American Pageant Terms Ch. 3

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SAT US History Flashcards on American Pageant Terms Ch. 3, created by Anta Cisse-Graham on 17/01/2018.
Anta Cisse-Graham
Flashcards by Anta Cisse-Graham, updated more than 1 year ago
Anta Cisse-Graham
Created by Anta Cisse-Graham almost 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Question Answer
Protestant Reformation a religious reform that made its way across Europe for more than a century; divided people
John Calvin a religious leader who elaborated Martin Luther's idea in ways that affected the thought and character of generations of Americans
Church of England (1530s) part Catholic and part Protestant religion created by King Henry VIII
"Puritans" came from commercially depressed woolen districts; believed that only "visible saints" should be admitted to the church membership
Pilgrims a group of separatists that longed to find a haven where they could live and die as English men and women and as purified
Plymouth Colony a colony at Plymouth rock of Pilgrims where they didn't have the legal right to the land nor specific authority to establish a government
Captain Myles Standish (Captain Shrimp) rendered indispensable service as an Indian fighter and negotiator
Mayflower Compact an agreement to form a crude government and to submit to the will of the majority under the regulations agreed upon
William Bradford a self-taught scholar; read Hebrew, Greek, Latin, French, and Dutch; was chosen as governor 30 times in the annual elections
Massachusetts Bay Colony (1629) formed by an energetic group of non-separatist Puritans fearing for their fath; eventually merged wiht Plymouth colony
"Great Migration"(1630s) about 7,000 refugees left England; about 20,000 came to Massachusetts; many were attracted to the warm and fertile West Indies than to Massachusetts
JOhn Winthrop was the first governor of Massachusetts Bay; successful attorney and manor lord in England; helped Massachusetts prosper
"Freemen" adult males who belonged to the Puritan congregations
Congressional Church Puritan congregations
John Cotton educated at Cambridge University; emigrated to Massachusetts to persecution for his criticism of the church
Anne Hutchinson (1638) intelligent, strong-willed woman with 14 children; very logical on the Puritan doctrine of Predestination and was banished by the Puritan magistrate for it
Roger Williams a Salem minister; extreme separatist; challenged the legality of the Bay Colony's character; denied the authority of civil government to regulate religions' behavior; built a Baptist church in Rhode Island; established complete freedom of religions
Rhode Island became a place for freedom of opportunity; known as the "traditional home of the otherwise minded"; became very individualistic and strongly independent; was a squatter colony in 1636 until they claimed the land; secured a charter from Parliament in 1644
Pequot War (1637) a war between the Pequot tribe and English settlers; created four decades of tense peace between Puritans and Natives
King Philip's War (1675-1676) coordinated attacks on New England villages; when it was over, 52 Puritan villages had been attacked and 12 were destroyed; King Philip was eventually beheaded
New England Confederation (1643) Charles II was restored to the English throne returning the monarchy in England
Bay Colony Charter Revocation as punishment for the colonies not listening to the royal orders, the colonies' charter was revoked
Dominion of New England (1686) created by royal authority; designed to promote urgently needed efficiency in the administration of the English Navigation Laws
Navigation Laws was to stitch England's overseas possessions more tightly to the motherland by making sure countries, not under the English crown, couldn't trade with America
Sir Edmund Andros head of the new dominion; curbed town meetings; put heavy restrictions on the courts, press, and school system; revoked all land titles; taxed people without the consent of their elected representatives; enforced unpopular Navigation Laws
"Glorious" Revolution / William & Mary (1688-1689) a bloodless revolution; dethroning the unpopular Catholic King James II; Protestant rulers of the Netherlands; Dutch-born William III and English wife Mary, daughter of James II
Dutch East India Company a company founded by the Dutch; challenged the supremacy of England; supported an army of 10,000 men and a fleet of 190 ships
Henry Hudson hired by the Dutch-East India Company; thought he discovered a shortcut through the continent but claimed land for the Dutch; now known as New York
New Netherland (1623-1624) located in Hudson River area; established the Dutch West India Company for its quick profit fur trade
New Amsterdam (New York City) a company town; run by and for Dutch company; attracted a cosmopolitan population (common in seaport towns)
Peter Stuyvesant (1655) led a small military expedition; intolerant of religion; lived in a constant state of friction with the prominent residents of New Amsterdam
New York (1664) Charles II granted the area of New Amsterdam to his brother, the Duke of York; Peter Stuyvesant surrendered New Amsterdam and was renamed New York in honor of the Duke of York
Society of Friends / "Quakers" Quakers were offensive to both civil and religious authority; refused military service; wanted civil and religious freedom
William Penn an Englishman who became a Quaker; wanted to create a safe haven for his people; managed to secure a grant of land from the king
Pennsylvania (1681) named after William Penn's deceased father; was very welcoming to looking spirits and substantial citizens; the promise land of Indian-white relations
The middle or " bread colonies" New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania; fertile soil; heavy grain exports; rivers introduced water-wheel power; forests were great for lumbering and shipbuilding; lots of diversity
Benjamin Franklin Founding father who lived in the middle colonies, was a painter, writer, inventor, and diplomat; was highly respected even in England
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