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AP Review 1607-1789

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Title: AP Review 1607-1789


1
AP Review 1607-1789
  • Early settlement
  • through
  • The Constitution

2
1607-1789
  • The Navigation Act Acts were part of the British
    policy known as
  • Isolationism
  • Capitalism
  • Mercantilism
  • Monopolism
  • Imperialism

C
3
1607-1789
  • The major purpose of Englands mercantilist
    policy was to
  • Protect the infant industries of Englands young
    colonies
  • Increase Englands prosperity
  • Discourage other European powers from colonizing
    North America
  • Reduce the need for an overseas empire
  • Open the Atlantic to free trade

B
4
1607-1789
  • The Dutch settled New Netherland primarily to
  • Secure a refuge for the persecuted
  • Check the growth of English colonies in North
    America
  • Expand their commercial and mercantile network
  • Gain colonies to produce agricultural surpluses
  • Secure naval supplies

C
5
1607-1789
  • Which of the following statements about Africans
    brought as slaves to the British North American
    colonies is true?
  • They were the primary labor source for
    plantations in the Chesapeake by 1630.
  • They had a much lower life expectancy in the
    Chesapeake than in South Carolina or the West
    Indies.
  • They greatly outnumbered Europeans in every
    colony south of the Mason-Dixon Line by 1776.
  • They maintained cultural practices brought from
    Africa.
  • They were the primary source of labor in
    Pennsylvania until 1720.

D
6
1607-1789
  • By the 1750s, the British colonies on the North
    American mainland were characterized by all of
    the following EXCEPT
  • disdain for British constitutional monarchy
  • many religious denominations
  • a society without a hereditary aristocracy
  • a growing number of non-English settlers
  • acceptance of slavery as a labor system

A
7
1607-1789
  • The primary purpose of the Proclamation of 1763
    was to
  • Encourage westward colonial migration
  • avoid conflict with the trans-Appalachian
    Indians
  • gain much-needed revenue
  • drive out French colonists
  • provide a haven for Catholics

B
8
1607-1789
  • France negotiated a treaty of alliance with the
    new American nation in 1778 following
  • the defeat of the British General Burgoyne at
    Saratoga
  • American naval victories on the Great Lakes
  • the dispatch of an American peace mission to
    Britain
  • an ultimatum by American diplomats
  • a personal plea by George Washington

A
9
1607-1789
  • A major weakness of the Articles of Confederation
    was that they
  • created a too-powerful chief executive
  • did not include a mechanism for their own
    amendment
  • made it too difficult for the government to
    raise money through taxes and duties
  • denied the federal government the power to
    mediate disputes between states
  • required the ratification of only a simple
    majority of states

C
10
1607-1789
  • The Puritans believed that the freedom to
    practice religion should be extended to
  • Puritans only
  • all Protestants only
  • all Christians only
  • all Jews and Christians only
  • all inhabitants of the New World, including
    Africans and Native Americans

A
11
1607-1789
  • The Sugar Act of 1764 represented a major shift
    in British policy toward the colonies in that,
    for the first time, the British
  • Allowed all proceeds from a tax to stay in the
    colonial economy
  • attempted to control colonial exports
  • offered the colonists the opportunity to address
    Parliament with grievances
  • required the colonies to import English goods
    exclusively
  • levied taxes aimed at raising revenue rather
    than regulating trade

E
12
1607-1789
  • Roger Williams was banished from Massachusetts
    Bay in 1636 for advocating
  • the separation of church and state
  • womens suffrage
  • bigamy
  • the export of tobacco
  • independence from England

A
13
1607-1789
  • The First Great Awakening can be seen as
    response to which of the following?
  • Puritanism
  • the Enlightenment
  • transcendentalism
  • existentialism
  • post-modernism

B
14
1607-1789
  • Which of the following states the principle of
    virtual representation?
  • Paper money has value even though it is
    inherently worth very little
  • Slave populations must be counted when figuring
    Congressional apportionment
  • American property-holding colonists may, if they
    desire, join their state legislatures
  • All English subjects, including those who are
    not allowed to vote, are represented in
    Parliament
  • All English subjects are entitled to a trial
    before a jury of their peers

D
15
1607-1789
  • Which of the following most accurately describes
    the system of indentured service in the
    Chesapeake settlement during the 17th century?
  • Indentured servants were slaves for life however
    their children were born free and could own
    property.
  • Most indentured servants were lured by the
    promise of freedom and property upon completion
    of their service.
  • Most indentured servants were convicted
    criminals sentenced to servitude in the New
    World.
  • The vast majority of indentured servants died
    within two years of arriving in the New World.
  • Indentured servants were not protected under
    colonial law.

