Deck 4: The Empire in Transition

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Question
King George's War

A)inspired the American Revolution.
B)failed to resolve European conflicts in North America.
C)was a conflict between England and the Iroquois.
D)saw English colonists stay out of the conflict.
E)saw England acquire Newfoundland from the French.
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Question
During the eighteenth century,in North America,the most powerful native group was the

A)Iroquois.
B)Cherokee.
C)Seminole.
D)Chickasaw.
E)Sioux.
Question
As a result of the Seven Years' War in North America,England

A)confirmed its commercial supremacy.
B)increased its political control of the settled regions.
C)shifted its interest away from the Caribbean colonies.
D)confirmed its commercial supremacy and increased its political control of the settled regions.
E)confirmed its commercial supremacy and shifted its interest away from the Caribbean colonies.
Question
The beginning of the end of the American phase of the French and Indian War was marked by the French defeat at

A)Montreal.
B)Quebec.
C)Ottawa.
D)Louisbourg.
E)Fort Necessity.
Question
Under the terms of the Peace of Paris of 1763,

A)France surrendered New Orleans and Canada to the British.
B)England acquired all French naval vessels docked in North American ports.
C)France surrendered title to all of its territory on mainland North America.
D)France agreed to pay England for the cost of the war.
E)France ceded all of its Caribbean colonies to England.
Question
During the third and final stage of the French and Indian War,British leader William Pitt

A)ignored the complaints of colonists.
B)gave more authority to conduct the war over to the colonists.
C)gradually loosened his tight control over the colonists.
D)barred the colonists from military service.
E)allowed Indian tribal leaders to dictate British battle strategy.
Question
During the first half of the eighteenth century,England's administration of the colonies

A)was primarily concerned with checking the growth of New France.
B)began to assert greater authority over newspapers and public expression.
C)sought new means to tax American merchants.
D)was notable for its strict enforcement of trade policies.
E)was loose,decentralized,and inefficient.
Question
The French and Indian War was fought in

A)India.
B)the West Indies.
C)the North American interior.
D)Europe.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The major participants in the Seven Years' War,in North America,were

A)the colonists,the English,and the Spanish.
B)the French,the colonists,and the Spanish.
C)the Iroquois,the English,and the French.
D)the French,the Spanish,and the English.
E)the English,the Iroquois,and the Spanish.
Question
The Treaty of Utrecht in 1713

A)ended King William's War.
B)transferred territory from the French to the English in North America.
C)was a considerable victory for Spain in North America.
D)slowed England's western expansion of its American colonies.
E)transferred territory from the English to the French in the Caribbean.
Question
What future American Revolutionary figure surrendered to French forces in 1754 at Fort Necessity in the Ohio Valley?

A)George Washington
B)Patrick Henry
C)James Madison
D)Benedict Arnold
E)John Adams
Question
The first clash of the French and Indian War took place near what is now

A)Detroit.
B)Buffalo.
C)Pittsburgh.
D)St.Louis.
E)Chicago.
Question
Through the first half of the eighteenth century,the Iroquois Confederacy formed agreements and traded with

A)England only.
B)England,and then France.
C)both France and England at the same time.
D)France only.
E)no European powers.
Question
In the years after the Glorious Revolution,political power in England increasingly shifted toward

A)the monarchy.
B)Parliament.
C)the citizens.
D)the Anglican Church.
E)the colonial governors.
Question
In the aftermath of King George's War

A)relations among the English,French,and Iroquois deteriorated.
B)the French moved out of the Ohio Valley.
C)the Iroquois decided not to grant any future trade concessions to the English.
D)military activity west of England's North American colonies steadily declined.
E)the English abandoned many of their fortresses in the interior.
Question
During the eighteenth century,in North America,the French differed from the English in Indian relations,in that the French

A)offered the Indians more and better trading goods.
B)largely isolated themselves from Indian tribes.
C)were more tolerant of Indian cultures.
D)made little effort to convert Indians to Christianity.
E)forced Indians to adjust to European ways.
Question
The proposed Albany Plan of 1754

A)was intended to give the colonies greater independence from royal authority.
B)recognized the land rights of Indian tribes living within the colonies.
C)was approved by the colonial assemblies but was vetoed by Parliament.
D)proposed to set up a "general government" of the colonies.
E)attempted to create a united front with New France against Indian attacks.
Question
During the first half of the eighteenth century,royal officials in America

