Deck 2: Transplantations and Borderland

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Question
Between 1608 and 1609, Captain John Smith strengthened the Jamestown settlement by

A)improving relations with the local Indians.
B)dividing the decision-making authority among the colonists to improve morale.
C)imposing work and order on the colonists.
D)introducing tobacco to the colonists.
E)importing African slaves to rebuild the fort.
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Question
The Powhatan Indian Pocahontas

A)married Englishman John Smith.
B)was kidnapped by John Rolfe.
C)created an interest in England to "civilize" Indians.
D)was the cause of a war between the Powhatan Indians and Virginian colonists.
E)refused to convert to Christianity.
Question
The "starving time" in Jamestown during the winter of 1609-1610 was partly the result of

A)colonists being kept barricaded in their palisade by local Indians.
B)the extermination of the Indians who used to grow crops.
C)an influx of rats from settlers' ships that ate much of the stored grains.
D)a drought that led to crop failures.
E)the sinking of the colonists' supply ship in the Atlantic.
Question
In London, the initial promoters of Jamestown encouraged colonists to focus on

A)the long-term success of the settlement.
B)building a family-centered community.
C)developing peaceful relations with the Indians in the area.
D)the search for gold.
E)converting the local Indians to Christianity.
Question
Which the following statements regarding Sir William Berkeley is FALSE?

A)He was a dominant political figure in Virginia for more than three decades.
B)He encouraged Virginia to develop westward.
C)His relations with Indians were violent and bloody.
D)He extended the political representation for frontier settlers.
E)He sent explorers across the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Question
Bacon's Rebellion

A)spelled the demise of the Virginia Company.
B)saw the royal governor of Virginia forced to resign.
C)spread throughout several colonies.
D)carried on for several years.
E)was a conflict between eastern and western Virginia.
Question
The first blacks imported to Virginia in 1619

A)were most likely indentured servants.
B)began a rapid stream of African slaves to the British colonies.
C)were preferred to European indentured servants.
D)followed Indians into slavery.
E)arrived as independent landowners.
Question
Seventeenth-century English colonial settlements

A)were essentially business enterprises.
B)were tightly controlled by the English government.
C)were effectively isolated from contact with other nations.
D)were well-planned and generally quite successful from the start.
E)maintained the political and social institutions of England.
Question
When the House of Burgesses was created in Virginia in 1619,

A)it gave settlers the full political control of their colony.
B)land-owning women colonists were allowed to vote.
C)colonists were given a share of local political representation.
D)it put an end to a violent uprising by disgruntled colonists.
E)it recommended that Virginia declare independence from England.
Question
Warfare between Englishmen and Powhatan Indians in Virginia

A)continued without interruption until the early eighteenth century.
B)was first triggered by the kidnapping of Pocahontas.
C)was primarily a result of religious tensions between natives and settlers.
D)was uncommon until the early eighteenth century.
E)included an Indian attack on Jamestown which killed hundreds of colonists.
Question
Which of the following statements best characterizes the first years of Jamestown's existence?

A)A majority of its colonists enjoyed significant economic success.
B)The settlement was often assaulted by Spanish invaders.
C)The settlement was notable for its peaceful relations with local Indians.
D)The settlement was notable for its toleration of political freedom.
E)The settlement survived despite an enormous loss of life.
Question
The Virginia Company developed the "headright" system to

A)attract new settlers to the colony.
B)discourage poor people from moving to the colony.
C)require families to migrate together.
D)raise revenue from the sale of land.
E)cause conflict among the neighboring Indian tribes.
Question
In the seventeenth century, English colonists recognized that corn

A)could only be grown in the New World.
B)was their most financially valuable crop.
C)produced yields greater than any of the European grains.
D)was a particularly difficult crop to cultivate.
E)could not be grown in the swampy land around Jamestown.
Question
By 1670, political representation for colonists in Virginia

A)saw elections take place every two years.
B)was open to all white men over the age of twenty-one.
C)had grown more restrictive.
D)favored western counties over eastern counties.
E)expanded to include landholding black men.
Question
The cultivation of tobacco around Jamestown resulted in all the following EXCEPT

A)the rapid wearing out of the soil.
B)the search for new sources of labor.
C)rising prosperity for the colony.
D)improved relations with the local Indians.
E)the expansion of European settlement into the interior.
Question
In the first seventeen years of Virginia's existence,

A)more than 20,000 white settlers came to Jamestown.
B)half of the white settlers were Puritans.
C)the colony moved from royal control to an independent government.
D)nearly eighty percent of the white settlers died.
E)the Virginia Company saw tremendous profits.
Question
The site chosen for the Jamestown settlement included all of the following EXCEPT

A)it was low and swampy and subject to outbreaks of malaria.
B)it was inland so as to offer security from natives.
C)it bordered the territories of powerful Indian tribes.
D)it was surrounded by thick woods.
E)it was inaccessible by ship.
Question
In which area of technology were Indians more advanced than the Virginia colonists?

