| A | B |
| an effective economic protest of British policies | boycott |
| colonist who favored war against Britain | patriots |
| colonist who remained loyal to Britain | loyalists |
| Westward Expansion; belief that the United States had the right to expand westward to the Pacific Ocean. | Manifest Destiny |
| In the 1840s, the center of the women’s rights movement in New York. | Seneca Falls, NY |
| In the 1830s, labor unions emerged mostly among these workers | skilled workers |
| 1820, Governor of New York DeWitt Clinton’s plan to link New York City to the Great Lakes region. | Erie Canal |
| British capture of this colony would have split the 13 English colonies | New York |
| document guarantees freedom of speech, the right to bear arms, and protection from unreasonable search and seizure | Bill of Rights |
| This is how the New York government is similar to our national government. | Three branches of government |
| first attempt to practice representative democracy in the colonies | House of Burgesses |
| belief that colonies exist to benefit the economy of the mother country | mercantilism |
| Europeans brought this and caused a large number of deaths among Native Americans when they met | disease |
| first permanent English colony in the New World | Jamestown |
| developed many different cultures because they adapted to different environments and used the resources around them | Native Americans |
| Native American nations that lived in the Eastern Woodlands of New York | Iroquois and Algonquin |
| first European nation to have settlers in the Hudson Valley region of New York | Netherlands |
| spells out the rights of citizens and limits the power of government. | constitution |
| helped to establish democratic ideas of a representative government because settlers discussed and voted on many issues | town meetings |
| Civil War Amendment which abolished slavery. | 13th Amendment |