A)began to increase the presence of British troops in the colonies.
B)contributed to England's overall lax control of the colonies.
C)had no significant influence on colonial finances.
D)were generally able and honest administrators.
E)chose Philadelphia as the capital of the colonies.
Question
By the 1750s,American colonial assemblies

A)exercised a significant degree of authority to levy taxes.
B)existed only to implement the policies of the English Parliament.
C)felt little loyalty to the English government.
D)consisted of colonists all approved by royal governors.
E)were petitioning the king to charter new colonies to the west.
Question
During the first stage (1754-1756)of the French and Indian War,

A)only the Iroquois Indians were allied with the French.
B)the Iroquois remained passive,but most other tribes allied with the French.
C)English colonists fought with the support of the Iroquois.
D)the colonists fought with the French against the English.
E)the colonists fought primarily against the Iroquois.
Question
The French and Indian War in North America

A)greatly enriched the English government's finances.
B)began a period of almost continual warfare for England.
C)suggested that increasing England's control over the colonies would not be easy.
D)led England to conclude that its relationship with the colonies was strong.
E)led England to conclude that the American colonies were not worth protecting.
Question
Legislation passed by the Grenville ministry in 1764-1765 adversely affected American

A)merchants in New England.
B)planters in the South.
C)small farmers.
D)urban workers.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The Declaratory Act of 1766

A)caused renewed protests throughout the colonies.
B)was a sweeping assertion of Parliament's authority over the colonies.
C)threatened the colonies with military action should future protests develop.
D)was an attempt by outgoing minister George Grenville to save face.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The Proclamation of 1763

A)disrupted England's western trade in the colonies.
B)was generally effective.
C)was supported by many Indian tribes.
D)encouraged settlement of the western edge of the colonies.
E)led to renewed conflict with the remaining French colonists in the West.
Question
The Stamp Act of 1765

A)was consistent with traditional parliamentary efforts to regulate commerce.
B)did not generate a lot of revenue for the British.
C)helped to unite the colonies in opposition to the English government.
D)required the consent of the colonial assemblies before going into effect.
E)really affected only a few New England merchants.
Question
The Paxton Boys and the Regulators both

A)demanded tax relief.
B)feared violence from western farmers.
C)demanded independence from England.
D)sought to increase the authority of local colonial governments.
E)demanded the redistribution of the land making up the former French colonies.
Question
The Mutiny Act of 1765

A)required colonists to evacuate their farms to occupying British soldiers.
B)required colonists to provision and maintain British troops.
C)resulted in the killing of several British soldiers by colonists.
D)allowed British officers to force colonists into military service for England.
E)declared that all ships in the colonial navy must have a British officer on board.
Question
British official Thomas Hutchinson

A)was an early and outspoken supporter of the Stamp Act.
B)called for suppression of colonial demonstrations.
C)was murdered during colonial protests against the Stamp Act.
D)had his home ransacked by anti-Stamp Act demonstrators.
E)signed his name to the "Virginia Resolves" to support the colonists' position.
Question
The Sugar Act of 1764 was designed to

A)damage the market for sugar grown in the colonies.
B)spur the illegal sugar trade among the colonies,the French,and the West Indies.
C)put accused smugglers before local juries.
D)increase the colonial duty on molasses.
E)require the colonies stop issuing paper money.
Question
In the 1760s,the Grenville ministry increased its authority in the colonies by

A)stationing regular British troops permanently in America.
B)banning political meetings.
C)closing the port of Boston.
D)closing newspapers that criticized the English government.
E)outlawing the Sons of Liberty.
Question
The Stamp Act of 1765

A)established a royal postal system between the American colonies and England.
B)required colonists to pay taxes on most printed documents.
C)replaced the Sugar Act of 1764.
D)proved to be ineffective,as most colonies refused to accept it.
E)cost the British government much more money than it made in revenues.
Question
Many colonists believed the legislation passed by the Grenville ministry in 1764-1765

A)showed the British were committed to the long-term success of the colonies.
B)meant the British were trying to take away their tradition of self-government.
C)signified that the British finally understood the desires of the colonists.
D)would have little long-term effect on the economy of the colonies.
E)would lead to renewed hostilities with Indians in the West.
Question
When George III assumed the throne of England,he

A)was considered to have a brilliant mind for politics.
B)was painfully immature.
C)faced a full rebellion in the colonies.
D)feared using the authority of his monarchy.
E)mandated official recognition of the Church of England in all colonies.
Question
When he became British Prime Minister,George Grenville

