85049233 | Corn or Maize | Staple crop that formed the economic foundation of Indian civilizations. | |
85049234 | Portugal | First European nation to send explorers around the west coast of Africa. | |
85049235 | Horse | Animal introduced by Europeans that changed Indian way of life on the Great Plains | |
85049236 | Treaty of Tordesillas | Treaty that secured Spanish title to lands in Americas by dividing them with Portugal. | |
85049237 | Mestizos | Person of mixed European and Indian ancestry. | |
85049238 | St. Augustine | Founded in 1565, it's the oldest continually inhabited European settlement in US territory | |
85049239 | Black Legend | Belief that the Spanish only killed, tortured, and stole in the Americas while doing nothing good | |
85049241 | Joint-stock | Forerunner of the modern corporation that enabled investors to pool capital for colonial ventures. | |
85049242 | Charter | Royal document granting a specified group the right to form a colony and guaranteeing settlers their rights as English citizens. | |
85049244 | Act of Toleration | Maryland statute of 1649 that granted religious freedom to all Christians, but not Jews and atheists. | |
85049245 | Squatters | Poor farmers in North Carolina and elsewhere who occupied land and raised crops without gaining legal title to the soil | |
85049247 | Ferdinand and Isabella | Financiers and beneficiaries of Columbus's voyages of discovery. | |
85049248 | Cortes | Conqueror of the Aztecs. | |
85049249 | Pizarro | Conqueror of the Incas. | |
85049250 | Dias and DaGama | Portuguese navigators who led early voyages of discovery. | |
85049251 | Columbus | Italian-born explorer who believed he arrived off the coast of Asia rather than on an unknown continent. | |
85049252 | Montezuma | Powerful Aztec monarch who fell to Spanish conquerors | |
85049253 | Elizabeth I | Unmarried English ruler who led England to national glory. | |
85049254 | Hiawatha | Legendary founder of the powerful Iroquois Confederation | |
85049255 | John Cabot | Italian-born explorer sent by the English to explore the coast of North America in 1498 | |
85049256 | Georgia | Founded by crown as a buffer state to protect the carolinas | |
85049257 | North Carolina | Colony that was called "a vale of humility between two mountains of conceit". | |
85049258 | Smith and Rolfe | leaders who rescued Jamestown from the "starving time". | |
85049259 | Maryland | Founded as a haven for Roman Catholics. | |
85049261 | South Carolina | Colony that turned to disease-resistant African-American slaves for labor in its extensive rice plantations. | |
85049262 | Raleigh and Gilbert | Elizabethan courtiers who failed in their attempts to found New World colonies. | |
85049284 | Santa Fe | 1st spanish settlement | |
85049285 | Jamestown | 1st English settlement | |
85049286 | Quebec | 1st French settlement | |
85049287 | Sir Francis Drake and the Sea Dogs | wanted to spread Protestantism and seize Spanish treasure; circumnavigated the globe | |
85049288 | Sir Walter Raleigh | started the colony of Roanoke | |
85049289 | Roanoke | colony in North Carolina founded by Sir Walter Raleigh- failure- disappeared in 1580's | |
85049290 | Virgin Queen | Queen Elizabeth | |
85049291 | Spanish Armada | Tried to fight against the English- destroyed by the sea dogs- *Turning point*- end of Spanish domination | |
85049292 | Virginia Company | a joint stock company- settled North America- guaranteed settlers same rights as Englishmen | |
85049293 | Charter | legal document giving certain rights to a person or company | |
85049294 | Captain John Smith | leader of Jamestown- helped by Pocahontas | |
85049295 | Powhatan | indian cheif who led a mock execution of Captain John Smith | |
85049296 | Pocahontas | protected John Smith and became an intermediary- provided peace and food | |
85049297 | Starving Time | name for the winter of 1609- severe famine | |
85049298 | Lord De La War | person who led the relief party to Jamestown- harsh military regime | |
85049299 | Irish Tactics | war methods used by Lord De La Ware against the Indians- raided and destroyed them | |
85049300 | First Powhatan War | 1614- war between Lord De La Ware and the Indians- ended with marriage of Pocahontas and John Rolfe | |
85049301 | Second Powhatan War | 1644- Indians tried to dislodge Virginians- Indians fail and are destroyed and banished from homeland | |
85049302 | The Three Ds | Disease, disorganization, disposablity | |
85049303 | John Rolfe | Pocahontas' husband- killed in Indian attacks- father of the tobacco industry | |
85049304 | Broad Acre Plantation System | farming method- increased demand for labor- encouraged by tobacco | |
85049305 | House of Burgesses | first representative government in the colonies- miniature Parliament for the colonies | |
85049306 | Lord Baltimore | founded Maryland colonies for Catholics- wanted freedom of worship | |
