| A | B |
| Native americans sided with | French |
| gentry | highest social class made of church officials, land owners, merchants |
| Iroquois League sided with | British |
| social mobility | possibility for a person to move up from one social |
| leading revivalist preacher | George Whitefield |
| Great Awakening | period of renewed interest in religion starting in 1730's |
| revival | renewed interest in religion |
| Jonathan Edwards | Massachusetts preacher who said Great Awakening touched all people |
| Enlightenment | Age of Reason |
| wrote Poor Richard's Almanac | Benjamin Franklin |
| John Locke | writer who believed in people's natural rights |
| Galileo and Sir Isaac Newton | great scientists who believed in observation and experimentation |
| Anne Dudley Bradstreet | Puritan poet whose works were first woman's poetry to be published |
| African American female poet | Phillis Wheatley |
| French and Indian War | fighting between France and Great Britain |
| France and Britain fought over | Ohio Valley |
| George Washington | appointed military commander |
| called for a council made up of delegates from each colony that would manage Native American relations | Albany Plan of Union |
| William Pitt | Great Britain's minister of war |
| given the task of capturing French Quebec | General James Wolfe |
| 1763 | Treaty of Paris signed |
| an Ottawa leader | Pontiac |
| forbade colonists from settling west of the Appalachian mountains | Proclamation of 1763 |
| Sugar Act of 1764 | placed a tax on foreign molasses and suger |
| required colonists to pay for quartering British soldiers | Quartering Act of 1764 |
| Stamp Act passed | 1765 |
| small group of angry colonists formed | Sons of Liberty |
| agreement signed agreeing to not buy certain products | boycott |
| Boston Tea Party | 1773 |
| Intolerable Acts | Provisions of the Coercive Acts |
| a group of citizens ready fo fight at any emergency | militia |
| Concord | guns and gunpowder stored here |
| warned that the redcoats were coming | Paul Revere and William Dawes |
| 1775 | an olive branch petition was sent to the king |