A)believed the colonial economies could not weather the cost of the recent war.
B)criticized William Pitt for being too harsh in dealing with the American colonies.
C)began a cost-cutting effort by reducing the number of British officials in America.
D)initially sought to further decentralize government authority in the American colonies.
E)believed the American colonists should help to pay for the administration of the empire.
Question
Throughout the French and Indian War,American colonists

A)fought on the side of the French.
B)accepted temporary new taxes to help finance the war.
C)sold and traded food with the French in the West Indies.
D)resented that they had to do more of the fighting than did the British regulars.
E)saw British requisition and impressment policies form as necessary.
Question
The "Virginia Resolves" stated that

A)Virginians should not be required to pay taxes.
B)the English government had no authority over the economic activities of Virginians.
C)anyone who supported the right of Parliament to tax was an enemy of the colony.
D)independence from England was the only solution to the tax crisis.
E)Virginia must do its part to reimburse England for the cost of colonial defense.
Question
British victory in the French and Indian War

A)convinced many Indian tribes to cease in their struggle against European expansion.
B)had disastrous effects on the future of North American Indians.
C)was cheered,among Indians,only by the Iroquois Confederacy.
D)led to an improvement in relations between Indians and English colonists.
E)encouraged Indian tribes to join the Iroquois Confederacy.
Question
Following the conclusion of the French and Indian War,

A)many colonists resented England's interference in their local affairs.
B)colonial expansion westward rapidly progressed.
C)many colonists began to call for full independence from England.
D)the economy of several American colonies was in ruins.
E)the British and Iroquois renewed their alliance.
Question
Who among the following took the lead in protesting against the Stamp Act?

A)Patrick Henry
B)Ben Franklin
C)Samuel Adams
D)Thomas Jefferson
E)George Mason
Question
In 1766,in response to colonial protests against the Stamp Act,the British government

A)closed the port of Boston.
B)attempted to arrest the authors of the "Virginia Resolves."
C)created the Currency Act.
D)sent additional troops to the colonies.
E)rescinded the Stamp Act.
Question
In the 1760s,"country Whigs" were English colonists who

A)feared the political protests would damage the long-term profits of America.
B)considered the British government to be corrupt and oppressive.
C)defended the British imperial system.
D)called on King George III to more firmly assert his authority.
E)believed the political philosophy of John Locke gave too much power to the king.
Question
English and American supporters of the English constitution felt it correctly divided power between

A)the monarchy,the aristocracy,and representative assemblies.
B)England and the American colonies.
C)the commercial and landholding classes on both sides of the ocean.
D)Parliament and the monarchy.
E)the monarchy,Parliament,and the courts.
Question
The colonial boycott of tea in 1773

A)was based on colonists' anger at having to pay a new tax.
B)involved relatively small numbers of people.
C)was led by women.
D)had little financial effect on England.
E)resulted in the arrest of the Daughters of Liberty.
Question
Colonial protests against the Townshend Duties resulted in

A)the Boston Massacre.
B)Parliament passing a second Stamp Act.
C)an increase in smuggling in port cities such as Boston.
D)many colonists joining in nonimportation agreements.
E)the Boston Tea Party.
Question
In the eighteenth century,under the English government's theory of representation,

A)the American colonies were represented in Parliament.
B)each American colony was allowed one non-voting representative in Parliament.
C)the American colonies had no claim to any political representation.
D)the king spoke to Parliament on behalf of the American colonies.
E)the American colonies were represented by the courts.
Question
Parliament responded to the Boston Tea Party by

A)withdrawing its military protection of Massachusetts.
B)reducing the powers of self-government in Massachusetts.
C)reducing the geographic size of the colony.
D)threatening to launch a war against the Massachusetts militia.
E)repealing the Tea Act.
Question
In the eighteenth century,the English constitution was

A)an unwritten document.
B)difficult to change.
C)unpopular in both England and America.
D)believed to be holding back colonial expansion.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The leading colonial figure in the Boston Massacre was

A)Samuel Adams.
B)Thomas Jefferson.
C)Patrick Henry.
D)James Otis.
E)George Mason.
Question
During the events of Lexington and Concord,

A)colonists tried to surprise the British by seizing a British arsenal.
B)the Americans lost many more men than the British.
C)the British were harassed by the gunfire of American farmers.
D)George Washington gained his first victory in the conflict with England.
E)Massachusetts was further alienated from the more moderate colonies.
Question
Under the English constitution during the eighteenth century,

