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Ch.6 History Vocab.

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Question
Answer
British monarch who wanted to keep peace with its Native American allies and enforce the Proclamation of 1763   King George III  
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A law passed by British Parliament in 1765 which required colonists to house British troops and provide them with supplies   Quartering Act  
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Income needed to help pay expenses   revenue  
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A law passed by Parliament in 1764 placing a tax on sugar, molasses and other products shipped to the colonies   Sugar Act  
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A law passed by Parliament in 1764 that required all legal and commercial documents to carry an official mark showing a tax had been paid   Stamp Act  
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A member of the Virginia House of Burgesses who called for resistance to the British-imposed stamp tax   Patrick Henry  
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Refusal to buy certain products   boycott  
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A colonial secret society opposed to British policies   Sons of Liberty  
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A sailor of African-American and Native American ancestry who was an early hero of America's struggle for freedom   Crispus Attucks  
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Passed in 1767 by Parliament it suspended New York's assembly as well as placing import taxes on such products as glass, paper, lead, paint, and tea   Townshend Acts  
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A warrant that let British officers enter colonial homes or businesses to search for smuggled goods   writs of assistance  
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A colonial leader who led a 1767 boycott of British goods and urged colonists to resist British control   Samuel Adams  
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In 1770, a violent fight between British soldiers and colonists where British soldiers fired into a crowd of colonial protesters killing five colonists   Boston Massacre  
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Lawyer and cousin of Samuel Adams who defended the British soldiers in court   John Adams  
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Groups of people in the colonies who exchanged letters on colonial affairs   committees of correspondence  
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A 1773 protest of the Tea Act where colonists disguised as Mohawks destroyed tea aboard British ships by dumping 342 chests of tea into a harbor   Boston Tea Party  
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A force of armed civilians who pledged to defend their community during the American Revolution   militia  
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Militia trained to be ready quickly   Minutemen  
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A series of laws passed in 1775 passed by Parliament to punish the Massachusetts colonists for the Boston Tea Party   Intolerable Acts  
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A 1774 meeting of delegates from all colonies except Georgia to uphold colonial rights   First Continental Congress  
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Boston silversmith who took a midnight ride spreading news about British troops' movements   Paul Revere  
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Massachusetts' locations of the first battles of the American Revolutionary War   Lexington and Concord  
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Term for American colonist who supported the British in the American Revolution   Loyalist  
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Term for American colonist who sided with rebels in the American Revolution   Patriot  
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Led Green Mountain Boys and captured Fort Ticonderoga   Ethan Allen  
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Cannons or large guns   artillery  
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May 1775, assembly that authorized the Continental Army and approved the Declaration of Independence   Second Continental Congress  
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A colonial force authorized by the Second Continental Congress with George Washington as its commanding general   Continental Army  
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An officer who played a role in the victory at Fort Ticonderoga   Benedict Arnold  
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The 1776 document in which the colonies declared independence and called for separation from Britain   Declaration of Independence  
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A respected political leader and thinker who was chosen to write the Declaration of Independence   Thomas Jefferson  
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