Deck 7: The Road to Revolution,1763-1775

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Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Marquis de Lafayette
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Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Samuel Adams
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
mercantilism
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
boycott
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Benjamin Franklin
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
internal/external taxation
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
John Hancock
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
George Grenville
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Lord North
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
King George III
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Thomas Hutchinson
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Adam Smith
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Edmund Burke
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Abigail Adams
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Charles Townshend
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Crispus Attucks
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"No taxation without representation"
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
nonimportation agreement
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
John Adams
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"virtual" representation
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Townshend Acts
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Hessians
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
First Continental Congress
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Navigation Acts
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
admiralty courts
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
The Association
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Boston Massacre
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Declaratory Act
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Boston Tea Party
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Board of Trade
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Quartering Act
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Quebec Act
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Stamp Act Congress
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sons of Liberty & Daughters of Liberty
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"enumerated" products
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
committees of correspondence
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Loyalists
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Intolerable Acts
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sugar Act
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Stamp Act
Question
The radical whigs feared

A) too much democracy.
B) a written constitution.
C) the arbitrary power of the monarchy.
D) a too powerful parliament.
E) republicanism.
Question
In a broad sense,America was

A) a revolutionary force from the day of its discovery by Europeans.
B) a place that nurtured a love for Britain.
C) completely dependent on Britain for economic support.
D) a place where no new ideas took shape.
E) essentially a conservative society.
Question
Before 1763,the Navigation Laws

A) were enforced heavily in the American colonies and were very effective.
B) hurt Great Britain more than the American colonies.
C) were a great burden to only India.
D) discouraged smuggling by American colonial merchants.
E) were only loosely enforced in the American colonies.
Question
Change in colonial policy by the British government that helped precipitate the American Revolution involved

A) removing British troops from American soil.
B) beginning a war with Spain.
C) removing the majority of the British navy from American waters.
D) compelling the American colonists to shoulder some of the financial costs of the empire.
E) allying with the French.
Question
Under mercantilist doctrine,the American colonies were expected to do all of the following except

A) supply Britain with products such as tobacco, sugar and ships' masts.
B) become economically self-sufficient as soon as possible.
C) furnish ships, seamen, and trade to bolster the strength of the Royal Navy.
D) provide a market for British manufactured goods.
E) refrain from exporting woolen cloth.
Question
Under the mercantilist system,the British government reserved the right to do all of the following regarding the American colonies except

A) prevent the colonies from developing militias.
B) restrict the passage of lax bankruptcy laws.
C) nullify any colonial legislation deemed bad for the mercantilist system.
D) restrain the colonies from printing paper currency.
E) enumerate products that must be shipped to Britain.
Question
The British Crown's royal veto of colonial legislation

A) was used frequently to overturn laws passed in colonial assemblies.
B) prohibited colonists from conducting the slave trade.
C) was what finally provoked the War of Independence.
D) was used sparingly by the British Parliament.
E) was opposed by many members of the British Parliament.
Question
Battle of Lexington and Concord
Question
The American colonial exponents of republicanism argued that a just society depends on

A) a powerful central government.
B) a weak army.
C) a strong aristocratic tradition.
D) support for hierarchical institutions.
E) a willingness to subordinate private interests to the common good.
Question
Not one of the original thirteen colonies except ____ was formally planted by the British government.

A) Virginia
B) Maryland
C) South Carolina
D) Georgia
E) Massachusetts
Question
The British Parliament enacted currency legislation that was intended primarily to benefit

A) Virginia tobacco planters.
B) British merchants.
C) New England merchants.
D) backwoods farmers.
E) the Crown.
Question
The first Navigation Laws were designed to

A) help colonists get the best possible price for their trade goods.
B) eliminate Dutch shippers from the American carrying trade.
C) foster a colonial economy that would offer healthy competition with Britain's.
D) encourage agricultural experimentation in the colonies.
E) support the mapping of the Atlantic trade routes.
Question
Republicans looked to the models of the ____ for examples of a just society.