A)only American colonists were denied direct representation in Parliament.
B)the boroughs of England were represented in Parliament through virtual representation.
C)all seats in American colonial assemblies were appointed.
D)each member of Parliament represented a particular geographic area.
E)the empire was made up of a federation of commonwealths.
Question
At the time of the Battles of Lexington and Concord,General Thomas Gage,the commander of the British garrison in Boston,

A)considered his army too small to act without reinforcements.
B)was convinced that Americans would never actually dare to fight.
C)arrested Sam Adams and John Hancock near Lexington.
D)offered to resign his command to avoid war.
E)believed the colonists' calls for independence were justified.
Question
Which of the following statements regarding the Coercive Acts is true?

A)Massachusetts became politically isolated from the other colonies.
B)Colonial boycotts decreased.
C)Massachusetts became a martyr in the cause of resistance.
D)The Acts had little practical effect on the Massachusetts colony.
E)The Acts were basically ignored by other colonial legislatures.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a provision in one of the acts that Parliament passed in retaliation for the Boston Tea Party?

A)closing the port of Boston
B)rescinding the charter of the East India Company
C)permitting royal officers to be tried for crimes in England
D)reducing the power of self-government in Massachusetts
E)providing for the quartering of troops by the colonists
Question
In 1770,the Townshend Duties were ended by

A)Charles Townshend.
B)the Marquis of Rockingham.
C)Lord North.
D)George III.
E)Lord Chatham.
Question
In 1774,the First Continental Congress

A)accepted a plan for a colonial union under British authority.
B)proposed that the colonies tax themselves at Parliament's demand.
C)agreed to end colonial boycotts of British trade.
D)issued an order for the arrest of all colonists loyal to the king.
E)called for the repeal of all oppressive legislation passed since 1763.
Question
The Townshend Duties of 1767

A)constituted a form of taxation quite similar to the Stamp Act.
B)were ultimately ratified by the New York Assembly.
C)drew no immediate objection from the colonists.
D)were withdrawn before they took effect.
E)were taxes on what were called external transactions.
Question
In 1775,the Conciliatory Propositions

A)called on Parliament to reduce taxes for the sake of colonial peace.
B)saw Parliament agree to the terms of the First Continental Congress.
C)was an appeal by the British government to colonial moderates.
D)temporarily reduced tensions in the colonies.
E)forced Parliament to send more troops to Boston.
Question
Taverns were important in the growth of revolutionary sentiment because

A)they were the only public places where one could legally speak without fear of arrest.
B)they became central meeting places to discuss ideas about resistance.
C)it was one of the few places where men and women gathered together to speak.
D)colonists increasingly resented the heavy British duties on alcohol.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The Tea Act of 1773

A)was the result of a glut of tea that could not be sold in England.
B)lowered the price of tea for American colonists.
C)was intended to benefit a private British company.
D)provided no new tax on tea.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The Boston Massacre

A)was transformed by some colonists into a symbol of British oppression.
B)resulted in the death of several British soldiers.
C)led to Paul Revere's midnight ride of warning.
D)included a trial in which British soldiers were convicted of murder.
E)turned Paul Revere into a martyr for the cause of colonial independence.
Question
The Currency Act of 1764 gave the colonial legislatures the power to print paper money.
Question
Colonial merchants proved their allegiance to the British during the Seven Years' War.
Question
Following the Seven Years' War,the British government faced huge problems of imperial organization,but had ample funds to deal with those problems.
Question
In the aftermath of King George's War (1744-1748),relations between the English,French,and Iroquois in North America rapidly deteriorated.
Question
The Stamp Act was a direct attempt by Parliament to raise revenues in the colonies without the consent of the colonial legislatures.
Question
The Proclamation of 1763 failed to meet even the modest expectations of the Indians.
Question
The Paxton Boys and the Regulators were examples of colonists who objected to the Mutiny Act of 1765.
Question
The character of the royal officials in America contributed to the overall looseness of the British imperial system.
Question
The Treaty of Utrecht (1713)signaled a rare French victory over the English.
Question
In their competition for the allegiance of native tribes,the English could offer more and better goods than the French.
Question
The Stamp Act was a British attempt to regulate commerce.
Question
Despite the flurry of parliamentary legislation after 1763,most colonists found ways either to live with or to get around these laws.
Question
Creole refers to a white immigrant of French descent.
Question
Resistance to British imperial authority was centered among western farmers.
Question
The Proclamation of 1763 decreed that Parliament had the right to pass laws dealing with the colonies.
Question
Eighteenth-century parliamentary leaders were less inclined than seventeenth-century English monarchs to exert control over their empire.
Question
The British were more tolerant of Indian culture and Indian religions than were the French.
Question
During the Seven Years' War the British relied on the colonies to tax themselves and contribute financially to the war effort.
Question
In general,the colonists regarded the political burden of the post-1763 imperial program to be worse than the economic burden.
Question
The Peace of Paris (1763)saw the French retain a portion of their North American holdings.
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Deck 4: The Empire in Transition
1
King George's War

