Became prime minister of England in 1763; determined to help George III bring the colonies into subjection
James Otis
Boston lawyer who published "The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved"
