chapter 6
In 1776, the slave population of the United States was What was the slave population of the United States in 1776?
20 percent.
What percentage of non-slave Americans remained loyal to the British during the American Revolution?
20 to 25 percent
The estimated percentage of free Americans who remained loyal to the British during the Revolution was
20-25 percent
What famous American woman wrote to her husband that the Second Continental Congress should "remember the ladies" when they drew up a "Code of Laws"?
Abigail Adams
Which of the following was not a course adopted by African-Americans to advance the cause of emancipation during the revolutionary era?
assassination of pro-slavery public figures
The authority of church leaders went remarkably unchallenged during the revolutionary era.
false
For most free Americans in the new republic, equality meant
equal opportunity rather than equality of condition.
By 1810, there were fewer free blacks than there had been in 1776.
false
Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations (1776) argued
that the "invisible hand" of the free market was more effective and fair than government intervention in the economy.
Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on the relative status of men and women in America?
the elimination of legal inequality between husband and wife
Which of the following defines republican motherhood?
training sons to be future citizens
The first antislavery tract in America was
The Selling of Joseph.
Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on economic thought and policy in America?
The estates of wealthy landowners were appropriated by Congress and redistributed among the rural poor.
Who wrote that he hoped to erect a "wall of separation" between church and state?
Thomas Jefferson
Who, out of the following, dressed in men's clothes to fight in the American Revolution?
Deborah Sampson
The daughter of a Massachusetts farmer who disguised herself as a man and fought in the Continental Army during the American Revolution was Who was the daughter of a Massachusetts farmer who disguised herself as a man to fight in the Continental Army during the American Revolution?
Deborah Sampson.
Advertisements for runaway slaves were rare in the early republic.
False
Committed to freedom of conscience and thought, most patriots adopted a live-and-let-live attitude toward the Loyalists during the Revolutionary War.
False
Confiscated property of Loyalists was returned to them following the Treaty of Paris.
False
Except in Vermont, property ownership was not a requirement for voting in the early Republic.
False
Which was not the case for Indians following the War for Independence?
Indians were incorporated as citizens within the new republic.
Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on the issue of slavery in America? Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on the issue of slavery in America?
Ironically, the arrival of independence was accompanied by an expansion of slavery throughout the United States.
Who developed the state constitution that gave the governor an effective veto over laws passed by the legislature, included a two-chamber legislature and powerful judiciary, and was subsequently an important model for the U.S. Constitution?
John Adams
Members of which of the following groups were not subject to arrest by the Pennsylvania government because of refusal to participate in the American Revolution?
Mormons
Which Indian tribe sided with the Americans against the British in the War for Independence?
Oneida
Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on political life in America?
Patriots of all stripes united around the principle of universal suffrage, regardless of economic status.
Three months after independence was declared in 1776, which state adopted a new state constitution with only a one-house legislature?
Pennsylvania
The foremost center of political radicalism during the revolutionary era was
Pennsylvania.
At the end of war, as many as 100,000 Loyalists were banished from the United States or emigrated voluntarily.
True
Because of religious freedom an astonishing number of new religious denominations proliferated in the early republic; today more than 1,300 religions are practiced in the United States. Because of religious freedom, an astonishing number of new religious denominations proliferated in the early republic; today more than 1,300 religions are practiced in the United States.
True
Deists and members of evangelical sects worked together to separate church and state.
True
Evangelical Christians supported the separation of church and state following the American Revolution because they wanted to protect religion from the corrupting embrace of government.
True
Indentured servitude went into rapid decline following national independence.
True
James Otis argued that black colonists were entitled to the same civil rights as any British subject.
True
Many women who entered public debate felt the need to apologize for their forthrightness.
True
Militias did much to promote the expansion of political democracy in revolutionary America. Militias did much to promote the expansion of political democracy in revolutionary America.
True
Some Americans employed the revolutionary language of equality on behalf of women's rights.
True
The Declaration of Independence elevated the principle of equality to a central place in the American conception of freedom.
True
The years following independence saw the emergence of free black communities, especially in the northern states.
True
Which of the following was not an effect of the struggle for independence on religion in America?
a marked decline in the influence of religion in American society
Phillis Wheatley is celebrated in American history as Phillis Wheatley, a slave during the revolutionary era, is celebrated in American history for being
a published poet and slave.
How many slaves fled to British lines during the American Revolution?
almost 100,000
The first time in recorded human history that slavery was eradicated by legislative power of government was The first time in recorded human history that slavery was eradicated by legislative power of government was
in the United States when, between 1777 and 1804, every state north of Maryland took steps toward emancipation.
The decline of indentured servitude and apprenticeship had many causes. Which of the following was not one of these causes?
increased use of African slaves
Thomas Jefferson helped pass laws in the state of Virginia that abolished primogeniture. Define "primogeniture."
passing of all of a family's land to the oldest son
In the early 1770s, "freedom petitions" were
slave petitions urging slavery's end, presented to New England courts and legislatures.
"Throughout the new nation, states disestablished their established churches." Define "disestablished."
to remove public funding for
By 1776, the year in which he wrote The Declaration of Independence with its famous phrase "all men are created equal, " Thomas Jefferson owned more than 100 slaves.
true
During the Revolution, Indians were divided in allegiance.
true
Except for New York, all new states barred Jews from voting.
true
Initially, African-Americans saw the ideals of the Revolution as an opportunity to claim their freedom.
true
Loyalists who did not leave the country were quickly reintegrated into American society.
true
Though it was not granted to many Americans, by 1776, most Americans considered suffrage to be synonymous with freedom.
true
from 1776 to 1807, some women were legally allowed to vote in New Jersey.
true