A)inspired the American Revolution.
B)failed to resolve European conflicts in North America.
C)was a conflict between England and the Iroquois.
D)saw English colonists stay out of the conflict.
E)saw England acquire Newfoundland from the French.
failed to resolve European conflicts in North America.
2
During the eighteenth century,in North America,the most powerful native group was the

A)Iroquois.
B)Cherokee.
C)Seminole.
D)Chickasaw.
E)Sioux.
Iroquois.
3
As a result of the Seven Years' War in North America,England

A)confirmed its commercial supremacy.
B)increased its political control of the settled regions.
C)shifted its interest away from the Caribbean colonies.
D)confirmed its commercial supremacy and increased its political control of the settled regions.
E)confirmed its commercial supremacy and shifted its interest away from the Caribbean colonies.
confirmed its commercial supremacy and increased its political control of the settled regions.
4
The beginning of the end of the American phase of the French and Indian War was marked by the French defeat at

A)Montreal.
B)Quebec.
C)Ottawa.
D)Louisbourg.
E)Fort Necessity.
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5
Under the terms of the Peace of Paris of 1763,

A)France surrendered New Orleans and Canada to the British.
B)England acquired all French naval vessels docked in North American ports.
C)France surrendered title to all of its territory on mainland North America.
D)France agreed to pay England for the cost of the war.
E)France ceded all of its Caribbean colonies to England.
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6
During the third and final stage of the French and Indian War,British leader William Pitt

A)ignored the complaints of colonists.
B)gave more authority to conduct the war over to the colonists.
C)gradually loosened his tight control over the colonists.
D)barred the colonists from military service.
E)allowed Indian tribal leaders to dictate British battle strategy.
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7
During the first half of the eighteenth century,England's administration of the colonies

A)was primarily concerned with checking the growth of New France.
B)began to assert greater authority over newspapers and public expression.
C)sought new means to tax American merchants.
D)was notable for its strict enforcement of trade policies.
E)was loose,decentralized,and inefficient.
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8
The French and Indian War was fought in

A)India.
B)the West Indies.
C)the North American interior.
D)Europe.
E)All these answers are correct.
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9
The major participants in the Seven Years' War,in North America,were

A)the colonists,the English,and the Spanish.
B)the French,the colonists,and the Spanish.
C)the Iroquois,the English,and the French.
D)the French,the Spanish,and the English.
E)the English,the Iroquois,and the Spanish.
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10
The Treaty of Utrecht in 1713

A)ended King William's War.
B)transferred territory from the French to the English in North America.
C)was a considerable victory for Spain in North America.
D)slowed England's western expansion of its American colonies.
E)transferred territory from the English to the French in the Caribbean.
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11
What future American Revolutionary figure surrendered to French forces in 1754 at Fort Necessity in the Ohio Valley?

A)George Washington
B)Patrick Henry
C)James Madison
D)Benedict Arnold
E)John Adams
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12
The first clash of the French and Indian War took place near what is now

A)Detroit.
B)Buffalo.
C)Pittsburgh.
D)St.Louis.
E)Chicago.
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13
Through the first half of the eighteenth century,the Iroquois Confederacy formed agreements and traded with

A)England only.
B)England,and then France.
C)both France and England at the same time.
D)France only.
E)no European powers.
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14
In the years after the Glorious Revolution,political power in England increasingly shifted toward

A)the monarchy.
B)Parliament.
C)the citizens.
D)the Anglican Church.
E)the colonial governors.
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15
In the aftermath of King George's War

A)relations among the English,French,and Iroquois deteriorated.
B)the French moved out of the Ohio Valley.
C)the Iroquois decided not to grant any future trade concessions to the English.
D)military activity west of England's North American colonies steadily declined.
E)the English abandoned many of their fortresses in the interior.
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16
During the eighteenth century,in North America,the French differed from the English in Indian relations,in that the French

