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American History Pre-Test
Day! Take some time to think about the following pre-test questions and see what you already know! If you are unsure, please write down your best guess! (it will be funny when we look back at it at the end of the year!)
Be a Better Reader! Read and Answer the information given. When completed you can work on Chapter 3 vocabulary or Chapter’s 1 and 2 of your textbook to
complete the handout and bridge the gap between 7th and 8th grade! Good Luck!
Why should we study history?
How do we put an essay together?
Please Write the Warm-Up down, complete it, and wait patiently;
Today will make sure you don’t look silly … and…
We’ll figure out how and why people came to America!
What was the significance What was the significance of the Spanish Armada of the Spanish Armada being defeated at sea? being defeated at sea? (Page 51)(Page 51)
Today we will learn of Native Americans that helped Jamestown survive and discover who lost out in colonization!
Bonus Warm-up: What was Blue-Gold?(hint: nothing to do with Olentangy!)
What is the significance of the Mayflower Compact?(pages 69-70)
Bonus Warm-up: What was Blue-Gold?(hint: nothing to do with Olentangy!)
THIS IS THE FIRST DOCUMENT IN
WHICH AMERICAN SETTLERS CLAIMED
A RIGHT TO GOVERN THEMSELVES (with loyalty to the king, but for the good of
the colony!)
Blue-Gold is Indigo
-Discuss the Plymouth Colony
-No penalty quiz
-Discuss “Who Lost” during colonization
-Billboard Assignment
Discuss the Billboard Assignment….
Learn about Colonial America!McDonald’s sun dial billboard…Shows what you might want to eat during the day!
A religious revival called the Great Awakening hit the colonies in the 1740s. Many colonists, particularly in the middle and lower classes found the staid, ritualistic Anglican service unfulfilling against their assigned place at the bottom of the traditional social order. The Awakening brought an evangelical message of “new birth” that divided older congregations into New Lights and Old Lights. The movement infected Anglicanism as ministers like George Whitefield traveled to the colonies to spread his message of salvation to standing-room-only crowds from Pennsylvania to Georgia. Many of the “saved” joined the Separate Baptists, who promoted the equality of all souls before God and welcomed and baptized slaves into their congregations, treating them as “brothers” and “sisters” but also insisting that they adhere to the strict moral code of the evangelicals. The Baptists railed against the gambling, horseracing, card playing, dancing, swearing, drinking, and Sabbath-breaking that seemed to be the mainstay of traditional gentry culture. To Virginia elites this was indeed a world turned upside down.
-Questions on the Billboard Assignment?
-Vocabulary Quiz
-Begin to work in groups on Colony Discovery!
The Holy Experiment:
This was the attempt to follow a Quaker way of life in a new colony that would be known as Pennsylvania!
Quakers were Pacifists!
The Enlightenment:
The idea that swept through Europe and the colonies during the 18th century that human reason could be used to combat ignorance, superstition, and tyranny and to build a better world.
The English Navigation Acts were a series of laws which restricted the use of foreign shipping in the trade of England and its colonies. Colonies were also forced to trade sugar and tobacco with England!
Sugar Cane
Warm-Up: What was the goal of the Native Americans during King Phillips War (1675)? (p. 76)
The goal was to stop Puritan expansion, however it was unsuccessful and the English colonies were free to expand following the Metacom’s (King Philip) capture and death in 1676.
Many Puritans migrated from England to North America during the 1620s to the 1640s due to belief that the Church of England was beyond reform. However, most Puritans in England and New England were non-separatists. They continued to profess allegiance to the Church of England despite their dissent with leadership and practices. This greatly increased the (European) population of North America, which is why it is called the "Great Migration". John Calvin
Did you know…
Use the French and Indian War word bank on our Colony Discovery Handout and Section 4-4 to create your own story
of the war!
Warm-Up: What was the Albany Congress? (p. 141)
In 1753, the British wanted all the colonies to agree to cooperate in defending themselves against the French.
The Iroquois Nation was also invited in hopes of an alliance, but they refused (they thought the French would win).
This Cartoon originally appeared in Franklin’s Pennsylvania Gazette in 1754, but was reprinted throughout the colonies.With problems with the Iroquois and also with the French and Indian War looming, Franklin thought unity was a must!
The Albany Plan of Union was a plan suggested by Ben Franklin to place the British North American colonies under a more centralized government. The plan was adopted on July 10, 1754, by representatives from seven of the British North American colonies. Although never carried out, it was the first important plan to conceive of the colonies as a collective whole united under one government.
DID YOU KNOW?
The Proclamation of 1763 was issued October 7, 1763 by King George III following Great Britain's acquisition of French territory in North America after the end of the French and Indian War/Seven Years' War. The purpose of the proclamation was to establish Britain's vast new North American empire, and to stabilize relations with Native Americans through regulation of trade, settlement, and land purchases on the western frontier.