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Document that listed rights that even the Englsh nobles wouldn't have the right to take away; English nobles forced King John to sign this.
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Belief in the benefits of profitable trading.
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First permanent English settlement.
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The lower house of legislature in colonial Virginia.
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Formed by the Pilgrims when they arrived at Plymouth Rock.
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The Agreement to establish a government by the pilgrims in the cabin of the Mayflower.
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The first written constitution.
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When the rebels of John Culpeper and George Durant, imprisoned the deputy governor and other officials, and assembled a legislature governed bu Culpeper for two years.
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The overthrow og King James II by a union of English Parlementarians; this conferred the sovereignty on William III and his wife, Mary II.
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Declared the rights and liberties of the subjects and giving William III and Mary II the succession.
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Held in Salem, Massachusetts which lead to the execution of twenty people for allegedly practicing witchcraft.
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A period of religious awakening and reform in New England; this movement swept the Atlantic world and the American colonies.
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The North American War between France and Great Britian. (1754-1763)
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A meeting of delegates from seven colonies held at Albany, New York where Benjamin Franklin proposed a plan for unifying colonies.
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The British crown's attempt to separate white settlement from Indian country after the French and Indian War. (1754-1763)
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Indian uprising against the British after the French and Indian war; lead to the Proclamation Line of 1763.
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Revenue-raising act passed by the Parliament.
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Organization of American colonials who opposed British measures against the colonists; initially formed to protest the Stamp Act.
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The new tax being imposed on all American colonists and it required them to pay a tax on evry piece of printed paper that they used.
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Virginia's response to the British Parliament's Stamp Act of 1765.
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Laws passed by Parliment placing duties on certain items imported by the American colonists.
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British soldiers fired on a crowd of civilians, killing five men; this sparked the rebellion of the American colonies. (The Revolutionary War).
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Organized by Samuel Adams in Massachusetts to keep colonists informed on the ant-colonial actions of the British and to plan resistance by the colonies.
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The chase of a ship believed to be smuggling goods; a group of men boarded the Gaspee (lead by John Brown) they wounded the lieutenant of the ship and set it on fire; the British ordered a full investigation and offered a reward; no one confessed.
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British Parliment created a monopoly unfair to American tea merchants; caused the Boston Tea Party.
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Raid of three British ships in the Boston Harbor; colonists dressed as Indians, threw tea into the harbor in order to protest against the British taxes on tea.
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A series of laws passed by the British to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party.
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Lasted until October 26, 1774; held because colonists were upset by the Intolerable Acts and taxes; 12 colonies represented.
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When fifty-one ladies from Edenton met and publicly resisted not to drink tea or wear any cloth made from England until th tax acts were repealed.
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When Mecklenburg County gathered and signed a declaration of independence from Britain; Mecklenburg Resolves were a series of radical resolutions; this document was supposedly burned in a fire in 1800.
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A resolution adopted by the Fourth Provincial Congress of the Province of North Carolina during the American Revolution; this helped pave the way for the U.S. Declaration of Independence.
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After the Battles of Lexington and Concord; they decided to break away from the British; met in the State House in Philadelphia (Independence Hall).
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Established by the Second Continental Congress, which declared the American colonies to be free and independent of England.
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The orginal constitution; replaced by the U.S. Constitution in 1789.
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Ended the United states War for Independence.
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Adopted by the U.S. Congress; this divided much of the country into townships and ranges to facilitate the sale of land to settlers.
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The armed uprising in central and western massachusetts- Springfield- 1786-1787.
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The Congress of Confederation adopted this for the government of the Western territories ceded to the U.S. by the states.
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The convention of United States statesmen who drafted the U.S. Constitution in 1787.
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A collection of essays written by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison, by the name of "Publius." Its puropse was to persuade New Yorkers to ratify the Constitution.
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Western Pennsylvanian settlers revolted against the tax on whiskey.