A | B |
Boston Tea Party | a 1773 protest against British taxes in which colonists dumped tea into Boston Harbor |
boycott | to refuse to do business or have contact with a person, group, country, or product |
Committees of Correspondence | groups organized in the 1700s to keep colonists informed of important events |
Continental Army | the army created by the Second Continental Congress with George Washington as commander-in-chief |
Declaration of Independence | the official document by the Second Continental Congress explaining why the colonies were breaking away from England |
delegate | a member of an elected assembly |
Intolerable Acts | laws passed by Parliament that closed Boston Harbor, ended the Massachusetts assembly, and forced colonists to quarter British soldiers |
liberty | freedom |
Loyalist | a colonist who supported Great Britain in the American Revolution |
mercenary | a soldier paid to fight for another country |
militia | a group of volunteers who fought in times of emergency during the colonial period and the Revolutionary War |
minutemen | well-trained volunteer soldiers who defended the American colonies at a minute's notice |
Patriot | an American colonist who supported the fight for independence |
petition | a written request signed by many people |
rebel | to oppose those in charge because of different ideas of what is right |
repeal | to withdraw or cancel |
Sons of Liberty | groups of colonists who organized themselves to protest against the British government |
Stamp Act | a law passed by Parliament requiring colonists to pay a tax on all paper products |
Townshend Acts | taxes passed by Parliament in 1767 for goods brought into the colonies |
treason | the betrayal of one's country by giving help to the enemy |
traitor | someone who turns against his or her country |
Tory | another word for Loyalist |
Redcoat | a term for a British soldier |