85049308 | Barbados Slave Code | law that gave masters complete control over their slaves | |
85049310 | Charles Town | busiest seaport- aristocratic- diverse- religious toleration | |
85049311 | North Carolina Settlers | outcasts from aristocratic Virginia- poor, don't like authority | |
85049312 | Tuscaroras | Indians who fought North Carolina settlers- defeated- turned into slaves | |
85049313 | Yamasee | indians who fought the South Carolina settlers- defeated and dispersed | |
85049314 | Buffer colony | what Georgia was to protect the colonies from Spanish Florida | |
85049315 | James Oglethorpe | leader and one of the founders of Georgia- wanted it to be a place for people who were imprisoned for debt | |
85049317 | Longhouses | homes of the Iroquois- shared by maternal families | |
85049319 | John Calvin | formed Calvinism- believed in predestination | |
85049320 | Predestination | doctrine of John Calvin that adhered to the idea that each person's fate is predetermined by god | |
85049321 | Visible Saints | people who had seen their conversion and lived lives of holy behavior | |
85049322 | Puritans | English religious reformers who wanted to break all ties with Rome and follow Calvinism | |
85049323 | Separatists | Puritans who only wanted visible saints in the Churches and wanted to leave the Church | |
85049324 | Mayflower | boat the Separatists used to go to New England | |
85049325 | Captain Miles Standish | soldier who turned out to be a good Indian fighter and negotiator | |
85049326 | Mayflower Compact | Precedent to further constitutions- establishment of self-government | |
85049327 | William Bradford | governor of Plymouth- worried about non-Puritan settlers | |
85049328 | Massachusetts Bay Colony | colony formed by the Puritans to get away from attacks from conservatives in England | |
85049329 | Great Migration | 1630s- 70,000 refugees left England for New World | |
85049330 | John Winthrop | 1st governor of Massachusetts colony | |
85049331 | City Upon a Hill | name of Massachusetts colony symbolizing how it will be a Puritan example that others will look up to | |
85049332 | John Cotton | father of Congregationalism in America, staunch supporter of the enforcement of religious principles by civil officials | |
85049333 | Blue Law State | nickname for Connecticut- had strict Puritan laws (no kissing in public) | |
85049334 | Michael Wigglesworth | poet who wrote a very detailed description of Puritan Hell | |
85049335 | Anne Hutchinson | Puritan woman who challenged predestination- antinomianism | |
85049336 | Antinomianism | couldn't be saved by good actions, so the truly saved need not obey the laws of God or man | |
85049337 | Roger Williams | American Protestant theologian, and first American proponent of religious freedom and the separation of church and state. Founder of Rhode Island | |
85049338 | Rogues Island | nickname for Rhode Island- founded by Roger Williams for outcasts- freedom of religion | |
85049339 | Thomas Hooker | Reverend who led a group of Puritans west to Connecticut | |
85049340 | Fundamental Orders of Connecticut | modern constitution- established a more democratically controlled government- written by Connecticut River settlers | |
85049341 | Squanto | Wampanoag indian who learned English- helped keep peace w/ settlers | |
85049342 | Wampanoags | indian tribe that tried to be peaceful | |
85049343 | Massasoit | wampanog chief who signed a treaty w/ the Pilgrims and celebrated Thanksgiving | |
85049344 | Pequot War | 1637- war between the colonists and the Pequot tribe- ended in destruction of the tribe and uneasy peace | |
85049345 | Metacom (King Philip) | Indian who united the tribes and defeated 52 Puritan towns | |
85049346 | King Philip's War | 1676- united tribes and attacked Puritans- slowed Western expansion- killed Indians | |
85049347 | New England Confederation | 1643-1686- 4 colonies banded together- all Puritan- step toward American unity | |
85049348 | Dominion of New England | 1686- 1688- created in London- regulated trade (Navigation Acts) and increased defense against Indians in colonies | |
85049349 | Sir Edmund Andros | head of new Dominion- open affiliation w/ Church of England, decreased the power of local authority- hated in the Puritan colonies | |
85049351 | Glorious Revolution | event in England that dethroned James II and throned William III- caused the collapse of the Dominion in the colonies | |
85049352 | Salutary Neglect | period of time where the Navigation Laws were weakly enforced | |
85049353 | Henry Hudson | English explorer- employed by the Dutch to explore the New World- claimed Hudson Bay | |
85049354 | Dutch East and West India Companies | companies controlled by the Dutch to explore | |
85049355 | New Netherlands | Hudson river area | |
