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THIS
IS
With Host...
Your
100 100 100 100 100 100
200 200 200 200 200 200
300 300 300 300 300 300
400 400 400 400 400 400
500 500 500 500 500 500
Early Settlement
The 13 Colonies
Road to Revolution
Revolutionary War
The Constitution
The New Nation
This was the first representative
government in the colonies.
A 100
What is the House
of Burgesses?
A 100
This was the first permanent English settlement in the
Americas.
A 200
What is Jamestown?
A 200
This was the main reason for the French
settlement of Quebec (in modern day Canada).
A 300
What is fur?
A 300
Indian chief who taught settlers at Jamestown basic
survival skills.
A 400
Who is Powhatan?
A 400
The main purpose of these events in colonial New England was for a community to address and debate local issues.
A 500
What are town meetings?
A 500
This “Mid-Atlantic” colony was founded by
William Penn and home to many Quakers.
B 100
What is Pennsylvania?
B 100
This concept stated that the economic responsibility of a colony is to financially
benefit the mother country.
B 200
What is mercantilism?
B 200
Name given to the trans-Atlantic shipment of African slaves to the
Americas.
B 300
What is the “Middle Passage”?
B 300
Period of religious resurgence in which
colonial pastors preached of salvation
through repentance and forgiveness.
B 400
What is the Great Awakening?
B 400
Name given to the idea that individuals could
rise in society from poor to rich as embodied in the life of Benjamin
Franklin. B 500
What is social mobility?
B 500
This decree by the King of England forbade
colonial settlement west of the Appalachian
Mountains.
C 100
What is the Proclamation of
1763?
C 100
This British law placed taxes on anything paper;
from newspapers to deeds and playing cards.
C 200
What is the Stamp Act?
C 200
This pamphlet written by Thomas Paine laid out
many reasons the colonies should break
away from English rule.
C 300
What is “Common
Sense”?
C 300
DAILY DOUBLE
C 400
DAILY DOUBLE
Place A Wager
To the colonists, the enforcement of the
Quartering Act and the closing of Boston
Harbor to trade was called this.
C 400
What are the Intolerable Acts?
C 400
This war (1754-1763) was an example of
imperial competition for the rights to the lands of
North America.
C 500
What is the French and Indian War?
C 500
He is the primary author of the
Declaration of Independence.
D 100
Who is Thomas Jefferson?
D 100
This was the final battle of the
Revolutionary War.
D 200
What is the Battle of Yorktown?
D 200
He surrendered to George Washington after the Battle of
Yorktown.
D 300
Who is General
Cornwallis?
D 300
French commander who provided military expertise and assisted the American armed
forces against the British in the
Revolutionary War. D 400
Who is Marquis de Lafayette?
D 400
He founded Committees of Correspondence that
helped keep communication lines active between and among the colonies.
D 500
Who is Samuel Adams?
D 500
The Constitutional Convention was
called originally to revise this document.
E 100
What are the Articles of
Confederation? Recall: Under the Articles,
states held the power!
E 100
Proposed plan that would base
representation in the House and Senate on
POPULATION.
E 200
What is the Virginia Plan?
Recall: The New Jersey Plan wanted EQUAL
representation The Great Compromise would
settle this dispute between large and small states!
E 200
Rebellion of farmers against the state of
Massachusetts to protest farm foreclosures and
imprisonment.
E 300
What is Shays’ Rebellion?
Note: This event led to a call for a stronger central government!
E 300
This collection of essays (written by James Madison and Alexander Hamilton) were written to convince
people that a strong central government was best for
the new nation.
E 400
What are the Federalist Papers?
E 400
The Constitutional Convention addressed
the North-South controversy over slavery
through this compromise.
E 500
What is the three-fifths compromise?
Which states would want the slaves counted? Why?
Recall: This debate was not about letting slaves VOTE, but
COUNTING slaves towards total population!
E 500
Adopted in 1789, these first ten amendments to the Constitution were intended
to protect individual liberties from the potential tyranny of a strong central
government. F 100
What is the Bill of Rights?
Recall: Anti-Federalists refused to ratify the
Constitution if the Bill of Rights was not included.
F 100
This rebellion in Pennsylvania highlighted
George Washington’s determination to enforce the laws under the new
Constitution.
F 200
What is the Whiskey Rebellion?
F 200
These laws (passed in 1787) laid out the
guidelines for how new territories would be admitted as states.
F 300
What are the Northwest
Ordinances of 1787?
F 300
John Adams’ Presidency is best remembered for his refusal to go to war with which European nation in the 1790s?
F 400
What is France? Note: Your standard refers to
this as non-intervention in Europe.
F 400
Political parties were formed in the 1790’s by
the debate between Alexander Hamilton and
Thomas Jefferson over the creation of this institution.
F 500
What is a National Bank?
Recall: Jefferson felt that giving the National Bank too
much power could lead to economic tyranny!
F 500
The Final Jeopardy Category is:
Early Settlement
Please record your wager.
Click on screen to begin
This rebellion at Jamestown concerned territorial expansion. A disparity in power had developed between plantation owners in the
east and newer settlers in the west. Governor Berkley did not
authorize further expansion into Native American land.
Click on screen to continue
What is Bacon’s Rebellion?
Click on screen to continue
Thank You for Playing Jeopardy!
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