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AP US Chapter 7: The Road to Revolution, 1763-1775

AP US chapter 7 studyguide

Terms : Hide Images
a system in which benefits, including jobs, money, or protection are granted in exchange for political support
the economic and political theory that colonial economics should be subordinated for the benefit of the British empire
to decrease in value, as in the decline of the purchasing power of money, which swiftly depreciated
the constitutional right of a ruler or executive to block legislation passed by another unit of government
the complete control of a product or sphere of economic activity by a single producer or business
in British law, special administrative courts designed to hangle maritime cases without a jury
the political theory that a class of persons is represented in a lawmaking body without direct vote
pledges to boycott, or decline to purchase, certain goods from abroad; effective form of resistance agaisnt the Stamp Act
a person of mixed African and European ancestry
a customs tax on the export or import of goods
a systematic program or particular materials designed to promote certain ideas; sometimes but not always the term is used negatively, implying the use of manipulative or deceptive means
an organized refusal to deal with some person, organization, or product
an increase in the supply of currency relative to the goods available, leading to a decline in the purchasing power of money
to leave official government or military service without permission
the colonial economy should be carefully controlled to serve the mother country's needs
by inhibiting the development of banking and paper currency in the colonies
it aroused revolutionary fervor among many ordinary American men and women
colonists were outraged because they saw it as a trick to undermine their principled resistance to the tax
closing the Port of Boston until damages were paid and order restored
the revenues from the taxation would go to support British officials and judges in America
it extended Catholic jurisdiction and a non-jury judicial system into the western Ohio country
forming The Association to impose a complete boycott of all British goods
the British attempt to seize colonial supplies and leaders at Lexington and Concord
Lord North
possible revolts in IReland and war with France
the Whig Party
the ability to enlist foreign soldiers, Loyalists, and Native Americans in their military forces
fighting defensively on a large, agriculturally self-sufficient continent
fought in both the American patriot and British loyalist military forces
the set of parliamentary laws, first passed in 1650, that restricted colonial trade and directed it to benefit of Britain
the term of products, such as tobacco, that could be shipped only to England and not to foreign markets
hated British courts in which juries were not allowed and defendants were assumed guilty until proven innocent
British governmental theory that Parliament spoke for all British subjects, including Americans, even if they did not vote for its members
the product taxed under the Townshend Acts that generated the greatest colonial resistance
underground networks of communication and propaganda, established by Samuel Adams, that sustained colonial resistance
religion that was granted toleration in the trans-Allegheny West by the Quebec Act, arousing deep colonial hostility
British political party opposed to Lord North's Tories and generally more sympathetic to the colonial cause
German mercenaries hired by George III to fight the American revolutionaries
paper currency authorized by Congress to finance the Revolution depreciated to near worthlessness
effective organization created by the First Continental Congress to provide a total, unified boycott of all British goods
rapidly mobilized colonial militiamen whose refusal to disperse sparked the first battle of the Revolution
popular term for British regular troops
wealthy president of the Continental Congress and "King of the Smugglers"
British minister who raised a storm of protest by passing the Stamp Act
legislation passed in 1765 but repealed the next year, that taxed all printed goods: ship's papers, legal documents, licenses, newspapers, other publications, and playing cards
male and female organizations that enforced the nonimportation agreements, sometimes by coercive means
minister whose clever attempt to impose import taxes nearly succeeded, but eventually brewed trouble for Britain
alleged leader of radical protesters killed in Boston Massacre
stubborn ruler, lustful for power, who promoted harsh ministers like Lord North
zealous defender of the common people's rights and organizer of underground propaganda committees
event organized by disguised "Indians" to sabotage British support of a British East India Company monopoly
harsh measures of retaliation for a tea party, including the Boston Port Act closing that city's harbor
British governor of Massachusetts whose stubborn policies helped provoke the Boston Tea Party
body led by John Adams that issued a Declaration of Rights and organized The Association to boycott all British goods
nineteen-year-old major general in the Revolutionary army
organizational genius who turned raw colonial recruits into tough professional soldiers
legislation that required colonists to feed and shelter British troops; disobeyed in New York and elsewhere

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