Test Review: APUSH Review (3.1 - 3.9)
Format:
- 15 MCQs (3.6 - 3.9)
- 1 DBQ (3.1 - 3.5)
- Context
- Thesis (ATS)
- Body Paragraph
3.1: A Revolutionary Era
- Seven Years’ War (French and Indian War)
- Albany Plan of Union
- Guerrilla Tactics
- George Washington
- Peace of Paris (1763)
- Proclamation Line of 1763
- Speculators
- Pontiac’s Rebellion
3.2: Resistance to Britain Intensifies
- Salutary Neglect
- Quartering Act (1765)
- Sugar Act (1764)
- Currency Act (1764)
- Britain’s 3-pronged program
- Committee of Correspondence
- Stamp Act (1765)
- Virginia Resolves
- Declaratory Act
- Townshend Acts
- Boston Massacre
- Tea Act
- Boston Tea Party
- Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
- Quebec Acts
- Snake
3.3: The American Revolution Begins
- Continental Congress (1774)
- Continental Army
- Battle of Lexington and Concord
- Declaration of Independence
- Dunmore’s Proclamation
- Second Continental Congress
- Minutemen
- Olive Branch Petition
- Pyrrhic
, - Armeries
- Impact of Enlightenment and the Great Awakening
3.4: Winning the War for Independence
- Battle of Saratoga
- French Allies
- Women’s Contribution
- European Allies
- Valley Forge
- Battle of Yorktown
- Treaty Peace of Paris (1783)
- General Cornwallis
- Patriots
- Loyalists
3.5: Governing in Revolutionary Times
- Statute of Religious Freedom
- Articles of Confederation
- Northwest Ordinances
- Treaty of Fort Stanwix
- Shays’ Rebellion
- Shaysities
- Economic Challenges (1780-1783)
- Conflicts Over Western Lands
- Revolutionary National Government
3.6: Reframing the American Government
- Constitutional Convention
- ⅗ Compromise
- Electoral College
- New-Jersey Plan
- Virginia Plan
- Federalists
- Separation of Powers
- Checks and Balances
- Antifederalists
- The Federalist Papers
3.7: Legacies of the American Revolution
- Republican Motherhood
- Loyalist Exodus
- Separation of Powers
- First Colleges
- Slavery’s Legacy
- Racial Limits of American Culture
- Status
, 3.8: George Washington Unites a Nation
- Bill of Rights
- Hamilton’s Financial Plans
- Washington City
- Workforce for the New Capital
- Cabinet Departments of Washington's Administration
- The First National Bank
3.9: Political Parties in Years of Crisis
- Neutrality Proclamation
- French Revolution (1793)
- Jay Treaty (1796)
- Whiskey Rebellion
- Battle of Fallen Timbers (1794)
- Sedition and Alien Acts
- Naturalization Act
- Treaty of Greenville (1795)
- Pinckney Treaty (1796)
- XYZ affair
- Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
- Democratic-Republicans
- Election of 1800
Practice MCQs:
“Instead of a powerful nation-state with imperial pretensions, the government established under the
Articles of Confederation was not really much of a government at all, but rather a diplomatic conference
where the sovereign states, each of which regarded itself as an autonomous nation, met to coordinate a
domestic version of foreign policy. It was, in effect, designed to be weak, and lacked altogether the
authority to manage a burgeoning empire.
-Source: Joseph J. Ellis, historian, American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the
Republic, 2007
Which of the following actions of the central government under the Articles of Confederation
directly undermines Ellis’s assertions.
A) regulating interstate commerce regulating interstate commerce
B) managing internal unrest
C) instituting a single, national currency
D) negotiating the Treaty of Paris of 1783
Format:
- 15 MCQs (3.6 - 3.9)
- 1 DBQ (3.1 - 3.5)
- Context
- Thesis (ATS)
- Body Paragraph
3.1: A Revolutionary Era
- Seven Years’ War (French and Indian War)
- Albany Plan of Union
- Guerrilla Tactics
- George Washington
- Peace of Paris (1763)
- Proclamation Line of 1763
- Speculators
- Pontiac’s Rebellion
3.2: Resistance to Britain Intensifies
- Salutary Neglect
- Quartering Act (1765)
- Sugar Act (1764)
- Currency Act (1764)
- Britain’s 3-pronged program
- Committee of Correspondence
- Stamp Act (1765)
- Virginia Resolves
- Declaratory Act
- Townshend Acts
- Boston Massacre
- Tea Act
- Boston Tea Party
- Coercive (Intolerable) Acts
- Quebec Acts
- Snake
3.3: The American Revolution Begins
- Continental Congress (1774)
- Continental Army
- Battle of Lexington and Concord
- Declaration of Independence
- Dunmore’s Proclamation
- Second Continental Congress
- Minutemen
- Olive Branch Petition
- Pyrrhic
, - Armeries
- Impact of Enlightenment and the Great Awakening
3.4: Winning the War for Independence
- Battle of Saratoga
- French Allies
- Women’s Contribution
- European Allies
- Valley Forge
- Battle of Yorktown
- Treaty Peace of Paris (1783)
- General Cornwallis
- Patriots
- Loyalists
3.5: Governing in Revolutionary Times
- Statute of Religious Freedom
- Articles of Confederation
- Northwest Ordinances
- Treaty of Fort Stanwix
- Shays’ Rebellion
- Shaysities
- Economic Challenges (1780-1783)
- Conflicts Over Western Lands
- Revolutionary National Government
3.6: Reframing the American Government
- Constitutional Convention
- ⅗ Compromise
- Electoral College
- New-Jersey Plan
- Virginia Plan
- Federalists
- Separation of Powers
- Checks and Balances
- Antifederalists
- The Federalist Papers
3.7: Legacies of the American Revolution
- Republican Motherhood
- Loyalist Exodus
- Separation of Powers
- First Colleges
- Slavery’s Legacy
- Racial Limits of American Culture
- Status
, 3.8: George Washington Unites a Nation
- Bill of Rights
- Hamilton’s Financial Plans
- Washington City
- Workforce for the New Capital
- Cabinet Departments of Washington's Administration
- The First National Bank
3.9: Political Parties in Years of Crisis
- Neutrality Proclamation
- French Revolution (1793)
- Jay Treaty (1796)
- Whiskey Rebellion
- Battle of Fallen Timbers (1794)
- Sedition and Alien Acts
- Naturalization Act
- Treaty of Greenville (1795)
- Pinckney Treaty (1796)
- XYZ affair
- Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
- Democratic-Republicans
- Election of 1800
Practice MCQs:
“Instead of a powerful nation-state with imperial pretensions, the government established under the
Articles of Confederation was not really much of a government at all, but rather a diplomatic conference
where the sovereign states, each of which regarded itself as an autonomous nation, met to coordinate a
domestic version of foreign policy. It was, in effect, designed to be weak, and lacked altogether the
authority to manage a burgeoning empire.
-Source: Joseph J. Ellis, historian, American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the
Republic, 2007
Which of the following actions of the central government under the Articles of Confederation
directly undermines Ellis’s assertions.
A) regulating interstate commerce regulating interstate commerce
B) managing internal unrest
C) instituting a single, national currency
D) negotiating the Treaty of Paris of 1783