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Warm-ups

Warm-ups. Warm-ups. Skillbuilder - Understanding the parts of a Map On page 27, Read Understanding Maps – Why Learn this skill? Learning the skill and answer question under practicing the skill 1-5. You have 5 minutes to complete this warm-up. Thank you for your cooperation!!. Sept. 19, 2011.

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Warm-ups

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  1. Warm-ups

  2. Warm-ups • Skillbuilder- Understanding the parts of a Map On page 27, Read Understanding Maps – Why Learn this skill? Learning the skill and answer question under practicing the skill 1-5. You have 5 minutes to complete this warm-up. Thank you for your cooperation!!

  3. Sept. 19, 2011 • Who are the two countries that are involved in the line of demarcation? Explain in your own words what the line of demarcation was. • ( Read Dividing the World Pg. 47-48)

  4. Warm-up Oct. 19, 2011 • Name the types of colonies and explain each. (Pages 110-111) • Charter- Connecticut and Rhode Island. Were established by settlers who had been given a charter- a grant of rights and privileges. These colonists elected their own governors and the members of the legislature. Great Britain approve the governor, governor could not veto the acts of the legislature.

  5. Warm-upOct. 19, 2011 • Proprietary- Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. Were ruled by proprietors. These were individuals or groups to whom Britain had granted land. Proprietors were generally free to rule as they wished. They appointed the governor and members of the upper house of the legislature, while the colonists elected the lower house.

  6. Warm-up Oct. 19, 2011 • Royal- Georgia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. Britain directly ruled all royal colonies. The king appointed a governor and council known as the upper house. The colonists elected an assembly, called the lower house. The governor and members of the council usually did what the British leaders told them to do. How ever, this often led to conflict with the colonists in the assembly, especially when officials tried to enforce tax laws and trade restrictions.

  7. Identifying the Significance of Events • Explain the following events. Give all the details. • Glorious Revolution • English Bill of Rights • Navigation Acts • Great Awakening • Enlightenment

  8. Identifying the Significance of Events • Glorious Revolution- The change to the throne ( King James daughter Mary and her husband William of Orange) which showed the power the elected representatives over the monarch. • English Bill of Rights- This gua

  9. Answer question below. Refer to the page number next to the questions. • 1. How did the Navigation Act affect the colonist? Pg. 109 • 2. Why were the Native Americans so important in the clash between the French and British? Who had the advantage with the Native Americans and why? Pg. 117 • 3. What was the organization of a typical New England town? Pg. 101

  10. 1. The Navigation Act, a series of laws passed by England in the 1650’s, directed the flow of goods between England and the colonies. Colonial merchants who had goods to send to England could not use foreign ships-even if those ships offered lower ship rates. The Navigation Act also prohibited the colonists from sending certain products, such as sugar or tobacco, outside England’s empire. Some colonists ignored these laws and began smuggling in Europe or the West Indies.

  11. 2. The side that received the best trade terms from Native Americans and the most help in war would probably win the contest for the control of North America. The French had the advantage. Unlike the British, the French were more interested in trading furs than taking over the Native Americans' land. The French had better relations with Native Americans. French trappers and fur traders often married Native American women and followed their customs. French missionaries converted many Native Americans to Catholicism but let them maintain their own culture.

  12. 3. Most people in New England lived in well-organized towns. In the center of the town stood the meetinghouse, a building used both for church services and town meetings. The meetinghouse faced a piece of land called the green, where cows grazed and the citizen army trained. Farmers lived in the town and worked in fields on its outskirts.

  13. Answer question below. Refer to the page number next to the questions. • 4. What were the three types of colonies? Describe one type. Pg. 110-111 • 5. What was the triangular trade? Pg. 102 • 6. Why did the Middle Colonies have more tolerance for religious and cultural differences than the New England Colonies did? Pg. 100-104

  14. 4. The three types of colonies are the charter colonies, proprietary colonies, and royal colonies. Charter colonies: Connecticut and Rhode Island; established by a group of settlers who had been given a charter; elected their own governors and members of the legislature; although Britain had the right to approve the governor's appointment, the governor could not veto the acts of the legislature. Proprietary colonies: Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania; ruled by proprietors who were granted land by Britain; proprietors were generally free to rule as they wished; proprietors appointed the governor and members of the upper house of legislature, while the people elected the lower house. Royal colonies: Georgia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia; ruled directly by Britain; the king appointed a governor and council, known as the upper house; the colonists elected an assembly, called the lower house; the governor and members of the council usually did what the British leaders told them to do, which often led to conflict with the assembly

  15. 5. Ships brought sugar and molasses from the West Indies to the New England colonies, where the molasses was made into rum. Rum and other manufactured goods were shipped to West Africa and traded for enslaved Africans. Enslaved Africans were then taken to the West Indies and sold to planters. The profit from selling slaves was used to buy more molasses.

  16. 6. Most New England colonists were English, but a great many settlers in the Middle Colonies were German, Dutch, or Swedish. These different immigrants practiced different religions. The cultural and religious diversity encouraged tolerance for such differences.

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