A)offered the Indians more and better trading goods.
B)largely isolated themselves from Indian tribes.
C)were more tolerant of Indian cultures.
D)made little effort to convert Indians to Christianity.
E)forced Indians to adjust to European ways.
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17
The proposed Albany Plan of 1754

A)was intended to give the colonies greater independence from royal authority.
B)recognized the land rights of Indian tribes living within the colonies.
C)was approved by the colonial assemblies but was vetoed by Parliament.
D)proposed to set up a "general government" of the colonies.
E)attempted to create a united front with New France against Indian attacks.
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18
During the first half of the eighteenth century,royal officials in America

A)began to increase the presence of British troops in the colonies.
B)contributed to England's overall lax control of the colonies.
C)had no significant influence on colonial finances.
D)were generally able and honest administrators.
E)chose Philadelphia as the capital of the colonies.
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19
By the 1750s,American colonial assemblies

A)exercised a significant degree of authority to levy taxes.
B)existed only to implement the policies of the English Parliament.
C)felt little loyalty to the English government.
D)consisted of colonists all approved by royal governors.
E)were petitioning the king to charter new colonies to the west.
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20
During the first stage (1754-1756)of the French and Indian War,

A)only the Iroquois Indians were allied with the French.
B)the Iroquois remained passive,but most other tribes allied with the French.
C)English colonists fought with the support of the Iroquois.
D)the colonists fought with the French against the English.
E)the colonists fought primarily against the Iroquois.
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21
The French and Indian War in North America

A)greatly enriched the English government's finances.
B)began a period of almost continual warfare for England.
C)suggested that increasing England's control over the colonies would not be easy.
D)led England to conclude that its relationship with the colonies was strong.
E)led England to conclude that the American colonies were not worth protecting.
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22
Legislation passed by the Grenville ministry in 1764-1765 adversely affected American

A)merchants in New England.
B)planters in the South.
C)small farmers.
D)urban workers.
E)All these answers are correct.
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23
The Declaratory Act of 1766

A)caused renewed protests throughout the colonies.
B)was a sweeping assertion of Parliament's authority over the colonies.
C)threatened the colonies with military action should future protests develop.
D)was an attempt by outgoing minister George Grenville to save face.
E)All these answers are correct.
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24
The Proclamation of 1763

A)disrupted England's western trade in the colonies.
B)was generally effective.
C)was supported by many Indian tribes.
D)encouraged settlement of the western edge of the colonies.
E)led to renewed conflict with the remaining French colonists in the West.
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25
The Stamp Act of 1765

A)was consistent with traditional parliamentary efforts to regulate commerce.
B)did not generate a lot of revenue for the British.
C)helped to unite the colonies in opposition to the English government.
D)required the consent of the colonial assemblies before going into effect.
E)really affected only a few New England merchants.
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26
The Paxton Boys and the Regulators both

A)demanded tax relief.
B)feared violence from western farmers.
C)demanded independence from England.
D)sought to increase the authority of local colonial governments.
E)demanded the redistribution of the land making up the former French colonies.
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27
The Mutiny Act of 1765

A)required colonists to evacuate their farms to occupying British soldiers.
B)required colonists to provision and maintain British troops.
C)resulted in the killing of several British soldiers by colonists.
D)allowed British officers to force colonists into military service for England.
E)declared that all ships in the colonial navy must have a British officer on board.
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28
British official Thomas Hutchinson

A)was an early and outspoken supporter of the Stamp Act.
B)called for suppression of colonial demonstrations.
C)was murdered during colonial protests against the Stamp Act.
D)had his home ransacked by anti-Stamp Act demonstrators.
E)signed his name to the "Virginia Resolves" to support the colonists' position.
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29
The Sugar Act of 1764 was designed to

A)damage the market for sugar grown in the colonies.
B)spur the illegal sugar trade among the colonies,the French,and the West Indies.
C)put accused smugglers before local juries.
D)increase the colonial duty on molasses.
E)require the colonies stop issuing paper money.
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30
In the 1760s,the Grenville ministry increased its authority in the colonies by

A)stationing regular British troops permanently in America.
B)banning political meetings.
C)closing the port of Boston.
D)closing newspapers that criticized the English government.
E)outlawing the Sons of Liberty.
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31
The Stamp Act of 1765