A) Egyptians
B) Greeks and Romans
C) Middle Ages
D) Renaissance
E) Enlightenment
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
British East India Company
Question
When it came to the Revolution,it could be said that the American colonists were

A) eager revolutionaries.
B) up until the end wanting more than the "rights of Englishmen."
C) little concerned about economics.
D) clearly opposed to tightening commercial bonds to the British.
E) reluctant revolutionaries.
Question
Identify the statement that is false.

A) Royal titles were unknown in the American colonies.
B) Property ownership and political participation were relatively accessible.
C) The Americans were dependent on the British officials in London to run their affairs.
D) Republican and Whig ideas predisposed the Americans to be more aware of threats to their rights.
E) Distance weakens authority, great distance weakens authority greatly.
Question
Mercantilists believed that

A) a mother country needed to import more goods than it exported.
B) power came from a small colonial empire.
C) the mother country produced raw materials and colonies produced the finished product.
D) a country's economic wealth could be measured by the amount of gold and silver in its treasury.
E) colonies drained a country of its resources.
Question
Despite the benefits of the mercantile system,the American colonists disliked it because it

A) forced the South into a one-crop economy.
B) favored the northern over the southern colonies.
C) forced economic initiative on the colonists.
D) made them feel used and kept them in a state of perpetual economic adolescence.
E) forced them to sell their products to other countries at a reduced price.
Question
Republican belief held that the stability of society and the authority of the government

A) rested with the legislature.
B) depended on a strong hierarchical culture.
C) rested with a strong monarchy.
D) rested on an interdependence of all citizens.
E) depended on the virtue of its citizenry.
Question
The founding of the American colonies by the British was

A) accomplished in a well-planned fashion.
B) based on the high-minded aspirations of groups such as the Puritans and the Quakers.
C) undertaken by the government in every case.
D) undertaken in a haphazard manner.
E) rarely undertaken by trading companies or religious groups.
Question
The British Parliament passed the Stamp Act to

A) raise money to support new military forces needed for colonial defense.
B) punish the American colonists.
C) reduce the number of printed documents in America.
D) enable tax collectors to become wealthy.
E) raise taxes to a higher level than in Britain.
Question
Arrange these events in chronological order: (A)Boston Massacre,(B)Townshend Acts,(C)Tea Act,and (D)Intolerable Acts.

A) A, B, C, D
B) D, B, C, A
C) C, B, D, A
D) B, A, C, D
E) A, C, D, B
Question
In some ways,the Navigation Laws and mercantilist system were a burden to certain colonists because

A) northern merchants derived greater benefit from the system than did southern planters.
B) those colonists were heavily taxed to help provide financing for the Royal Navy, which protected colonial and British trade.
C) they stifled economic initiative.
D) Britain had the only European empire based on mercantilist principles.
E) they gave greater benefits to slaveholders.
Question
Match each act below with the correct description. <strong>Match each act below with the correct description.  </strong> A) A-3, B-2, C-l B) A-1, B-4, C-3 C) A-1, B-4, C-2 D) A-4, B-1, C-2 E) A-2, B-1, C-4 <div style=padding-top: 35px>

A) A-3, B-2, C-l
B) A-1, B-4, C-3
C) A-1, B-4, C-2
D) A-4, B-1, C-2
E) A-2, B-1, C-4
Question
The Quartering Act required that colonists

A) pay one quarter of their income to the British crown.
B) provide housing and food for British troops.
C) ship all of their export goods through England.
D) try those accused of theft in admiralty courts.
E) None of these
Question
The first law ever passed by Parliament for raising tax revenues in the colonies for the crown was the

A) Stamp Act.
B) Declaratory Act.
C) Townshend Acts.
D) Quartering Act.
E) Sugar Act.
Question
When colonists shouted "No taxation without representation," they were denying Parliament's power to

A) legislate for the colonies in any matter whatsoever.
B) levy revenue-raising taxes on the colonies.
C) enforce the old Navigation Laws.
D) regulate trade in the empire.
E) choose colonial legislators who would pass taxes.
Question
Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A)Sugar Act,(B)Declaratory Act,(C)Stamp Act,and (D)repeal of the Stamp Act.

