History Simulation Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Question | Answer |
Jamestown was founded in | 1607 |
Declaration of Independence was signed on | July 4, 1776 |
The United States Constitution was written in the year | 1787 |
Louisiana purchase was in the year | 1803 |
Civil War was fought in the years | 1861 - 1865 |
The first battle of the American Revolution: | Concord, 1775 |
The turning point in the American Revolution: | Battle of Saratoga, 1777 |
The end of the American Revolution: | Battle of Yorktown, 1781 |
The treaty that ended the American Revolution: | Treaty of Paris 1783 |
The first shots of the Civil War were fired at * on * | Fort Sumter, April 12, 1861 |
The turning point in the Civil War | Battle of Gettysburg - Northern Victory |
The capture of this city in 1863 gave the North control over the Mississippi river | Vicksburg |
Where General Lee surrendered to General Grant | Appomattox Court House |
A strong sense of loyalty to a state or section instead of to the whole country | Sectionalism |
A campaign against the sale or drinking of alcohol. | Temperance Movement |
The first representative assembly in the new world | Virginia House of Burgesses |
The freedom of private business to operate competitively with little government regulation | Free enterprise |
People that supported strong national government | Federalists |
An idea towards society in the late 1700s based on the belief that the good virtue and morality of the people was essential to sustain the republican form of government. | Republicanism |
The first document that limited the power of the government | Magna Carta 1215 |
The basis for the American Bill of Rights | The English Bill of Rights |
The first American Constitution | Articles of Confederation |
A policy of establishing the principles and procedures for the orderly expansion of the United States. | Northwest Ordinance |
An agreement signed by Pilgrims to create fair laws for the good of the colony. First example of self government in the North America | Mayflower Compact |
The Federalist papers were written to defend the constitution. Written by: | Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison |
Written by Lincoln to dedicate a cemetery for soldiers who died in the Battle of Gettysburg | Gettysburg Address |
Created two houses in Congress - one based on population and one with equal representation | The Great Compromise |
A statement written by woman's rights supporters that was modeled after the Declaration of Independence | The Declaration of Sentiments |
Founded the Sons of Liberty and Committees of Correspondence. Loud mouth Boston patriot who complained taxing the colonies was unfair | Samuel Adams |
Andrew Jackson's vice president and supporter of the South before and during the war | John C. Calhoun |
Was a powerful Kentucky Congressman and Senator who proposed the Missouri Compromise and the Compromise of 1850 | Henry Clay |
Massachusetts Congressman and Senator who spoke for the North and preservation of the Union | Daniel Webster |
President of the Confederacy | Jefferson Davis |
General of the Northern army | Ulysses S. Grant, 1863 - 1865. He was the General of the Union Army's western campaign before. |
General of the Southern army | Robert E. Lee, 1861 - 65 |
member of the Virginia House of Burgesses "Give me liberty or give me death" | Patrick Henry |
Father of the Constitution | James Madison |
Former slave who became the best-know black abolitionist in the country | Frederick Douglas |
An escaped slave who became a conductor on the Underground Railroad. | Harriet Tubman |
Organized the Seneca Falls Convention and created the Women's Rights Movement in the US | Elizabeth Cady Stanton |
Known as the "Father of Education" | Horace Mann |
An African American regiment during the Civil War that played a key role in the attach of Fort Wagner | The 54th Massachusetts Infantry |
Court Case that set up judicial review | Marbury vs. Madison |
Court decision counting slaves as property not people | Dred Scott vs. Sanford |
Abraham Lincoln was elected in the year | 1860 |
The capital of the Confederacy | Richmond, Virginia |
First REAL battle of the Civil War | Battle of Bull Run - long and bloody |
Bloodiest Civil War battle | Battle of Antietam, on September 17, 1862. North won |
Emancipation Proclamation issued on | January 1, 1863 |
This general was called to apply "Total War" to the South in 1864 | General William Tecumseh Sherman. Became known as "Sherman's march to the sea" |
The Bank of the United States opened in the year | 1791 |
Jay's Treaty was in the year | 1794 |
Pickney's Treaty was with the country of: | Spain |
Treaty which ended the war of 1812 | Treaty of Ghent |
The boundaries of Florida are settled in this treaty | Adams-Onis Treaty |
George Washington was president from the years: | 1789 - 1797 |
The first political parties: Federalist Party led by * and Democratic-Republican Party led by * | Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson |
the election of 1800 caused what amendment | the 12th amendment |
The Embargo Act was in the year | 1807 |
The Missouri Compromise and The Monroe Doctrine were both done by president: | Monroe |
Meeting of colonial delegates in September 1774 | 1st Continental Congress |
A rebellion of farmers due to their inability to pay taxes | Shays' Rebellion |
Meeting of 55 Delegates in May of 1787, to try to improve the Articles of Confederation | Constitutional Convention |
proposed 3 branches of government with a two house legislature | Virginia Plan |
Proposed plan to keep only one legislature. | New Jersey Plan |
The idea that political authority rests with people | NThe idea that political power rests with the people |
The first state to ratify the constitution | Delaware |
Large farms that grew only one kind of crop | plantation |
The transfer of plants and animals from Europe to the Americas | Columbian Exchange |
He introduced tobacco which saved Jamestown | John Rolfe |
Religious group that left England to escape religious persecution | pilgrims |
Thousands of Puritans flock to the New World between 1630 and 1640 | Great Migration |
Kicked out of Massachusetts for claiming God spike directly to her | Anne Hutchinson |
The 4 New England Colonies: | Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts (CHIMNE) |
The 4 Middle Colonies: | New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Delaware (JYPD) |
The 5 Southern Colonies: | Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia |
Spiritual revival that swept the colonies in the 1730's and 1740's | Great Awakening |
The Age of Reason | Enlightenment |
Ben Franklin's unsuccessful attempt to unite the colonies | Albany Plan of Union |
War between French and English for control of North America - Ohio River Valley | French and Indian War |
British tax on glass, paper, lead, and tea | Townshend Acts |
Punishment for the Boston Tea Party | Coercive (Intolerable) Acts |
Wrongful taking of power | Usurpations |
Washington crosses this river on Christmas night, 1776, to surprise the Hessians | Delaware Rivers |
governor of Spanish Louisiana, when Spain entered the war against Britain in 1779. | Bernardo de Galvez |
American naval hero who famously said, "I have not yet begun to fight" | John Paul Jones |
Became close friend of General Washington. Aided the Patriots with money and supplies. | Marquis de Lafayette |
German who helped train the Patriots at Valley Forge | Friedrich von Steuben |
First written plan of government/constitution in the colonies | Fundamental Orders of Connecticut |
Created by:
anna-mal
Popular U.S. History sets