APUSH Unit 2 Timeline

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    Southern Colonies

    Settlers in the Southern colonies came to America to seek economic prosperity they could not find in Old England. Their economy was based on growing cash crops such as tobacco and rice. To meet the increasing labor demands of the cash crop plantations, many farmers, merchants, and planters relied on indentured servants.
  • House of Burgesses

    House of Burgesses is important, because it was the first democratically-elected legislative body in the New World.
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    New England colonies

    The New England colonies (Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire) were founded to escape religious persecution in England. Their society is centered on trade and Boston was the colonies' major port city. Overall, they depended on fishing, lumbering, and subsistence farming.
  • Mayflower Compact

    The Mayflower Compact was a document signed on the English ship Mayflower by a group of pilgrims. This document is very significant, because it was the first instance of an established self-government in the New World.
  • Anne Hutchinson Banishment

    Anne Hutchinson discussed her own interpretation of the church's teachings. As she strayed away from the strict puritan view of christianity, many of the colonial leaders thought of her as a threat to their authority. Thus, on March 22nd, 1638, she was banished from the Massachusetts Bay colony.
  • Fundamental Orders of Connecticut

    A document that established a representative government in Connecticut. It includes a legislature elected by a popular vote and a governor elected by the legislature. The fundamental orders is usually considered the first written constitution in North America.
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    The Age of Salutary Neglect

    British Treatment of the colonies during the period preceding the French and Indian War is often described as salutary neglect.
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    Navigation Acts

    In order to guarantee a favorable balance of trade, the British government encouraged manufacturing in England and placed protective tariffs on imports that might compete with English goods. The navigation acts required colonists to buy and sell goods only from England. The passage of the Navigation Acts thus contributed to rising anti-British sentiment and the eventual outbreak of the American Revolution.
  • Halfway Covenant

    A group of ministers in Boston came up with a compromise known as the Halfway Covenant, allowing colonists to become partial church members even if they had not had a religious conversion experience.
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    Middle Colonies

    The Middle colonies (Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware) were also called the “Breadbasket colonies” because of their fertile soil, ideal for farming. They also featured mixed economies, including farming and merchant shipping. The Middle colonies attracted a diverse group of European migrants.
  • Wool Act

    The wool act forbade both the export of wool from the American colonies and the importation of wool from other British colonies.
  • Molasses Act

    The molasses act imposed an unreasonably high tax on the importation of sugar from the French West Indies. This act incited a form of resent toward the British crown which would soon turn into a full rebellion.