A)agriculture
B)ocean-going vessels
C)weaponry
D)tools
E)animal husbandry
Question
The first important economic boom in Jamestown resulted from

A)the discovery of gold and silver.
B)fur trade with the Indians.
C)the production of tobacco.
D)a development of fisheries and lumber.
E)the cultivation of cotton.
Question
In its beginning, the Maryland colony

A)experienced tremendous warfare with local Indians.
B)allowed no Protestant settlers.
C)was a refuge for English Catholics.
D)was led by Captain John Smith.
E)experienced considerable conflict with nearby French settlers.
Question
In the 1640s, during the English Civil War, the Cavaliers were

A)the forces of Parliament, who were largely Puritans.
B)supporters of King Charles I.
C)Scottish and Irish gentry desiring to secede from England.
D)both the forces of Parliament and supporters of King Charles I.
E)neither the forces of Parliament nor supporters of King Charles I.
Question
The suppression of Bacon's Rebellion helped spur

A)tobacco production.
B)slavery in Virginia.
C)European investment.
D)the triangular trade.
E)calls for independence from England.
Question
During its first year in North America, the Plymouth colony

A)survived in large part due to assistance from Indians.
B)grew rich from the surrounding productive farmlands.
C)carried out warfare that wiped out much of the local Indian population.
D)saw two-thirds of its population die.
E)established critically important trade routes with Jamestown to the south.
Question
In 1620, the Puritan Pilgrims who came to North America

A)intended to settle at Cape Cod.
B)came over the objections of the Virginia colony.
C)were seeking to escape military service in England.
D)were Christian missionaries.
E)enjoyed a particularly mild winter their first year.
Question
The Massachusetts Bay Puritans

A)lived as grim and joyless people.
B)took vows of poverty as evidence of their commitment to their faith.
C)created a colonial "theocracy."
D)fought with the surrounding Indians almost immediately.
E)introduced freedom of worship to the New World.
Question
Compared to King James I, King Charles I's treatment of Puritans

A)was more tolerant.
B)was more hostile.
C)was little different.
D)was more likely to advance Puritan thought in England.
E)was less likely to involve imprisonment for religious beliefs.
Question
In 1608, Puritan separatists who wished to leave England

A)began to seek refuge in Virginia.
B)emigrated quietly to northern France.
C)were encouraged by the Church of England to emigrate.
D)chartered a colony in Plymouth.
E)could not legally do so.
Question
The proprietors who founded the Carolina colony

A)guaranteed religious freedom to all Christians.
B)rejected the headright system.
C)ruled the colony with dictatorial powers.
D)quickly made it a financial success.
E)banned the importation of indentured servants.
Question
In 1638, Anne Hutchinson was deported from the Massachusetts colony because she

A)was accused of practicing witchcraft.
B)argued that only the "elect" were entitled to any religious or political authority.
C)challenged the prevailing assumptions of the proper role of women in society.
D)was a single mother who refused to marry.
E)preached against what she called the "Antinomian heresy."
Question
Which New England Puritan could LEAST accurately be described as a religious dissenter?

A)Anne Hutchinson
B)John Winthrop
C)Roger Williams
D)John Wheelwright
E)Thomas Hooker
Question
The Puritan merchants who founded the Massachusetts Bay Company

A)established their capital in Salem.
B)began as a royal colony.
C)were led by Miles Standish.
D)were given their colonial charter by Charles II.
E)carried out the largest single migration in the seventeenth century.
Question
One reason Roger Williams was deported from the Massachusetts colony was he

A)was a confirmed Separatist.
B)argued that the colony should maintain allegiance to the Church of England.
C)said the land occupied by the colonists belonged to the Indians.
D)attempted to take over the leadership of the colony.
E)advocated the principle of plural marriage.
Question
The Fundamental Constitution for the Carolina colony

