History of the United States Section 3

Section Content
Slave Codes. Protestantism. The Edict of Nantes. The Chesapeake region. Saugus Ironworks. Peter Hansclever. The Iron Act. Household goods in America during the early 1800s. Colonial currency paper. The triangular trade. Class division. Consumerism. Luxury goods. Plantations growth in the South. Slave communities. Stono Rebellion. Different trades in America. Slaves ownership of business. The Puritan's Community. Primogeniture and the distribution of land. Hysteria in Massachusetts. Colonial cities. Inequality in America. Elites. Calvinist. Religion disputes in early American government. Jonathan Edwards. John and Charles Wesley. Methodism. The New Light. Natural Laws. Enlightenment. Benjamin Franklin. Almanacs. Printing technology. Church schools. Reading and writing. Establishing Harvard, Yale, and Princeton. The Royal Society of London. Adopting England's legal system. Creation of Americas own political system. First Governors. The British attempt to keep American colonies under their power. The Albany Plan. Seigneuries. Quebec. Differences between colonial powers and their interaction with local natives. The Iroquois Confederacy.


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U.S. History A21

American slavery was also known as permanent servitude.


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U.S. History A22

Peter Hansclever was the ironmaster of New Jersey with the largest ironworks industry in the 1760's.


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U.S. History A23

Those with wealth and no land demonstrated wealth by showing off purchased goods. This was the origins of class division.


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U.S. History A24

Shoemaking, weaving, midwifery, carpentry, and blacksmithing were a handful of trades slaves learned.


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U.S. History A25

Successful women were not exempt from hysteria. Some believed their success originated from the practice of witchcraft.


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U.S. History A26

During the 18th century, Jews were not allowed to vote or obtain political office positions.


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U.S. History A27

Almanacs are informational handbook.


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U.S. History A28

Yale was named after Elihu Yale.


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U.S. History A29

By the mid 18th century, the North consisted of small family farms, towns, and cities.


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U.S. History A30

Americans refer to it as the French and Indian War. Europe refers to it as the Seven Years War. The French and Indian War/ the Seven Years War holds two names for the same historic occasion.