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Chapter 5 Sections 1-2

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  • Why did Patriot John Adams defend the British soldiers who took part in the Boston Massacre?
    Adams believed all people deserved a fair trial.
    Adams wanted to show that the Patriots were not at fault.
    Adams wanted to expand his law practice.
    Adams was a secret British sympathizer.
  • What right of the colonists did the British governor limit when he disbanded the Massachusetts Assembly?
    the right to follow their own consciences
    the right to their own representative governments
    the right to boycott British goods
    the right to challenge a leader's authority
  • Who were the committee of correspondence?
    in the Revolutionary era, a group of colonists whose duty it was to spread news about protests against the British
  • What was Prime Minister George Grenville's policy toward the colonies?
    Britain should tax colonies directly to raise money to pay for the war debt
  • What events led up to the Boston Massacre?
    1) Boy insults soldier 2) Soldier hits kid 3) Angry mob surrounds soldier 4) 7 soldiers arrive 5) mob throws items 6) soldier gets clubbed 7) soldiers fire
  • Why did some colonists object to the Proclamation of 1763?
    They thought the king was restricting their freedom to expand westward.
  • What was the Proclamation of 1763?
    a law requiring colonists to stay east of a line drawn on a map along the crest of the Appalachian Mountains
  • Who were the Sons of Liberty?
    the groups of merchants, shopkeepers, and craftsmen who successfully opposed the Stamp Act by establishing networks to boycott British goods
  • What was the British law requiring colonists to purchase a stamp for official documents and published papers called?
    The Stamp Act
  • How did the Townshend Acts affect the government of the colonies?
    The acts moved governors and judges from colonial payrolls to royal payrolls.
  • What do you call a a form of protest that involves refusing to purchase goods or services?
    boycott
  • What is a grievance?
    an objection or reason to complain
  • What was the Boston Tea Party?
    the 1773 incident in which the Sons of Liberty boarded British ships and dumped their cargo in protest of British taxes on the colonists
  • What is a duty?
    a tax on imports
  • Why were many colonists against writs of assistance?
    The writs allowed and justified searches without cause.
  • What is the Sugar Act?
    the British law that lowered the duty on molasses to cut out smuggling, so that the British would get the revenue
  • Was the Boston Tea Party an effective form of protest?
    Reasonable opinion; supported by cited evidence.
  • What was the Quartering Act?
    one of several British laws that required American colonists to provide housing and food for British soldiers stationed in North America
  • Why did King George III try to limit contact between the citizens of the British colonies and Native Americans?
    to keep peace on the frontier
  • What do you call a military force made up of local citizens to help protect their town, land, or nation
    militia
  • What were the set of British laws that placed duties on tea, glass, paper, lead, and paint; required colonists to purchase from Britain called?
    The Townshend Acts
  • What was the Tea Act?
    the British law stating that only the East India Company was allowed to sell tea to the American colonists
  • What is income or money that is received called?
    revenue
  • What was the Boston Massacre?
    the 1770 incident in which British soldiers fired on locals who had been taunting them
  • What were the writs of assistance?
    a legal document giving authorities the right to enter and search a home or business
  • How did the increase in the number of British troops help cause the Boston Massacre?
    Boston citizens were angered by British soldiers who camped on Boston Commons. Many soldiers took second jobs. This took jobs away from colonists.
  • What is unjust rule by an absolute ruler called?
    tyranny
  • What media did Samuel Adams and other Patriots use to circulate their ideas?
    Through printed letters and committees of correspondence. They also used broadsides and illustrated prints, such as The Bloody Massacre in King Street by Paul R
  • What was the British law that regulated paper money in the American colonies called?
    The Currency Act
  • How did the Currency Act contribute to colonial anger over the Stamp Tax?
    The Currency Act made it illegal to use anything but British coins. The Stamp Act said that taxes be paid in those rare coins—and threatened seizure of goods.
  • What methods did some merchants in the English colonies probably use to get around the Sugar Act, the Currency Act, and the Stamp Act?
    Merchants in the colonies may have smuggled or hidden their goods, falsified their tax documents, bartered for goods, or tried to use illegal colonial money.
  • Why did the British government need extra revenue in 1763
    Britain had to recoup the costs of its victory in the French and Indian War
  • What does repeal mean?
    to cancel or nullify, especially a law
  • Besides colonial tea merchants, who suffered direct losses because of the Tea Act of 1773?
    members of the British East India Company
  • How did the Currency Act of 1764 directly affect Benjamin Franklin?
    He paid for stamps for documents he printed.
    He had to stop printing colonial paper money
    He had to pay his taxes directly to Britain
    He created new currency sizes and designs
  • Why did Virginia and other colonies claim the sole right to tax their inhabitants?
    because colonists had representation only in their colonial assemblies