A)sought to create a society of general equality among Englishmen.
B)was influenced by the English philosopher John Locke.
C)initially did not include slavery.
D)made no provisions for a colonial parliament.
E)All the answers are correct.
Question
Thomas Hooker is to be associated with establishing the colony of

A)Rhode Island.
B)Vermont.
C)New Hampshire.
D)Connecticut.
E)Maine.
Question
The Puritan founders in Massachusetts who described their colony as a "shining city upon a hill"

A)felt they were creating a holy community that would be a model for the world.
B)wanted to construct their community on high ground to save it from Indian attacks.
C)wanted to create a community that would be open to all peoples of all faiths.
D)sought to create a community in which all people were treated as equals.
E)wanted to differentiate their community from the materialism and acquisitiveness of New Haven.
Question
The English Restoration began with the reign of

A)James II.
B)Oliver Cromwell.
C)George I.
D)Elizabeth I.
E)Charles II.
Question
In 1637, hostilities broke out between English settlers in the Connecticut Valley and what local Native American tribe?

A)the Seminoles
B)the Powhatans
C)the Sioux
D)the Wampanoags
E)the Pequots
Question
In King Philip's War, Indians made effective use of the relatively new weapon,

A)the flintlock rifle.
B)the matchlock musket.
C)the repeating revolver.
D)the gatling gun.
E)the artillery cannon.
Question
Over time in the seventeenth century, an increasing number of New England Puritans came to view Indian society

A)with condescending admiration.
B)with fear and contempt.
C)as worth preserving.
D)as part of the Godly community.
E)as helpful neighbors and partners in commerce.
Question
When it was established in 1644, the colony of Rhode Island

A)had strong ties to the church in the Massachusetts colony.
B)organized the first fully democratic government in North America.
C)had no ties to the Massachusetts colony.
D)was notable for its religious toleration.
E)banned Jews from emigrating.
Question
Unlike Puritans, the Quakers

A)accepted the concept of predestination.
B)rejected the doctrine of original sin.
C)were not persecuted by the English government.
D)paid their clergy handsomely.
E)All the answers are correct.
Question
What social institution did Europeans in the Caribbean share with their counterparts in North America?

A)town hall meeting
B)House of Burgesses
C)Quakerism
D)religious tolerance
E)slavery
Question
The colony established by people seeking to separate from Pennsylvania was

A)Maryland.
B)New Jersey.
C)Delaware.
D)New York.
E)Kentucky.
Question
William Penn

A)was a man of great wealth who converted to Quakerism.
B)established a moderately successful but never cosmopolitan colony.
C)suppressed the local Indians in Pennsylvania with a strong military presence.
D)never visited Pennsylvania.
E)used unscrupulous and deceptive advertising to attract settlers.
Question
The Glorious Revolution of 1688-1689

A)saw an English king, James II, flee to the European continent.
B)enhanced the influence of Catholicism in England.
C)helped put in place the Dominion of New England.
D)kept the English crown among Englishmen.
E)had no effect on colonial governments.
Question
The New York colony

A)saw its founding proprietors from the Carolina colony.
B)made a commitment to representative assemblies.
C)emerged after a struggle between the English and the Dutch.
D)saw its population grow slowly for its first fifty years.
E)banned slavery from its inception.
Question
The Dominion of New England

A)preserved existing colonial legislative assemblies.
B)was called into being by King Charles II.
C)was limited to what now constitutes New England.
D)declared the Navigation Acts null and void.
E)called for a single royal governor.
Question
Regarding the origins of slavery in the North American English colonies,

A)the practice of using slave labor in England was carried over into the colonies.
B)royal colonies were required by their government to use slaves.
C)English racism prevented blacks and whites from working together on equal terms.
D)many colonies gradually embraced slavery as a solution to their labor troubles.
E)proprietary colonies were required by their charters to use slaves.
Question
In the seventeenth century, English Quakers

A)had a disregard for class or gender distinctions.
B)had no paid clergy.
C)were pacifists.
D)believed all could attain salvation.
E)All the answers are correct.
Question
In colonial North America, the "middle grounds" refers to a region in which

A)no one European or Indian group held a clear dominance.
B)Indian tribes were largely able to keep out European colonists.
C)English colonists quickly became the dominant power.
D)Spanish colonists were long the dominant power.
E)French colonists managed to hold the balance of power.
Question
Originally, the Georgia colony excluded