85049356 | New Amsterdam | New York City area- bought for a small amount- run for Dutch company- harsh rules | |
85049357 | Patroonships | big feudal estates granted to promoters who would settle 50 people on them | |
85049358 | Wall Street | derives name from wall built on Manhattan that protected them from Indians | |
85049359 | Peter Stuyvesant | general in New Netherland- fought the Swedish and was forced to surrender New Amerterdam | |
85049360 | Religious Society of Friends | official name for the Quakers | |
85049361 | William Penn | founded the Pennsylvania colony for the Quakers | |
85049362 | Tammany | indian chief who sold Pennsylvania to William Penn | |
85049363 | Tobacco | principal crop in the Chesapeake region | |
85049364 | Indentured Servants | people who voluntarily sold themselves to work on plantations for Atlantic passage and freedom dues | |
85049365 | Headright System | who ever paid for the passage of a laborer recieved 50 acres of land in reward | |
85049366 | Freedom Dues | few barrels of corn, suit of clothes, and maybe a small parcel of land | |
85049367 | William Berkeley | governor of Virginia, friendly towards Indians | |
85049368 | Bacon's Rebellion | rebellion against Berkely (the Eastern elite) because of lack of support during Indian raids in the backcountry (rich vs. poor) | |
85049369 | Royal African Company | used to have a monopoly on the slave trade | |
85049370 | 1619 | 1st time Africans are brought to the colonies, House of Burgesses is founded | |
85049371 | Middle Passage | the transatlantic sea voyage that brought over slaves from Africa | |
85049372 | Slave Codes | laws that controled slaves and made them property for life | |
85049373 | Rice and Indigo | primary crops of South Carolina colony | |
85049374 | Gullah | language spoken by slaves- mix of African and English | |
85049377 | Isolated plantations | reason for few large cities in the south | |
85049378 | Jeremaid | form of sermon that scolded parishioners for their waning piety | |
85049379 | Half-Way Covenant | allowed children of members to join the church- weakened the distinction between elect and others, but needed membership | |
85049380 | Salem Witch Hunts | 1692- deaths of 20 women convicted of witchcraft (usually older, richer women) | |
85049381 | Leisler's Rebellion | between landholders and merchants- resentment against upper class | |
85049382 | Conquest of the Cradle | a phrase that described how the Americans were able to succed by simply reproducing faster than Britain | |
85049383 | Pennsylvania Dutch | German immigrants who left Germany because of religious persecution, economic problems and war | |
85049384 | Scots- Irish | scottish people who lived in Ireland, but moved to Pennsylvania | |
85049385 | Paxton Boys | armed march on Philadelphia by Scots-Irish frontiersmen in protest of Quaker lenient Indian policies | |
85049386 | Regulators | an insurrection against eastern domination of the colony's affairs | |
85049389 | Triangular Trade | rum to Africa, slaves to the West-Indies, and sugar to New England | |
85049391 | Navigation Acts | tariffs that controled trade with other countries- lead to rebellious feelings | |
85049392 | Samuel Adams | person who helped found the patroit movement | |
85049393 | Anglican and Congregational | the two established churches in America | |
85049394 | The Great Awakening | 1730s - 1740s religious revival of Puritan faith- Jonathan Edwards | |
85049395 | Jonathan Edwards | minister in Northampton who emphasized the need for grace | |
85049396 | George Whitefield | loud preacher who caused many to convert during the Great Awakening | |
85049397 | Old Lights | orthodox clergymen that did not support the Awakening | |
85049398 | New Lights | ministers who supported the Awakening | |
85049400 | John Trumbull | American painter during A. Revolutionary War | |
85049401 | Charles Wilson Peale | portraits of George Washington, ran museum | |
85049402 | Benjamin West | painter, close friend of George III | |
85049403 | John Singleton Copley | painter, went to London because he was a Loyalist | |
85049404 | Phylis Wheatley | first African-American woman in United States' history to have her poetry published | |
85049405 | Benjamin Franklin | wrote Poor Richard's Almanack | |
85049406 | Poor Richard's Almanack | book that had pithy, homespun sayings | |
85049407 | John Peter Zenger | person who printed mean things about the government and was decided "not guilty" - freedom of press | |
85049408 | Lord Cornbury | worst governor of New Jersey and New York- drunk gambler |
American Pageant: Chpt. 1-5
Primary tabs
Need Help?
We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.
For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.
If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.
Need Notes?
While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!