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Robbins
Friday, 11 February 2005

Vocabulary Test is on Monday
The following words will appear on the test:
Chapter 6 Vocabulary
Lesson 1 and 2

1. Ethan Allen - leader of the Green Mountain Boys; helped lead an attack on Fort Ticonderoga
2. Green Mountain Boys - a group of colonists who lead an attack on Fort Ticonderoga, led by Ethan Allen
3. Continental Army - established by the Second Continental Congress to protect the colony against Great Britain
4. Olive Branch Petition - a petition written to King George III declaring their loyalty to the king and asking that the Intolerable Acts be repealed.
5. Patriots - American colonists who opposed British rule
6. Loyalists or Tories - American colonists who remained loyal to Britain
7. Battle of Bunker Hill - the first major battle of the American Revolution
8. refugees - people who flee their homes to seek refuge from war, persecution, or other hardships
9. blockade - the shutting off of a port to keep people or supplies from moving in or out
10. mercenaries - troops for hire
11. Common Sense - a pamphlet written by Thomas Paine protesting British rule in the colonies
12. traitor - a person who betrays his or her country
13. Thomas Jefferson - one of the writers of the Declaration of Independence
14. Declaration of Independence - a document declaring the colonies independence from Britain
15. preamble - introduction
16. natural rights - rights that belong to all people from birth

Posted by 7thghms at 3:40 PM CST
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Wednesday, 9 February 2005

Vocabulary Test on Friday

Words for the Test:
refugee
blockade
mercenary
Ethan Allen
Green Mountain Boys
Continental Army
Olive Branch Petition
Patriots
Loyalists
Battle of Bunker Hill
Benedict Arnold
traitory
preamble
natural rights
Common Sense
Thomas Paine
Richard Henry Lee
Thomas Jefferson
Declaration Independence

Notes from today's discussion
Chapter 6 Lesson 1
* Early Battles ( War or Peace? )
Ethan Allan
* A blacksmith with a fierce temper
* Leader of the Green Mountain Boys
* Took over Fort Ticonderoga and seized all of the gun powder and cannons
* Gave the Americans control of a key route into Canada



Continental Army
* In June the Second Continental Congress set up the Army
* Georgia Washington was selected as their leader

Olive Branch Petition
* Written by John Dickinson of Pennsylvania
* Declared loyalty to King George III
* Asked that the Intolerable Acts be repealed
* King George III refused and vowed to bring the Rebels to justice











Posted by 7thghms at 3:37 PM CST
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Thursday, 3 February 2005

Chapter 5 Study Guide
Define the following:

petitions
formal written requests to someone in authority

Joseph Brant
Mohawk leader who was an ally of the English

Writs of assistance
legal documents allowing officers to inspect ships' cargoes

nonimportation agreements
promises to stop importing goods taxed by the British

Samuel Adams
Patriot leader who formed committees of correspondence

William Pitt
British leader who developed a strategy for winning the French and Indian War

Townshend Acts
British laws that put taxes on many goods sold in the colonies

Patrick Henry
Virginia leader who protested British policies

Stamp Act
British law that resulted in a meeting of delegates from nine colonies

Intolerable Acts
British laws passed to punish colonists after the Boston Tea Party


2. In the 1700's who fought for power in North America?

England
France
Spain

3. What were the Intolerable Acts?
Limit town meetings
Shut the port of Boston
Establish a new Quartering Act


4. What was the Sugar Act?
Tried to raise money by taxing molasses

5. How did France try to protect its claims in North America?
Building forts in the Ohio River Valley

6. Which Native American group were allied with the French?
Huron

7. Why was the group The Sons and Daughters of Liberty organized?
To protest British policies

8. Why did Chief Pontiac give up his war against the British?
Britain issued the Proclamation of 1763

9. What was the goal of the Tea Act?
To help the British Company

10. Why did the colonists object to the Stamp Act?
They did not have their own representatives in Parliament

11. Who fought the first battle of the French and Indian War?
George Washington

12. Which event caused anti-British feelings?
Boston Massacre

13. How did colonists show their opposition to British taxes?
They boycotted British goods

14. What event led to the Intolerable Acts?
The Boston Tea Party

15. Describe the following events and explain how each contributed to worsening relations between the colonists and Britain: (a) the Boston Massacre; (b) the Boston Tea Party; (c) the Intolerable Acts