A)established a royal postal system between the American colonies and England.
B)required colonists to pay taxes on most printed documents.
C)replaced the Sugar Act of 1764.
D)proved to be ineffective,as most colonies refused to accept it.
E)cost the British government much more money than it made in revenues.
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32
Many colonists believed the legislation passed by the Grenville ministry in 1764-1765

A)showed the British were committed to the long-term success of the colonies.
B)meant the British were trying to take away their tradition of self-government.
C)signified that the British finally understood the desires of the colonists.
D)would have little long-term effect on the economy of the colonies.
E)would lead to renewed hostilities with Indians in the West.
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33
When George III assumed the throne of England,he

A)was considered to have a brilliant mind for politics.
B)was painfully immature.
C)faced a full rebellion in the colonies.
D)feared using the authority of his monarchy.
E)mandated official recognition of the Church of England in all colonies.
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34
When he became British Prime Minister,George Grenville

A)believed the colonial economies could not weather the cost of the recent war.
B)criticized William Pitt for being too harsh in dealing with the American colonies.
C)began a cost-cutting effort by reducing the number of British officials in America.
D)initially sought to further decentralize government authority in the American colonies.
E)believed the American colonists should help to pay for the administration of the empire.
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35
Throughout the French and Indian War,American colonists

A)fought on the side of the French.
B)accepted temporary new taxes to help finance the war.
C)sold and traded food with the French in the West Indies.
D)resented that they had to do more of the fighting than did the British regulars.
E)saw British requisition and impressment policies form as necessary.
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36
The "Virginia Resolves" stated that

A)Virginians should not be required to pay taxes.
B)the English government had no authority over the economic activities of Virginians.
C)anyone who supported the right of Parliament to tax was an enemy of the colony.
D)independence from England was the only solution to the tax crisis.
E)Virginia must do its part to reimburse England for the cost of colonial defense.
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37
British victory in the French and Indian War

A)convinced many Indian tribes to cease in their struggle against European expansion.
B)had disastrous effects on the future of North American Indians.
C)was cheered,among Indians,only by the Iroquois Confederacy.
D)led to an improvement in relations between Indians and English colonists.
E)encouraged Indian tribes to join the Iroquois Confederacy.
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38
Following the conclusion of the French and Indian War,

A)many colonists resented England's interference in their local affairs.
B)colonial expansion westward rapidly progressed.
C)many colonists began to call for full independence from England.
D)the economy of several American colonies was in ruins.
E)the British and Iroquois renewed their alliance.
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39
Who among the following took the lead in protesting against the Stamp Act?

A)Patrick Henry
B)Ben Franklin
C)Samuel Adams
D)Thomas Jefferson
E)George Mason
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40
In 1766,in response to colonial protests against the Stamp Act,the British government

A)closed the port of Boston.
B)attempted to arrest the authors of the "Virginia Resolves."
C)created the Currency Act.
D)sent additional troops to the colonies.
E)rescinded the Stamp Act.
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41
In the 1760s,"country Whigs" were English colonists who

A)feared the political protests would damage the long-term profits of America.
B)considered the British government to be corrupt and oppressive.
C)defended the British imperial system.
D)called on King George III to more firmly assert his authority.
E)believed the political philosophy of John Locke gave too much power to the king.
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42
English and American supporters of the English constitution felt it correctly divided power between

A)the monarchy,the aristocracy,and representative assemblies.
B)England and the American colonies.
C)the commercial and landholding classes on both sides of the ocean.
D)Parliament and the monarchy.
E)the monarchy,Parliament,and the courts.
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43
The colonial boycott of tea in 1773

A)was based on colonists' anger at having to pay a new tax.
B)involved relatively small numbers of people.
C)was led by women.
D)had little financial effect on England.
E)resulted in the arrest of the Daughters of Liberty.
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44
Colonial protests against the Townshend Duties resulted in

A)the Boston Massacre.
B)Parliament passing a second Stamp Act.
C)an increase in smuggling in port cities such as Boston.
D)many colonists joining in nonimportation agreements.
E)the Boston Tea Party.
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45
In the eighteenth century,under the English government's theory of representation,

A)the American colonies were represented in Parliament.
B)each American colony was allowed one non-voting representative in Parliament.
C)the American colonies had no claim to any political representation.
D)the king spoke to Parliament on behalf of the American colonies.
E)the American colonies were represented by the courts.
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46
Parliament responded to the Boston Tea Party by

A)withdrawing its military protection of Massachusetts.
B)reducing the powers of self-government in Massachusetts.
C)reducing the geographic size of the colony.
D)threatening to launch a war against the Massachusetts militia.
E)repealing the Tea Act.
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47
In the eighteenth century,the English constitution was