A)free blacks.
B)slaves.
C)indentured servants.
D)both free blacks and slaves.
E)neither free blacks nor slaves.
Question
The English colonial settlements in the Caribbean

A)concluded it was cheaper to buy new African slaves than to protect those they owned.
B)developed their settlements along the same lines as in the Chesapeake.
C)developed significant economic success through the production of tobacco.
D)had a smaller percentage of slaves than in the North American colonies.
E)were forced to deal with larger native populations than those on the mainland.
Question
The English Parliament enacted the Navigation Acts primarily to benefit

A)colonial American tobacco plantations.
B)British business and merchants.
C)New England merchants.
D)Virginian planters.
E)Business and planters in the British Caribbean.
Question
Which of the following statement regarding the Navigation Acts (1660s) is FALSE?

A)English colonies were closed to all trade except that carried by English ships.
B)Certain colonial products could be exported only to England.
C)All European goods sent to the colonies had to pass through England and were subject to taxes.
D)English colonists could only produce products that were also sold in England.
E)Duties were imposed on the coastal trade among the English colonies.
Question
Which of the following was NOT a restoration colony?

A)Maryland
B)Carolina
C)New York
D)Pennsylvania
E)New Jersey
Question
Leisler's Rebellion took place in

A)Rhode Island.
B)New Jersey.
C)Massachusetts.
D)New York.
E)Connecticut.
Question
By 1700, the Spanish colonies north of Mexico

A)had attracted considerable interest from the Spanish government.
B)were being developed through a string of Catholic missions.
C)added little economic value to the Spanish Empire.
D)contained more than one million Spanish citizens.
E)included the largest Spanish city in the Americas.
Question
Like New York, the New Jersey colony

A)quickly developed a strong local government.
B)had few slaves during its early existence.
C)was characterized by a unified and generally peaceful society.
D)had great ethnic and religious diversity.
E)developed an important class of large landowners.
Question
The development of the Carolina colony was notable in that

A)the colony was able to attract large numbers of settlers from nearby colonies.
B)the northern and southern regions were economically and socially distinct from each other.
C)its economy was grounded in tobacco production.
D)its founders had discouraged the use of slaves.
E)it advocated independence from England well before all other mainland colonies.
Question
Georgia was founded

A)to provide a refuge for Catholics.
B)to create a military barrier against the Spanish.
C)to quickly make money for its investors.
D)by Quaker missionaries.
E)as a haven for religious dissenters.
Question
The Caribbean colonies of England were generally less democratic than the North American colonies of England.
Question
The tobacco culture of Virginia created great pressure for territorial expansion.
Question
Virginia did not become a royal colony until the eve of the American Revolution.
Question
Bacon's Rebellion was undertaken to do away with slavery in Virginia.
Question
The Englishmen who founded Maryland were Puritans, but not Separatists.
Question
Residents of Massachusetts generally had greater freedom of worship than the Puritans had had in England.
Question
John Smith imposed order on the Jamestown settlement, but he thought it was wise not to antagonize local Indians.
Question
Bacon's Rebellion accelerated the development of slavery in Virginia.
Question
The first Africans to arrive in Virginia in 1619 were probably servants rather than slaves.
Question
The survival of Jamestown was largely a result of the English borrowing from the agricultural knowledge of the Indians.
Question
During the middle of the seventeenth century, the right to vote in Virginia was becoming more restricted.
Question
Charles I dissolved Parliament and was later beheaded.
Question
In hunting, Indian canoes compared unfavorably to the larger, more durable English vessels.
Question
James I of England may have believed in the divine right of kings, but he was not particularly harsh in his treatment of Puritans.
Question
The Jamestown settlement was an instant success.
Question
English colonies in the Chesapeake were first and foremost business enterprises.
Question
Like Virginia, Maryland became a center for the cultivation of tobacco.
Question
The founders of Maryland encouraged both Protestants and Catholics to migrate to the colony.
Question
The Caribbean settlements of England were the main source of slaves for the English colonies of North America.
Question
The Mayflower Compact set forth the principles of the Puritan religion.
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Deck 2: Transplantations and Borderland
1
Between 1608 and 1609, Captain John Smith strengthened the Jamestown settlement by