A) A, C, D, B
B) C, A, D, B
C) C, B, A, D
D) B, A, C, D
E) A, B, D, C
Question
All of the following were direct benefits reaped by the Americans from the mercantile system of Britain except

A) British allowed the Americans to freely trade with other countries and compete on the open market.
B) London paid high prices for ship parts to American producers.
C) Virginia tobacco planters enjoyed a monopoly in the British market.
D) protection of the world's mightiest navy and army without a penny of cost.
E) some British merchants were not allowed to compete with the American colonial merchants.
Question
As a result of American opposition to the Townshend Acts

A) British officials sent regiments of troops to Boston to restore law and order.
B) the port of Boston was closed.
C) Americans killed several British soldiers in the Boston Massacre.
D) Parliament repealed all of the taxes levied under this legislation.
E) Prime Minister Townshend was forced to resign.
Question
Unlike the ____ Act,the ____ Act and the ____ Act were both indirect taxes on trade goods arriving in American ports.

A) Townshend, Stamp, Sugar
B) Stamp, Sugar, Townshend
C) Stamp, Quartering, Townshend
D) Declaratory, Stamp, Sugar
E) Quartering, Stamp, Sugar
Question
Colonists responded to the hated Stamp Act in all of the following ways except

A) convening a colonial congress to request repeal of the act.
B) boycotting British goods.
C) via violence in several colonial towns.
D) wearing woolen clothes made with colonial textiles vs. British cloth.
E) having colonial legislatures issue a court mandate forbidding the enforcement of the act.
Question
Passage of the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act

A) led many colonists to believe that the British were expanding colonial freedom.
B) convinced many colonists that the British were trying to take away their historic liberty.
C) resulted in fewer laws being passed by Parliament regarding the colonies.
D) exemplified to many colonists the difference between legislation and taxation.
E) required action by each colonial legislature.
Question
Virtual representation meant that

A) almost all British subjects were represented in Parliament.
B) every member of Parliament represented all British subjects everywhere.
C) colonists could elect their own representatives to Parliament.
D) Parliament could pass virtually all types of legislation except taxes.
E) each member of Parliament represented only people in his district.
Question
The colonists took the Townshend Acts less seriously than the Stamp Act because

A) they saw the futility of resistance.
B) smuggling was nearly impossible.
C) it was a direct tax.
D) the items taxed were rarely used.
E) they were light and indirect.
Question
Match each individual on the left with the correct description. <strong>Match each individual on the left with the correct description.  </strong> A) A-4, B-3, C-2 B) A-3, B-4, C-1 C) A-2, B-4, C-2 D) A-2, B-1, C-3 E) A-4, B-1, C-2 <div style=padding-top: 35px>

A) A-4, B-3, C-2
B) A-3, B-4, C-1
C) A-2, B-4, C-2
D) A-2, B-1, C-3
E) A-4, B-1, C-2
Question
Colonists objected to the Stamp Act because

A) it was a very expensive tax.
B) they believed it could not be repealed.
C) Parliament passed the tax, not the colonists.
D) they opposed all taxes.
E) they wanted their independence.
Question
Colonists responded to Grenville's various acts in all of the following ways except

A) they considered the Stamp and other acts as a sign of fiscal aggression.
B) they protested paying any duties required by the acts in an effort to force their repeal.
C) they rejected the need to fund a British army in the colonies.
D) they marched past Grenville's home and threatened to burn him in effigy.
E) they feared the real reason for a British army was to keep colonists in line.
Question
Women supported protests against the Stamp Act in all of the following ways except

A) assembling in public to hold spinning bees.
B) making homespun cloth to replace British textiles.
C) boycotting consumer goods imported from England.
D) signing petitions.
E) cooking lamb chops for their families.
Question
A new relationship between Britain and its American colonies was initiated in 1763 when ____ assumed charge of colonial policy.