Boston Massacre
March 5, 1770 crowd gathered outside the Boston customs house
The rowdy crowd shouted insults and threw objects at the soldiers
Soldiers fired into the crowd and killed 5 people ( the first to die was Crispus Attucks, a black sailor)
Soldiers were given a trial and let go with light punishments ( some were branded on their hands)


Boston Tea Party
Three ships loaded with tea reached Boston harbor in late November 1773
Colonists dressed as Mohawk Indians boarded the ships and threw the tea into Boston harbor

Intolerable Acts
First Parliament shut down the port of Boston

Second, Parliament forbade Massachusetts colonists to hold town meetings more than once a year without the governor's permission

Third, Parliament provided for customs officers and other officials charged whit major crimes to be tried in Britain instead of in Massachusetts

Fourth, Parliament passed a new Quartering Act. British commanders could force citizens to house troops in their homes.

16. What role did Native Americans play as France and Britain struggled for power in North America?
Next slide

Many Native Americans tried to remain neutral , feeling that both the French and British were determined to take away their lands and way of life. Many sided with the French, whit whom they had strong trading partnerships. They fought with the French in an effort to keep the western lands closed to settlement. Some groups, such as the Iroquois, fought with the British.

17. What was the French advantage in the French and Indian War?
New France had a single government, allowing for quick decisions

18. What was the cause of the French and Indian War?
Began over with the fight over claims to the Ohio River valley

19. What was the Albany Plan of Union?
The plan was to unite to defend the colonies against France

21. What did the colonists form to communicate news of mutual interest?
Committees of correspondence

22. What were the Sons of Liberty dressed as when they boarded the British tea ships?
Native Americans

23. What states were the delegates from in the First continental Congress?
All colonies except Georgia attended the Congress


24. What did the Continental Congress advise each colony to do?
Form a militia

25. What event came immediately before the Intolerable Acts?
Boston Tea Party

26. Who did the delegates from the First Continental Congress support?
Massachusetts

27. In which colony did the conflict with the British grow violent?
Massachusetts

28. Give two reasons why the British insisted on taxing the colonies.
Britain needed to pay off its debt from the French and Indian War
It felt that the colonists should help to pay this debt because they had benefited from the war

29. Describe what led the British to issue the Proclamation of 1763.
Next slide

In the last year of the French and Indian War, the Indian chief Pontiac fought a war against the British and captured most of their western forts. When the British won the war against France, they gained control of the lands formerly held by France. The Indians could no longer look to France for help and stopped fighting. However, the British were concerned that growing numbers of white settlers would stir trouble with the Native Americans again. They passed the Proclamation of 1763, banning colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains


Posted by 7thghms at 7:55 AM CST
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Tuesday, 1 February 2005

Test on Chapter 5 will be on Friday

Homework:

Journal entry
How might your life be different if France, not England, had won the French and Indian War?
Entries should be completed for homework and turned in tomorrow.

Classroom notes from Chapter 5 Lesson 1 and 2
Chapter 5
Lesson 1
* Rivalry in North America

* At stake was more than control of the Ohio River Valley.

* France and England each hoped to drive the other nation out of North America altogether
Who competead for trade in the corners of the globe?
* England
* France
* Spain
* the Netherlands
How did the French protect their land claims?
built an extensive system of forts
Why was the Ohio River Valley so important to the French?
* it provided a vital link between their lands in Canada and the Mississippi River

* Native Americans decided that the only way to protect their way of life was to take sides in the struggle
Why did the French think that the Native Americans would fight on their side?
* most French were trappers not farmers like the English
* French did not destroy Indian hunting grounds by clearing forests for farms
* French trappers married Native American women and adopted their ways

* English settlers were mostly farm families
* They ignored Indian rights when they cleared land for crops
* did not respect Indian ways

Chapter 5 Lesson 2
The French and Indian War

The French and Indian War would forever change the balance of power in North America

English settlers called the conflict the French and Indian War because it pitted them against France and its Native American allies

Scuffles between France and Britain in the Ohio River valley triggered the opening shots of the French and Indian war.