A)improving relations with the local Indians.
B)dividing the decision-making authority among the colonists to improve morale.
C)imposing work and order on the colonists.
D)introducing tobacco to the colonists.
E)importing African slaves to rebuild the fort.
imposing work and order on the colonists.
2
The Powhatan Indian Pocahontas

A)married Englishman John Smith.
B)was kidnapped by John Rolfe.
C)created an interest in England to "civilize" Indians.
D)was the cause of a war between the Powhatan Indians and Virginian colonists.
E)refused to convert to Christianity.
created an interest in England to "civilize" Indians.
3
The "starving time" in Jamestown during the winter of 1609-1610 was partly the result of

A)colonists being kept barricaded in their palisade by local Indians.
B)the extermination of the Indians who used to grow crops.
C)an influx of rats from settlers' ships that ate much of the stored grains.
D)a drought that led to crop failures.
E)the sinking of the colonists' supply ship in the Atlantic.
colonists being kept barricaded in their palisade by local Indians.
4
In London, the initial promoters of Jamestown encouraged colonists to focus on

A)the long-term success of the settlement.
B)building a family-centered community.
C)developing peaceful relations with the Indians in the area.
D)the search for gold.
E)converting the local Indians to Christianity.
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5
Which the following statements regarding Sir William Berkeley is FALSE?

A)He was a dominant political figure in Virginia for more than three decades.
B)He encouraged Virginia to develop westward.
C)His relations with Indians were violent and bloody.
D)He extended the political representation for frontier settlers.
E)He sent explorers across the Blue Ridge Mountains.
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6
Bacon's Rebellion

A)spelled the demise of the Virginia Company.
B)saw the royal governor of Virginia forced to resign.
C)spread throughout several colonies.
D)carried on for several years.
E)was a conflict between eastern and western Virginia.
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7
The first blacks imported to Virginia in 1619

A)were most likely indentured servants.
B)began a rapid stream of African slaves to the British colonies.
C)were preferred to European indentured servants.
D)followed Indians into slavery.
E)arrived as independent landowners.
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Unlock for access to all 130 flashcards in this deck.
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8
Seventeenth-century English colonial settlements

A)were essentially business enterprises.
B)were tightly controlled by the English government.
C)were effectively isolated from contact with other nations.
D)were well-planned and generally quite successful from the start.
E)maintained the political and social institutions of England.
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Unlock for access to all 130 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
9
When the House of Burgesses was created in Virginia in 1619,

A)it gave settlers the full political control of their colony.
B)land-owning women colonists were allowed to vote.
C)colonists were given a share of local political representation.
D)it put an end to a violent uprising by disgruntled colonists.
E)it recommended that Virginia declare independence from England.
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10
Warfare between Englishmen and Powhatan Indians in Virginia

A)continued without interruption until the early eighteenth century.
B)was first triggered by the kidnapping of Pocahontas.
C)was primarily a result of religious tensions between natives and settlers.
D)was uncommon until the early eighteenth century.
E)included an Indian attack on Jamestown which killed hundreds of colonists.
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11
Which of the following statements best characterizes the first years of Jamestown's existence?

A)A majority of its colonists enjoyed significant economic success.
B)The settlement was often assaulted by Spanish invaders.
C)The settlement was notable for its peaceful relations with local Indians.
D)The settlement was notable for its toleration of political freedom.
E)The settlement survived despite an enormous loss of life.
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12
The Virginia Company developed the "headright" system to

A)attract new settlers to the colony.
B)discourage poor people from moving to the colony.
C)require families to migrate together.
D)raise revenue from the sale of land.
E)cause conflict among the neighboring Indian tribes.
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k this deck
13
In the seventeenth century, English colonists recognized that corn

A)could only be grown in the New World.
B)was their most financially valuable crop.
C)produced yields greater than any of the European grains.
D)was a particularly difficult crop to cultivate.
E)could not be grown in the swampy land around Jamestown.
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14
By 1670, political representation for colonists in Virginia

A)saw elections take place every two years.
B)was open to all white men over the age of twenty-one.
C)had grown more restrictive.
D)favored western counties over eastern counties.
E)expanded to include landholding black men.
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15
The cultivation of tobacco around Jamestown resulted in all the following EXCEPT

A)the rapid wearing out of the soil.
B)the search for new sources of labor.
C)rising prosperity for the colony.
D)improved relations with the local Indians.
E)the expansion of European settlement into the interior.
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16
In the first seventeen years of Virginia's existence,

