APUSH Unit 2 Assignment 3 Vocab Basic

APUSH Vocab 2.3

6 cards   |   Total Attempts: 182
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
1st Continental Congress
The First Continental Congress met to discuss their concerns over Parliament's dissolutions of the New York (for refusing to pay to quarter troops), Massachusetts (for the Boston Tea Party), and Virginia Assemblies. The First Continental Congress rejected the plan for a unified colonial government, stated grievances against the crown called the Declaration of Rights, resolved to prepare militias, and created the Continental Association to enforce a new non-importation agreement through Committees of Vigilence. In response, in February, 1775, Parliament declared the colonies to be in rebellion.
Intolerable Acts
Coercive Acts / Intolerable Acts / Repressive Acts-All of these names refer to the same acts, passed in 1774 in response to the Boston Tea Party, and which included the Boston Port Act, which shut down Boston Harbor; the Massachusetts Government Act, which disbanded the Boston Assembly (but it soon reinstated itself); the Quartering Act, which required the colony to provide provisions for British soldiers; and the Administration of Justice Act, which removed the power of colonial courts to arrest royal officers
Coercive Acts
Coercive Acts / Intolerable Acts / Repressive Acts-All of these names refer to the same acts, passed in 1774 in response to the Boston Tea Party, and which included the Boston Port Act, which shut down Boston Harbor; the Massachusetts Government Act, which disbanded the Boston Assembly (but it soon reinstated itself); the Quartering Act, which required the colony to provide provisions for British soldiers; and the Administration of Justice Act, which removed the power of colonial courts to arrest royal officers
Lexington and Concord
April 19, 1774
General Gage, stationed in Boston, was ordered by King George III to arrest Samuel Adams and John Hancock. The British marched on Lexington, where they believed the colonials had a cache of weapons. The colonial militias, warned beforehand by Paul Revere and William Dawes, attempted to block the progress of the troops and were fired on by the British at Lexington. The British continued to Concord, where they believed Adams and Hancock were hiding, and they were again attacked by the colonial militia. As the British retreated to Boston, the colonials continued to shoot at them from behind cover on the sides of the road. This was the start of the Revolutionary War.
Conciliatory Proposition
In 1775, Parliament sought middle ground with the American colonies and proposed instead of being taxed directly by Parliament, the colonists would tax themselves at Parliament’s demand, and hoped this would splinter the united opposition against British taxation laws (it was too late as the first shots at Lexington and Concord had already been fired).
John Hancock
Early “rebel” leader in the United States who was sought after by the British; he forced the British soldiers to march out to Lexington and Concord to search him out and helped ignite the Revolutionary War.