circle clue game slowly, reveal the clues. try to guess the correct answer using as few clues as...
TRANSCRIPT
Circle Clue Game
• Slowly, reveal the clues. Try to guess the correct answer using as few clues as possible.
• GOOD LUCK!!!
Magna Carta
British
Nobility v. King
Limited Power of King
Trial by Jury
Founding document signed by King John
Federalism
System of Government
National Government
Divided Power
States
Power is divided between the national and state governments
Declaration of Independence
Treasonous
Grievances
King George III
1776
Written by Thomas Jefferson
Bill of Rights
Declaration of Independence
Anti-Federalists
Guarantees
Unalienable Rights
1st 10 Amendments
Thomas Jefferson
Secretary of State under Washington Vice
President under John Adams
3rd President
Louisiana Purchase
1803
Declaration of Independence 1776
Thomas Paine
Patriot
Writer
Urged colonists to
support independence
The Crisis
Common Sense
Articles of Confederation
Yorktown
No taxation
Weak central government
1st attempt at a national government by the United States
Weak executive
Checks and Balances
Congress approves
Presidents appointments
President appoints judges
Supreme Court may declare laws unconstitutional
President may veto bills
Way to make sure each branch does their jobs correctly
Nullification
South Carolina
John C. Calhoun
Henry Clay
State’s Rights
Idea that a state could ignore national laws
Abolitionists
William Lloyd Garrison
John Brown
Sojourner Truth
Frederick Douglass
Movement to end slavery
Abraham Lincoln
Republican
Illinois
Civil War
Emancipation Proclamation
Gettysburg Address
Women’s Suffrage
Seneca Falls
Elizabeth Cady
Stanton
Susan B. Anthony
Right to Vote
Exclusion
1787
Change Articles of
Confederation
George Washington
Philadelphia
Writing the Constitution
Weak Government
George Washington
From Virginia
On Money1st President of United
States
Commander of the
Continental Army
Member of Continental Congress
Unalienable Rights
God Given Rights
Rights that cannot be
taken awayLife, Liberty
Pursuit of Happiness
Declaration of Independence
Popular Sovereignty
People have the power
“We the People”Principal of
the Constitution
The People have the final authority over
the government
Constitution
Colonial Grievances
“He is waging war against us”
“He will not protect the
people”“Taxation without
representation”
Addressed in the Bill of
Rights
“We have no trial by jury”
1st Amendment
Freedom to Petition the government
Freedom of Religion
Freedom of the Press
Freedom of Speech
Freedom to Assemble Peacefully
13th, 14th, 15th
Amendments
Citizenship
Right to voteFormer Slaves
Constitutional Amendments
Freedom
Columbian Exchange
North America
Transfer and TradeAnimals, Crops,
and Disease
Between Europe and the New
World
Caribbean
Subsistence Farming
Self Sufficient
Family of WorkersGrowing for
yourself
Do not grow cash crops
Poor
Primary Source
Letter
Not a textbookEyewitness
to events
The best source of historical information
Diary
John and AbigailAdams
She wrote letters to him
often
He was Vice President
under Washington
She spoke often for women’s
rights
He was the 2nd President of the
Untied States
He helped negotiate the
Treaty of Paris in 1783
Bubonic Plague
From Asia
Ring Around the RosesRats
Millions Die
Trade
Bubonic Plague
From Asia
Ring Around the RosesRats
Killed Millions
Trade
SomeReasons for the
American Revolution
The colony was a long distance
away from it’s home country
Taxing Tea
Common Sense made sense to a
lot of people
No taxation without
representation
Demanded Rights of Englishmen
1861-1865Civil War
Fort Sumter
Gettysburg and Vicksburg
Over 600,000 people die
Surrender at Appomattox Courthouse
Secession
Cottage Industry
Work at home
Sell products
Minimal resources
Small Scale Production
Family
Growth ofRepresentative
Government
Mayflower Compact
English Bill of Rights
Fundamental Orders of
Connecticut
US Constitution
Magna Carta