A)more than 20,000 white settlers came to Jamestown.
B)half of the white settlers were Puritans.
C)the colony moved from royal control to an independent government.
D)nearly eighty percent of the white settlers died.
E)the Virginia Company saw tremendous profits.
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17
The site chosen for the Jamestown settlement included all of the following EXCEPT

A)it was low and swampy and subject to outbreaks of malaria.
B)it was inland so as to offer security from natives.
C)it bordered the territories of powerful Indian tribes.
D)it was surrounded by thick woods.
E)it was inaccessible by ship.
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18
In which area of technology were Indians more advanced than the Virginia colonists?

A)agriculture
B)ocean-going vessels
C)weaponry
D)tools
E)animal husbandry
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19
The first important economic boom in Jamestown resulted from

A)the discovery of gold and silver.
B)fur trade with the Indians.
C)the production of tobacco.
D)a development of fisheries and lumber.
E)the cultivation of cotton.
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20
In its beginning, the Maryland colony

A)experienced tremendous warfare with local Indians.
B)allowed no Protestant settlers.
C)was a refuge for English Catholics.
D)was led by Captain John Smith.
E)experienced considerable conflict with nearby French settlers.
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21
In the 1640s, during the English Civil War, the Cavaliers were

A)the forces of Parliament, who were largely Puritans.
B)supporters of King Charles I.
C)Scottish and Irish gentry desiring to secede from England.
D)both the forces of Parliament and supporters of King Charles I.
E)neither the forces of Parliament nor supporters of King Charles I.
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22
The suppression of Bacon's Rebellion helped spur

A)tobacco production.
B)slavery in Virginia.
C)European investment.
D)the triangular trade.
E)calls for independence from England.
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23
During its first year in North America, the Plymouth colony

A)survived in large part due to assistance from Indians.
B)grew rich from the surrounding productive farmlands.
C)carried out warfare that wiped out much of the local Indian population.
D)saw two-thirds of its population die.
E)established critically important trade routes with Jamestown to the south.
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k this deck
24
In 1620, the Puritan Pilgrims who came to North America

A)intended to settle at Cape Cod.
B)came over the objections of the Virginia colony.
C)were seeking to escape military service in England.
D)were Christian missionaries.
E)enjoyed a particularly mild winter their first year.
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k this deck
25
The Massachusetts Bay Puritans

A)lived as grim and joyless people.
B)took vows of poverty as evidence of their commitment to their faith.
C)created a colonial "theocracy."
D)fought with the surrounding Indians almost immediately.
E)introduced freedom of worship to the New World.
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Unlock for access to all 130 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Compared to King James I, King Charles I's treatment of Puritans

A)was more tolerant.
B)was more hostile.
C)was little different.
D)was more likely to advance Puritan thought in England.
E)was less likely to involve imprisonment for religious beliefs.
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Unlock for access to all 130 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In 1608, Puritan separatists who wished to leave England

A)began to seek refuge in Virginia.
B)emigrated quietly to northern France.
C)were encouraged by the Church of England to emigrate.
D)chartered a colony in Plymouth.
E)could not legally do so.
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28
The proprietors who founded the Carolina colony

A)guaranteed religious freedom to all Christians.
B)rejected the headright system.
C)ruled the colony with dictatorial powers.
D)quickly made it a financial success.
E)banned the importation of indentured servants.
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29
In 1638, Anne Hutchinson was deported from the Massachusetts colony because she

A)was accused of practicing witchcraft.
B)argued that only the "elect" were entitled to any religious or political authority.
C)challenged the prevailing assumptions of the proper role of women in society.
D)was a single mother who refused to marry.
E)preached against what she called the "Antinomian heresy."
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30
Which New England Puritan could LEAST accurately be described as a religious dissenter?