A) Charles Townshend
B) George Grenville
C) Lord North
D) William Pitt
E) King George III
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Deck 7: The Road to Revolution,1763-1775
1
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Marquis de Lafayette
Student answers will vary.
2
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Samuel Adams
Student answers will vary.
3
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
mercantilism
Student answers will vary.
4
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
boycott
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5
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Benjamin Franklin
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6
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
internal/external taxation
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7
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
John Hancock
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8
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
George Grenville
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9
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Lord North
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10
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
King George III
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11
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Thomas Hutchinson
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12
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Adam Smith
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13
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Edmund Burke
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14
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Abigail Adams
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15
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Charles Townshend
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16
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Crispus Attucks
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17
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"No taxation without representation"
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18
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
nonimportation agreement
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19
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
John Adams
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20
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"virtual" representation
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21
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Townshend Acts
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22
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Hessians
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23
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
First Continental Congress
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24
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Navigation Acts
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25
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
admiralty courts
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26
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
The Association
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27
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Boston Massacre
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28
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Declaratory Act
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29
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Boston Tea Party
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30
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Board of Trade
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31
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Quartering Act
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32
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Quebec Act
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33
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Stamp Act Congress
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34
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sons of Liberty & Daughters of Liberty
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35
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"enumerated" products
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36
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
committees of correspondence
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37
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Loyalists
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38
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Intolerable Acts
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39
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sugar Act
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40
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Stamp Act
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41
The radical whigs feared

A) too much democracy.
B) a written constitution.
C) the arbitrary power of the monarchy.
D) a too powerful parliament.
E) republicanism.
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42
In a broad sense,America was

A) a revolutionary force from the day of its discovery by Europeans.
B) a place that nurtured a love for Britain.
C) completely dependent on Britain for economic support.
D) a place where no new ideas took shape.
E) essentially a conservative society.
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43
Before 1763,the Navigation Laws

A) were enforced heavily in the American colonies and were very effective.
B) hurt Great Britain more than the American colonies.
C) were a great burden to only India.
D) discouraged smuggling by American colonial merchants.
E) were only loosely enforced in the American colonies.
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44
Change in colonial policy by the British government that helped precipitate the American Revolution involved

A) removing British troops from American soil.
B) beginning a war with Spain.
C) removing the majority of the British navy from American waters.
D) compelling the American colonists to shoulder some of the financial costs of the empire.
E) allying with the French.
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Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Under mercantilist doctrine,the American colonies were expected to do all of the following except

A) supply Britain with products such as tobacco, sugar and ships' masts.
B) become economically self-sufficient as soon as possible.
C) furnish ships, seamen, and trade to bolster the strength of the Royal Navy.
D) provide a market for British manufactured goods.
E) refrain from exporting woolen cloth.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Under the mercantilist system,the British government reserved the right to do all of the following regarding the American colonies except

A) prevent the colonies from developing militias.
B) restrict the passage of lax bankruptcy laws.
C) nullify any colonial legislation deemed bad for the mercantilist system.
D) restrain the colonies from printing paper currency.
E) enumerate products that must be shipped to Britain.
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Unlock Deck
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47
The British Crown's royal veto of colonial legislation

A) was used frequently to overturn laws passed in colonial assemblies.
B) prohibited colonists from conducting the slave trade.
C) was what finally provoked the War of Independence.
D) was used sparingly by the British Parliament.
E) was opposed by many members of the British Parliament.
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48
Battle of Lexington and Concord
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49
The American colonial exponents of republicanism argued that a just society depends on

A) a powerful central government.
B) a weak army.
C) a strong aristocratic tradition.
D) support for hierarchical institutions.
E) a willingness to subordinate private interests to the common good.
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Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Not one of the original thirteen colonies except ____ was formally planted by the British government.

A) Virginia
B) Maryland
C) South Carolina
D) Georgia
E) Massachusetts
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Unlock Deck
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51
The British Parliament enacted currency legislation that was intended primarily to benefit

A) Virginia tobacco planters.
B) British merchants.
C) New England merchants.
D) backwoods farmers.
E) the Crown.
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Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
The first Navigation Laws were designed to

A) help colonists get the best possible price for their trade goods.
B) eliminate Dutch shippers from the American carrying trade.
C) foster a colonial economy that would offer healthy competition with Britain's.
D) encourage agricultural experimentation in the colonies.
E) support the mapping of the Atlantic trade routes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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53
Republicans looked to the models of the ____ for examples of a just society.

