A | B |
writs of assistance | legal documents that let British officials searched for smuggled goods (133) |
revenue | incoming money to a government; Britain planned to raise it with new taxes (133) |
Parliament | the law-making body of Britain's government (133-135) |
Stamp Act | 1765 law placed a tax on printed material (134) |
repeal | To cancel - like the Stamp Act in March 1766. (134) |
Daughters of Liberty | Women groups organized to support the boycott of goods from Britain. (135) |
Sugar Act | 1764 law taxed molasses entering the colonies & cracked down on smuggling (133) |
boycott | refuse to buy, or use, as a means of protest (134) |
Declaratory Act | 1766 law to remind colonists that Parliament could tax & make decisions "in all cases". (134) |
Townshend Acts | 1767 laws that taxed basic items from Britain, such as glass, tea & paper. (135) |
Sons of Liberty | Boston group started by Sam Adams to protest the Stamp Act (134) |
Proclamation of 1763 | 1763 law that did not allow colonists to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains (133-134) |
committee of correspondence | organization started by Sam Adams to circulate writings about colonists' grievences with Britain (137) |
Paul Revere | Boston silversmith who created the most famous image of the Boston Massacre (137) |
propaganda | information designed to influenece opinion against the British (137) |
Sons of Liberty | Boston group that performed the Boston Tea Party (139) |
Boston Tea Party | dramatic Boston protest of the Tea Act in 1773 (138-139) |
King George III | British ruler that vowed to punish Boston in 1774 (139) |
Coercive Acts | Britain's name for the harsh laws to punish Bostonians for their resistance (139) |
Intolerable Acts | Colonist's name for the harsh laws to punish Bostonians for their resistance (139) |
Tea Act | law that gave unfair advantages to the British East India Tea Company (138) |
Boston Massacre | angry mob of Bostonians vs. British soldiers on March 5, 1770 (137) |
Loyalists | Those who lived in America, but remained on the side of Britain. (145) |
Battle of Bunker Hill | Battle to control strategic high ground overlooking Boston in June 1775. (145) |
Shot Heard 'Round the World | Name given to the gunshots that started the Revolutionary War. (144) |
Continental Congress | Leaders from the colonies met in Philadelphia in 1774 to act together against the British government. (141-142) |
Patriots | Those who wanted to fight for American independence from Britain. (145) |
Minutemen | Massachusetts militia men who were ready to fight the British. (142) |
militias | Volunteer citizen soldiers of the colonies. (142) |
Lexington & Concord | Two Massachusetts towns where the Revolutionary War began on April 18, 1775. (143-144) |
Fort Ticonderoga | The British military base captured by colonial militia on May 10, 1775. (144) |
Paul Revere | Sons of Liberty member who warned Massachusetts citizens that British soldiers were coming. (143) |
Continental Army | America's army created by the Second Continental Congress in 1775. (148) |
George Washington | The man chosen by the Second Continental Congress to be the commander of America's Continental Army. (148) |
Olive Branch Petition | The final formal request for peace and protection of American rights made to King and Parliament by the Second Continental Congress. (148-149) |
Common Sense | Thomas Paine's 1776 pamphlet that called for complete indepenence from Britain. (149-150) |
Second Continental Congress | Group of colonial leaders that began to govern the colonies and discuss independence in 1775. (147-148, 150) |
Boston | In March of 1776, the Continental Army led by General Washington, regained control of the city of ______. (149) |
Thomas Jefferson | He was the primary writer of the Declaration of Independence. (150) |
John Hancock | This leader of the Continental Congress boldly signed the Declaration of Independence first and large enough that "King George could read it without his glasses". (150) |
grievances | The longest part of the Declaration of Independence explains the colonists' ___________, or complaints, against the British government. (151, 154-156) |
July 4, 1776 | America's birthdate. The date the Declaration of Independence was officially approved by the Continental Congress. (150) |
Declaration of Independence | The historic document that boldly announces America's independence from Britain. (150-151, 154-156) |