Lieutenant Governor Dinwiddie wanted the French out of the Ohio River valley

He sent George Washington to deliver a letter warning the French to get of the Ohio River valley

When the French refused, he sent Washington and 150 men to build a fort where the Monogahela and Allegheny rivers meet.
* The French had already built Fort Duquesne where the rivers met
* Washington surprised the French with an early victory, but was then defeated at Fort Necessity
Albany Congress
* Delegates from seven colonies gathered in Albany, New York
* They met for two reasons
- Persuade the Iroquois to help them against the French
- To plan a united colonial defense


Albany Plan of Union
* Proposed by Benjamin Franklin
* Plan to create one general government for the 13 colonies
* Would be called the Grand Council and would be made up of members from each colony
* The council would make laws, raise taxes, and set up the defense of the colonies


* The delegates approved the plan
* The colonial assemblies did not approve it
* None of the colonies wanted to give up any of its powers to a central council
French strengths at the beginning of the war
* New France had a single government that could act quickly when necessary
* French had the support of many more Indian allies than the British did
British strengths at the beginning of the war
* Population of the English colonies was about 15 times greater that that of New France
* English colonies were clustered along the coast, so they were easier to defend that the widely scattered French settlements
* British had some Indian allies
* British navy ruled the seas

* During the next two years the war continued to go badly for the British
The Tide of Battle Turns
* William Pitt became the new head of the British government
* To encourage colonists to support the war, he promised large payments for military services and supplies
* In 1758, Amherst captures Louisburg
* British capture Fort Duquesne and renamed it Fort Pitt

Summer of 1759
* Pushed the French from Fort Niagara, Crown Point, and Fort Ticonderoga
* Pitt sent General Wolfe to take Quebec, capital of New France
* On September 17, 1759 Quebec surrendered to the British

* In 1760, the British took Montreal and the war in North America ended
* In 1763 Britain and France signed the Treaty of Paris, officially ending the long conflict
* The Treaty of Paris marked the end of French power in North America
Treaty of Paris
* Britain gained Canada and all French lands east of the Mississippi River
* France was allowed to keep two islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and islands in the West Indies
* Spain fought for France and had to give up Florida to Britain but received all French land west of the Mississippi River

Chapter 5 Study Guide

1. Define the following:
a. petitions
b. Joseph Brant
c. Writs of assistance
d. nonimportation agreements
e. Samuel Adams
f. William Pitt
g. Townshend Acts
h. Patrick Henry
i. Stamp Act
j. Intolerable Acts

2. In the 1700's who fought for power in North America?
3. What were the Intolerable Acts?
4. What was the Sugar Act?
5. How did France try to protect its claims in North America?
6. Which Native American group were allied with the French?
7. Why was the group The Sons and Daughters of Liberty organized?
8. Why did Chief Pontiac give up his war against the British?
9. What was the goal of the Tea Act?
10. Why did the colonists object to the Stamp Act?
11. Who fought the first battle of the French and Indian War?
12. Which event caused anti-British feelings?
13. How did colonists show their opposition to British taxes?
14. What event led to the Intolerable Acts?
15. Describe the following events and explain how each contributed to worsening relations between the colonists and Britain: (a) the Boston Massacre; (b) the Boston Tea Party; (c) the Intolerable Acts
16. What role did Native Americans play as France and Britain struggled for power in North America?
17. What was the French advantage in the French and Indian War?
18. What was the cause of the French and Indian War?
19. What was the Albany Plan of Union?
20. What was the turning point of the French and Indian War?
21. What did the colonists form to communicate news of mutual interest?
22. What were the Sons of Liberty dressed as when they boarded the British tea ships?
23. What states were the delegates from in the First continental Congress?
24. What did the Continental Congress advise each colony to do?
25. What event came immediately before the Intolerable Acts?
26. Who did the delegates from the First Continental Congress support?
27. In which colony did the conflict with the British grow violent?
28. Give two reasons why the British insisted on taxing the colonies.
29. Describe what led the British to issue the Proclamation of 1763.

Posted by 7thghms at 4:17 PM CST
Permalink
Friday, 28 January 2005

Please bring your journal each day to class. Daily Social Studies and writing assignments go in the journal.

This is the daily Social Studies for Thursday and Friday.