A) Egyptians
B) Greeks and Romans
C) Middle Ages
D) Renaissance
E) Enlightenment
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54
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
British East India Company
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55
When it came to the Revolution,it could be said that the American colonists were

A) eager revolutionaries.
B) up until the end wanting more than the "rights of Englishmen."
C) little concerned about economics.
D) clearly opposed to tightening commercial bonds to the British.
E) reluctant revolutionaries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Identify the statement that is false.

A) Royal titles were unknown in the American colonies.
B) Property ownership and political participation were relatively accessible.
C) The Americans were dependent on the British officials in London to run their affairs.
D) Republican and Whig ideas predisposed the Americans to be more aware of threats to their rights.
E) Distance weakens authority, great distance weakens authority greatly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Mercantilists believed that

A) a mother country needed to import more goods than it exported.
B) power came from a small colonial empire.
C) the mother country produced raw materials and colonies produced the finished product.
D) a country's economic wealth could be measured by the amount of gold and silver in its treasury.
E) colonies drained a country of its resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Despite the benefits of the mercantile system,the American colonists disliked it because it

A) forced the South into a one-crop economy.
B) favored the northern over the southern colonies.
C) forced economic initiative on the colonists.
D) made them feel used and kept them in a state of perpetual economic adolescence.
E) forced them to sell their products to other countries at a reduced price.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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59
Republican belief held that the stability of society and the authority of the government

A) rested with the legislature.
B) depended on a strong hierarchical culture.
C) rested with a strong monarchy.
D) rested on an interdependence of all citizens.
E) depended on the virtue of its citizenry.
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60
The founding of the American colonies by the British was

A) accomplished in a well-planned fashion.
B) based on the high-minded aspirations of groups such as the Puritans and the Quakers.
C) undertaken by the government in every case.
D) undertaken in a haphazard manner.
E) rarely undertaken by trading companies or religious groups.
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61
The British Parliament passed the Stamp Act to

A) raise money to support new military forces needed for colonial defense.
B) punish the American colonists.
C) reduce the number of printed documents in America.
D) enable tax collectors to become wealthy.
E) raise taxes to a higher level than in Britain.
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62
Arrange these events in chronological order: (A)Boston Massacre,(B)Townshend Acts,(C)Tea Act,and (D)Intolerable Acts.

A) A, B, C, D
B) D, B, C, A
C) C, B, D, A
D) B, A, C, D
E) A, C, D, B
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63
In some ways,the Navigation Laws and mercantilist system were a burden to certain colonists because

A) northern merchants derived greater benefit from the system than did southern planters.
B) those colonists were heavily taxed to help provide financing for the Royal Navy, which protected colonial and British trade.
C) they stifled economic initiative.
D) Britain had the only European empire based on mercantilist principles.
E) they gave greater benefits to slaveholders.
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64
Match each act below with the correct description. <strong>Match each act below with the correct description.  </strong> A) A-3, B-2, C-l B) A-1, B-4, C-3 C) A-1, B-4, C-2 D) A-4, B-1, C-2 E) A-2, B-1, C-4

A) A-3, B-2, C-l
B) A-1, B-4, C-3
C) A-1, B-4, C-2
D) A-4, B-1, C-2
E) A-2, B-1, C-4
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65
The Quartering Act required that colonists

A) pay one quarter of their income to the British crown.
B) provide housing and food for British troops.
C) ship all of their export goods through England.
D) try those accused of theft in admiralty courts.
E) None of these
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66
The first law ever passed by Parliament for raising tax revenues in the colonies for the crown was the

A) Stamp Act.
B) Declaratory Act.
C) Townshend Acts.
D) Quartering Act.
E) Sugar Act.
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67
When colonists shouted "No taxation without representation," they were denying Parliament's power to

A) legislate for the colonies in any matter whatsoever.
B) levy revenue-raising taxes on the colonies.
C) enforce the old Navigation Laws.
D) regulate trade in the empire.
E) choose colonial legislators who would pass taxes.
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68
Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A)Sugar Act,(B)Declaratory Act,(C)Stamp Act,and (D)repeal of the Stamp Act.