A)Anne Hutchinson
B)John Winthrop
C)Roger Williams
D)John Wheelwright
E)Thomas Hooker
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31
The Puritan merchants who founded the Massachusetts Bay Company

A)established their capital in Salem.
B)began as a royal colony.
C)were led by Miles Standish.
D)were given their colonial charter by Charles II.
E)carried out the largest single migration in the seventeenth century.
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32
One reason Roger Williams was deported from the Massachusetts colony was he

A)was a confirmed Separatist.
B)argued that the colony should maintain allegiance to the Church of England.
C)said the land occupied by the colonists belonged to the Indians.
D)attempted to take over the leadership of the colony.
E)advocated the principle of plural marriage.
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33
The Fundamental Constitution for the Carolina colony

A)sought to create a society of general equality among Englishmen.
B)was influenced by the English philosopher John Locke.
C)initially did not include slavery.
D)made no provisions for a colonial parliament.
E)All the answers are correct.
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34
Thomas Hooker is to be associated with establishing the colony of

A)Rhode Island.
B)Vermont.
C)New Hampshire.
D)Connecticut.
E)Maine.
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35
The Puritan founders in Massachusetts who described their colony as a "shining city upon a hill"

A)felt they were creating a holy community that would be a model for the world.
B)wanted to construct their community on high ground to save it from Indian attacks.
C)wanted to create a community that would be open to all peoples of all faiths.
D)sought to create a community in which all people were treated as equals.
E)wanted to differentiate their community from the materialism and acquisitiveness of New Haven.
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36
The English Restoration began with the reign of

A)James II.
B)Oliver Cromwell.
C)George I.
D)Elizabeth I.
E)Charles II.
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37
In 1637, hostilities broke out between English settlers in the Connecticut Valley and what local Native American tribe?

A)the Seminoles
B)the Powhatans
C)the Sioux
D)the Wampanoags
E)the Pequots
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38
In King Philip's War, Indians made effective use of the relatively new weapon,

A)the flintlock rifle.
B)the matchlock musket.
C)the repeating revolver.
D)the gatling gun.
E)the artillery cannon.
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39
Over time in the seventeenth century, an increasing number of New England Puritans came to view Indian society

A)with condescending admiration.
B)with fear and contempt.
C)as worth preserving.
D)as part of the Godly community.
E)as helpful neighbors and partners in commerce.
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40
When it was established in 1644, the colony of Rhode Island

A)had strong ties to the church in the Massachusetts colony.
B)organized the first fully democratic government in North America.
C)had no ties to the Massachusetts colony.
D)was notable for its religious toleration.
E)banned Jews from emigrating.
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41
Unlike Puritans, the Quakers

A)accepted the concept of predestination.
B)rejected the doctrine of original sin.
C)were not persecuted by the English government.
D)paid their clergy handsomely.
E)All the answers are correct.
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42
What social institution did Europeans in the Caribbean share with their counterparts in North America?

A)town hall meeting
B)House of Burgesses
C)Quakerism
D)religious tolerance
E)slavery
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43
The colony established by people seeking to separate from Pennsylvania was

A)Maryland.
B)New Jersey.
C)Delaware.
D)New York.
E)Kentucky.
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44
William Penn

A)was a man of great wealth who converted to Quakerism.
B)established a moderately successful but never cosmopolitan colony.
C)suppressed the local Indians in Pennsylvania with a strong military presence.
D)never visited Pennsylvania.
E)used unscrupulous and deceptive advertising to attract settlers.
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45
The Glorious Revolution of 1688-1689

A)saw an English king, James II, flee to the European continent.
B)enhanced the influence of Catholicism in England.
C)helped put in place the Dominion of New England.
D)kept the English crown among Englishmen.
E)had no effect on colonial governments.
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46
The New York colony

A)saw its founding proprietors from the Carolina colony.
B)made a commitment to representative assemblies.
C)emerged after a struggle between the English and the Dutch.
D)saw its population grow slowly for its first fifty years.
E)banned slavery from its inception.
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47
The Dominion of New England

A)preserved existing colonial legislative assemblies.
B)was called into being by King Charles II.
C)was limited to what now constitutes New England.
D)declared the Navigation Acts null and void.
E)called for a single royal governor.
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48
Regarding the origins of slavery in the North American English colonies,

A)the practice of using slave labor in England was carried over into the colonies.
B)royal colonies were required by their government to use slaves.
C)English racism prevented blacks and whites from working together on equal terms.
D)many colonies gradually embraced slavery as a solution to their labor troubles.
E)proprietary colonies were required by their charters to use slaves.
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49
In the seventeenth century, English Quakers

A)had a disregard for class or gender distinctions.
B)had no paid clergy.
C)were pacifists.
D)believed all could attain salvation.
E)All the answers are correct.
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50
In colonial North America, the "middle grounds" refers to a region in which