The main body of the Constitution has seven parts called articles. Answer these questions about the articles.
* 1. What do we call the two parts of Congress?
* 2. Which article talks about how much power the federal government has?
* 3. Which article allows the Constitution to be changed? How many changes have been made to date?
* 4. Articles I - III are the basis of what important principle in our government?

* 1. What do we call the two parts of Congress?
* House of Representatives and Senate

* 2. Which article talks about how much power the federal government has?
* Article VI ( Supremacy )

* 3. Which article allows the Constitution to be changed? How many changes have been made to date?
* Article V
* 27 changes ( amendments ) actually, only 18 changes since amendments 1 - 10
(Bill of Rights) occurred together
* 4. Articles I - III are the basis of what important principle in our government?
* separation of powers


How much would this many of each of these famous Americans be worth in other currencies?
Use the following conversion tables.
.9 euros = .6 pounds=1 dollar=11pesos=110 yen


Quantity EUROS PESOS POUNDS YEN
Abraham Lincoln 1
Andrew Jackson 100
Benjamin Franklin20
Alexander
Hamilton 10


Posted by 7thghms at 3:42 PM CST
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Wednesday, 26 January 2005

Homework: Begin to read over definitions and questions from Chapter 5 Lesson 1. Begin to study early for your test.

Daily Social Studies should all be placed in your journal each day.
Please have a journal by Friday.

Monday
Daily Social Studies
* Use the Preamble of the Constitution, SR3, to identify six reasons why our government was formed. Choose two of these reasons and rewrite them in your own words (Page 872)
1. ____________________
2._____________________
3._____________________
4._____________________
5._____________________
Answer DSS # 1
* 1. form a more perfect union
* 2. establish justice
* 3. insure domestic tranquility
* 4. provide for the common defense
* 5. promote the general welfare
* 6. secure the blessing of liberty

Tueday
Describe the place where you live by using
these categories to show how it is special.




* You are William Johnson. Write a speech in which you explain to the Iroquois why they should help the English instead of the French.
* For Help look on pg.134



Wednesday
We have many levels of government. On the lines below, write two other types (levels) of government that would fit in the diagram. Then tell what we call the executive leader of each level of government. Finally, tell the name of the leader.



Type Title and Name of Leader
A Federal Title: President
Name: Bush
B State Title: Governor
Name: Blanco
C Local Title:Mayor
Name: Dave Norris


Posted by 7thghms at 3:33 PM CST
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Monday, 24 January 2005

No Homework tonight!!!
Remember to bring your Speckle Book Journal to class each day.

Posted by 7thghms at 1:45 PM CST
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Thursday, 20 January 2005

We are in the process of changing from World History to American History
No Homework tonight for periods 2-4, and 7
Inauguration Project due Friday, all advanced classes

Advanced classes Project The following questions should be researched and turned into class on Friday

Test your knowledge about past Presidential inaugurations in this activity.

Whose was the Bicentennial Inauguration?

* When was the first televised inauguration?



* Who was the youngest President-elect at the time of his inauguration?

* Where is the oath of office found in the Constitution?

* Who was the first President inaugurated for a term limited by the Constitution?



* Who became President as a result of the Compromise of 1877?

* Whose inaugural address contained the phrase, "the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans . . ."?


* Who was the first President inaugurated on January 20th?


* Following whose inauguration was the first inaugural ball in Washington, DC, held?

* Which President wore a ring to his inauguration that contained a lock of hair cut from Lincoln's head after he was shot?

I found this on the internet, take a few minutes to read this it is really good.


WE ARE BLESSED

If you woke up this morning with more health than illness, you are more blessed than the million people who will not survive the week.

If you have never experienced the danger of battle, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony of torture or the pangs of starvation, you are ahead of 500 million people around the world.

If you attend a church meeting without fear of harassment, arrest, or torture of death, you are more blessed than almost three billion people in the world.

If you have food in your refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof over your head and a place to sleep, you are richer than 75% of this world.

If you have money in the bank, in your wallet, and spare change in a dish some place, you are among the top 8% of the world's wealthy.

If your parents are still married and alive, you are very rare, even in the United States.

If you hold up your head with a smile on your face and are truly thankful, you are blessed because the majority of us can, but most do not.