A) A, C, D, B
B) C, A, D, B
C) C, B, A, D
D) B, A, C, D
E) A, B, D, C
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69
All of the following were direct benefits reaped by the Americans from the mercantile system of Britain except

A) British allowed the Americans to freely trade with other countries and compete on the open market.
B) London paid high prices for ship parts to American producers.
C) Virginia tobacco planters enjoyed a monopoly in the British market.
D) protection of the world's mightiest navy and army without a penny of cost.
E) some British merchants were not allowed to compete with the American colonial merchants.
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70
As a result of American opposition to the Townshend Acts

A) British officials sent regiments of troops to Boston to restore law and order.
B) the port of Boston was closed.
C) Americans killed several British soldiers in the Boston Massacre.
D) Parliament repealed all of the taxes levied under this legislation.
E) Prime Minister Townshend was forced to resign.
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71
Unlike the ____ Act,the ____ Act and the ____ Act were both indirect taxes on trade goods arriving in American ports.

A) Townshend, Stamp, Sugar
B) Stamp, Sugar, Townshend
C) Stamp, Quartering, Townshend
D) Declaratory, Stamp, Sugar
E) Quartering, Stamp, Sugar
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72
Colonists responded to the hated Stamp Act in all of the following ways except

A) convening a colonial congress to request repeal of the act.
B) boycotting British goods.
C) via violence in several colonial towns.
D) wearing woolen clothes made with colonial textiles vs. British cloth.
E) having colonial legislatures issue a court mandate forbidding the enforcement of the act.
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73
Passage of the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act

A) led many colonists to believe that the British were expanding colonial freedom.
B) convinced many colonists that the British were trying to take away their historic liberty.
C) resulted in fewer laws being passed by Parliament regarding the colonies.
D) exemplified to many colonists the difference between legislation and taxation.
E) required action by each colonial legislature.
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74
Virtual representation meant that

A) almost all British subjects were represented in Parliament.
B) every member of Parliament represented all British subjects everywhere.
C) colonists could elect their own representatives to Parliament.
D) Parliament could pass virtually all types of legislation except taxes.
E) each member of Parliament represented only people in his district.
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75
The colonists took the Townshend Acts less seriously than the Stamp Act because

A) they saw the futility of resistance.
B) smuggling was nearly impossible.
C) it was a direct tax.
D) the items taxed were rarely used.
E) they were light and indirect.
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76
Match each individual on the left with the correct description. <strong>Match each individual on the left with the correct description.  </strong> A) A-4, B-3, C-2 B) A-3, B-4, C-1 C) A-2, B-4, C-2 D) A-2, B-1, C-3 E) A-4, B-1, C-2

A) A-4, B-3, C-2
B) A-3, B-4, C-1
C) A-2, B-4, C-2
D) A-2, B-1, C-3
E) A-4, B-1, C-2
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77
Colonists objected to the Stamp Act because

A) it was a very expensive tax.
B) they believed it could not be repealed.
C) Parliament passed the tax, not the colonists.
D) they opposed all taxes.
E) they wanted their independence.
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78
Colonists responded to Grenville's various acts in all of the following ways except

A) they considered the Stamp and other acts as a sign of fiscal aggression.
B) they protested paying any duties required by the acts in an effort to force their repeal.
C) they rejected the need to fund a British army in the colonies.
D) they marched past Grenville's home and threatened to burn him in effigy.
E) they feared the real reason for a British army was to keep colonists in line.
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79
Women supported protests against the Stamp Act in all of the following ways except

A) assembling in public to hold spinning bees.
B) making homespun cloth to replace British textiles.
C) boycotting consumer goods imported from England.
D) signing petitions.
E) cooking lamb chops for their families.
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80
A new relationship between Britain and its American colonies was initiated in 1763 when ____ assumed charge of colonial policy.

A) Charles Townshend
B) George Grenville
C) Lord North
D) William Pitt
E) King George III
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 122 flashcards in this deck.