A)no one European or Indian group held a clear dominance.
B)Indian tribes were largely able to keep out European colonists.
C)English colonists quickly became the dominant power.
D)Spanish colonists were long the dominant power.
E)French colonists managed to hold the balance of power.
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51
Originally, the Georgia colony excluded

A)free blacks.
B)slaves.
C)indentured servants.
D)both free blacks and slaves.
E)neither free blacks nor slaves.
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52
The English colonial settlements in the Caribbean

A)concluded it was cheaper to buy new African slaves than to protect those they owned.
B)developed their settlements along the same lines as in the Chesapeake.
C)developed significant economic success through the production of tobacco.
D)had a smaller percentage of slaves than in the North American colonies.
E)were forced to deal with larger native populations than those on the mainland.
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53
The English Parliament enacted the Navigation Acts primarily to benefit

A)colonial American tobacco plantations.
B)British business and merchants.
C)New England merchants.
D)Virginian planters.
E)Business and planters in the British Caribbean.
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54
Which of the following statement regarding the Navigation Acts (1660s) is FALSE?

A)English colonies were closed to all trade except that carried by English ships.
B)Certain colonial products could be exported only to England.
C)All European goods sent to the colonies had to pass through England and were subject to taxes.
D)English colonists could only produce products that were also sold in England.
E)Duties were imposed on the coastal trade among the English colonies.
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55
Which of the following was NOT a restoration colony?

A)Maryland
B)Carolina
C)New York
D)Pennsylvania
E)New Jersey
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56
Leisler's Rebellion took place in

A)Rhode Island.
B)New Jersey.
C)Massachusetts.
D)New York.
E)Connecticut.
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57
By 1700, the Spanish colonies north of Mexico

A)had attracted considerable interest from the Spanish government.
B)were being developed through a string of Catholic missions.
C)added little economic value to the Spanish Empire.
D)contained more than one million Spanish citizens.
E)included the largest Spanish city in the Americas.
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58
Like New York, the New Jersey colony

A)quickly developed a strong local government.
B)had few slaves during its early existence.
C)was characterized by a unified and generally peaceful society.
D)had great ethnic and religious diversity.
E)developed an important class of large landowners.
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59
The development of the Carolina colony was notable in that

A)the colony was able to attract large numbers of settlers from nearby colonies.
B)the northern and southern regions were economically and socially distinct from each other.
C)its economy was grounded in tobacco production.
D)its founders had discouraged the use of slaves.
E)it advocated independence from England well before all other mainland colonies.
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60
Georgia was founded

A)to provide a refuge for Catholics.
B)to create a military barrier against the Spanish.
C)to quickly make money for its investors.
D)by Quaker missionaries.
E)as a haven for religious dissenters.
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61
The Caribbean colonies of England were generally less democratic than the North American colonies of England.
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62
The tobacco culture of Virginia created great pressure for territorial expansion.
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63
Virginia did not become a royal colony until the eve of the American Revolution.
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64
Bacon's Rebellion was undertaken to do away with slavery in Virginia.
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65
The Englishmen who founded Maryland were Puritans, but not Separatists.
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66
Residents of Massachusetts generally had greater freedom of worship than the Puritans had had in England.
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67
John Smith imposed order on the Jamestown settlement, but he thought it was wise not to antagonize local Indians.
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68
Bacon's Rebellion accelerated the development of slavery in Virginia.
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69
The first Africans to arrive in Virginia in 1619 were probably servants rather than slaves.
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70
The survival of Jamestown was largely a result of the English borrowing from the agricultural knowledge of the Indians.
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71
During the middle of the seventeenth century, the right to vote in Virginia was becoming more restricted.
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72
Charles I dissolved Parliament and was later beheaded.
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73
In hunting, Indian canoes compared unfavorably to the larger, more durable English vessels.
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74
James I of England may have believed in the divine right of kings, but he was not particularly harsh in his treatment of Puritans.
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75
The Jamestown settlement was an instant success.
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76
English colonies in the Chesapeake were first and foremost business enterprises.
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77
Like Virginia, Maryland became a center for the cultivation of tobacco.
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78
The founders of Maryland encouraged both Protestants and Catholics to migrate to the colony.
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79
The Caribbean settlements of England were the main source of slaves for the English colonies of North America.
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80
The Mayflower Compact set forth the principles of the Puritan religion.
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