If you can read this message, you are more blessed than over two billion people in the world that cannot read anything at all.

When you compare our day to day problems with bigger problems around the world our troubles may not seem so large.

We are all truly blessed!

Posted by 7thghms at 1:50 PM CST
Permalink
Tuesday, 18 January 2005

Homework: Vocabulary Test Wednesday Chapter 20 Lesson 3

Posted by 7thghms at 4:37 PM CST
Permalink
Thursday, 13 January 2005

Chapter 20 Lesson 3

Cold War Time Line

1945 -World War II ends
1946 - The Soviet Union begins to dominate the countries of Eastern Europe
1948 - The United States implements the Marshall Plan
1948 - The United States begins the Berlin Airlift
1949 - NATO is formed
1950 - The Korean War begins
1955 - The Warsaw Pact is formed
1957 - The Soviet Union launches Sputnik
1958 - NASA is created
1960 - The Soviet Union shoots down an American U2 spy plane
1961 - The Berlin Wall is erected
1961 - The United States sends its first military personnel to Vietnam
1962 - The Cuban Missile Crisis
1963 - President Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas, on November 22nd
1972 - President Nixon makes an unprecedented trip to Communist china
1972 - SALT I treaty with the Soviet Union is completed
1987 - INF treaty is signed
1989 - The Berlin Wall is opened
1989 - Thousands are killed in a protest in Chin's Tiananmen Square
1993 - The break up of the Soviet Union is completed: the Cold War ends
1998 - The war in Bosnia ends

Cold War Vocabulary

Third World - the group of developing countries in the world not linked with the United States or the Soviet Union during the Cold War

Capitalism - an economic system characterized by private ownership of property and free enterprise

Communism - an economic system in which all goods are owned jointly, in the Soviet Union, this developed into a government in which all social and economic policy decisions were made by a single party

Cold War - an intense hostile rivalry during the second half of the 20th century between Communist nations, particularly the Soviet Union, and the democratic nations of the world, led by the United States

Containment - the foreign policy of the United States designed to stop the growth of communism

Iron Curtain - an imaginary line that separated the countries in Western Europe from the countries under Soviet domination in Eastern Europe

Truman Doctrine - A 1947 pronouncement by President Truman that offered aid to the government of Greece and Turkey in their fight against Soviet influence

Marshall Plan - A program implemented by the United States in 1948 to help bolster the economies of European countries trying to recover after World War II

Blockade - a military strategy that attempts to isolate a country by preventing the movement of its people and goods

North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) - A mutual defense alliance established in 1949 between the United States, Canada and several Western European countries designed to safeguard Western Europe against Soviet attack

Warsaw Pact - a mutual defense organization established in 1955 by the Soviet Union and several Eastern European countries

Nuclear arms race - the development and warehousing of weapons of mass destruction by the U. S. and the Soviet Union

Sputnik - a Russian space satellite launched in 1957 that caused the United States to reassess its role as a world leader in technology and develop its own space agency.

Berlin Wall - A barrier surrounding the German city of West Berlin, constructed by the Soviet Union in 1961 to stop people from fleeing Communist East Berlin

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) - an organization in the United States responsible for gathering information and facilitating overseas communications

Bay of Pigs - an unsuccessful attempt by U.S. backed Cuban exiles to overthrow Communist Cuban leader Fidel Castro in April 1961

Domino theory - the fear that the spread of communism would run rampant among neighboring counties if one were to fall under Communist influence

D?tente - The relaxation of tensions between nations

Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I) - Agreement between the United States and Soviet Union intended to limit the proliferation of long-range nuclear weapons

Contra - A member of a military group that fought the Sandinista government in Nicaragua

Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) - a program proposed by President Reagan in 1983 that was intended to provide the United States with a space-based defense system to guard against possible nuclear attacks.

Intermediate Nuclear Force Treaty (INF) - an agreement signed by President Reagan and Soviet President Gorbachev in 1987 that called for the elimination of medium-range nuclear weapons

Glasnost - a policy of political openness in Soviet society instituted by leader Mikhail Gorbachev

Perestroika - the restructuring of the failing Soviet economy, allowing for limited free enterprise under Mikhail Gorbachev

Posted by 7thghms at 12:32 PM CST
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