B
16
1607-1789
  • The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 was a significant
    achievement because it
  • laid claim to all of the North America east of
    the Mississippi River
  • represented one of the rare successes of
    diplomacy between the U.S. government and
    American Indians
  • defined the process by which the territories
    could become states
  • opened all territories west of the states to
    slavery
  • was the only piece of legislation to pass
    through Congress under the Articles of
    Confederation

C
17
1607-1789
All of the following statements about indentured
servitude in colonial America are true EXCEPT
  1. Indentured servants were primarily young men
  2. indentured servants provided most of the labor
    in tobacco cultivation in the 17th century
  3. Indentured servants could not be sold as property
  4. Indentured servants came primarily from the
    unemployed and lower classes
  5. Indentured servants were replaced by black slaves
    in the southern colonies by the early 18th century

C
18
1607-1789
The Virginia Resolves
  1. Declared Virginias secession from the Union
  2. Created the House of Burgesses
  3. Protested the Stamp Act of 1765
  4. Put forward Virginias claim to western lands
  5. Stated the Loyalist position during the American
    Revolution

C
19
1607-1789
The first proprietary colony was
  1. Jamestown
  2. Carolina
  3. Massachusetts Bay
  4. New Amsterdam
  5. Maryland

E
20
1607-1789
Which of the following is a direct social change
brought about by the American Revolution?
  1. The emancipation of slaves who fought against the
    British
  2. The elimination of property qualifications for
    voting
  3. An end to religious requirements for holding
    political office
  4. Recognition of the right of women to inherit
    property
  5. Complete separation of church and state

A
21
1607-1789
The most important consequence of the Boston Tea
Party was the
  1. Repeal of the tax on tea
  2. Failure of other colonies to support Bostons
    action
  3. Opening of negotiations between Britain and
    Massachusetts
  4. Enactment by Parliament of the Coercive Acts
  5. Reopening of the Port of Boston to foreign trade

D
22
1607-1789
Ratification of the Constitution
  1. Required unanimous approval of the states
  2. Was put to a nationwide referendum
  3. Was agreed to by the delegates to the
    Constitutional Convention
  4. Was determined by electors from each state
  5. Needed the approval of nine states

E
23
1607-1789
  • The Molasses Act was intended to enforce
    Englands mercantilist policies by
  • forcing the colonists to export solely to Great
    Britain
  • forcing the colonists to buy sugar from other
    British colonies rather than from foreign
    producers
  • forbidding the colonists to engage in
    manufacturing activity in competition with
    British industries
  • providing a favorable market for the products of
    the British East India Company
  • creating an economic situation in which gold
    tended to flow from the colonies to the mother
    country

B
24
1607-1789
  • The British government imposed the Townsend Acts
    on the American colonies in the belief that
  1. the American position regarding British taxation
    had changed
  2. it was necessary to provoke a military
    confrontation in order to teach the colonists a
    lesson
  3. its provisions were designed solely to enforce
    mercantilism
  4. it had been approved by the colonial
    legislatures
  5. the Americans would accept it as external rather
    than internal taxation

E
25
1607-1789
  • The primary issue in dispute in Shays Rebellion
    was
  1. the jailing of individuals or seizure of their
    property for failure to pay taxes during a time
    of economic hardship
  2. the under representation of western Massachusetts
    in the state legislature leading to accusations
    of taxation without representation.
  3. the failure of Massachusetts to pay a promised
    postwar bonus to soldiers who had served in its
    forces during the Revolution
  4. the failure of Massachusetts authorities to take
    adequate steps to protect the western part of the
    state from the depredations of raiding Indians
  5. economic oppression practiced by the banking
    interests of eastern Massachusetts

A
26
1607-1789
  • Congresss most successful and effective method
    of financing the War of Independence was
  1. printing large amounts of paper money
  2. obtaining grants and loans from France and the
    Netherlands
  3. levying heavy direct taxes
  4. issuing paper securities backed by the promise
    of western land grants
  5. appealing to the states for voluntary
    contributions

B
27
1607-1789
  • In which of the following British North American
    colonies was slavery legally established by the
    early 1700s?

(A) The southern colonies only (B) The middle and
southern colonies only (C) The tobacco- and
rice-growing colonies only (D) All the colonies
except Pennsylvania and the New England
colonies (E) All the colonies
E
28
1607-1789
  • Which of the following was true of most Puritans
    who emigrated to seventeenth-century New England?

(A) They had renounced the Church of England (B)
They rejected the authority of the English
king (C) They considered themselves
non-Separatists (D) They approved of the Crowns
religious policy (E) They intended to return
eventually to England
C
29
1607-1789
  • The guarantee that English settlers in the New
    World would retain the rights of Englishmen
    proved to be
  • an empty promise
  • (B) unpopular among the settlers
  • (C) the cause of revolution in Spain and France
  • (D) the foundation of American liberties

D
30
1607-1789
  • By 1700, the most populous colony in English
    America was
  • Massachusetts
  • (B) Virginia
  • (C) New York
  • (D) Pennsylvania

B
31
1607-1789
  • Among the Puritans, it was understood that
  • they would establish democratic government in
    America
  • (B) clergymen would hold the most powerful
    political office
  • (C) the purpose of government was to enforce
    Gods laws
  • (D) all adult white male landowners could vote
    for political leaders

C
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