A)an unwritten document.
B)difficult to change.
C)unpopular in both England and America.
D)believed to be holding back colonial expansion.
E)All these answers are correct.
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48
The leading colonial figure in the Boston Massacre was

A)Samuel Adams.
B)Thomas Jefferson.
C)Patrick Henry.
D)James Otis.
E)George Mason.
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49
During the events of Lexington and Concord,

A)colonists tried to surprise the British by seizing a British arsenal.
B)the Americans lost many more men than the British.
C)the British were harassed by the gunfire of American farmers.
D)George Washington gained his first victory in the conflict with England.
E)Massachusetts was further alienated from the more moderate colonies.
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50
Under the English constitution during the eighteenth century,

A)only American colonists were denied direct representation in Parliament.
B)the boroughs of England were represented in Parliament through virtual representation.
C)all seats in American colonial assemblies were appointed.
D)each member of Parliament represented a particular geographic area.
E)the empire was made up of a federation of commonwealths.
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51
At the time of the Battles of Lexington and Concord,General Thomas Gage,the commander of the British garrison in Boston,

A)considered his army too small to act without reinforcements.
B)was convinced that Americans would never actually dare to fight.
C)arrested Sam Adams and John Hancock near Lexington.
D)offered to resign his command to avoid war.
E)believed the colonists' calls for independence were justified.
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52
Which of the following statements regarding the Coercive Acts is true?

A)Massachusetts became politically isolated from the other colonies.
B)Colonial boycotts decreased.
C)Massachusetts became a martyr in the cause of resistance.
D)The Acts had little practical effect on the Massachusetts colony.
E)The Acts were basically ignored by other colonial legislatures.
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53
Which of the following is NOT a provision in one of the acts that Parliament passed in retaliation for the Boston Tea Party?

A)closing the port of Boston
B)rescinding the charter of the East India Company
C)permitting royal officers to be tried for crimes in England
D)reducing the power of self-government in Massachusetts
E)providing for the quartering of troops by the colonists
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54
In 1770,the Townshend Duties were ended by

A)Charles Townshend.
B)the Marquis of Rockingham.
C)Lord North.
D)George III.
E)Lord Chatham.
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55
In 1774,the First Continental Congress

A)accepted a plan for a colonial union under British authority.
B)proposed that the colonies tax themselves at Parliament's demand.
C)agreed to end colonial boycotts of British trade.
D)issued an order for the arrest of all colonists loyal to the king.
E)called for the repeal of all oppressive legislation passed since 1763.
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56
The Townshend Duties of 1767

A)constituted a form of taxation quite similar to the Stamp Act.
B)were ultimately ratified by the New York Assembly.
C)drew no immediate objection from the colonists.
D)were withdrawn before they took effect.
E)were taxes on what were called external transactions.
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57
In 1775,the Conciliatory Propositions

A)called on Parliament to reduce taxes for the sake of colonial peace.
B)saw Parliament agree to the terms of the First Continental Congress.
C)was an appeal by the British government to colonial moderates.
D)temporarily reduced tensions in the colonies.
E)forced Parliament to send more troops to Boston.
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58
Taverns were important in the growth of revolutionary sentiment because

A)they were the only public places where one could legally speak without fear of arrest.
B)they became central meeting places to discuss ideas about resistance.
C)it was one of the few places where men and women gathered together to speak.
D)colonists increasingly resented the heavy British duties on alcohol.
E)All these answers are correct.
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59
The Tea Act of 1773

A)was the result of a glut of tea that could not be sold in England.
B)lowered the price of tea for American colonists.
C)was intended to benefit a private British company.
D)provided no new tax on tea.
E)All these answers are correct.
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60
The Boston Massacre

A)was transformed by some colonists into a symbol of British oppression.
B)resulted in the death of several British soldiers.
C)led to Paul Revere's midnight ride of warning.
D)included a trial in which British soldiers were convicted of murder.
E)turned Paul Revere into a martyr for the cause of colonial independence.
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61
The Currency Act of 1764 gave the colonial legislatures the power to print paper money.
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62
Colonial merchants proved their allegiance to the British during the Seven Years' War.
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63
Following the Seven Years' War,the British government faced huge problems of imperial organization,but had ample funds to deal with those problems.
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64
In the aftermath of King George's War (1744-1748),relations between the English,French,and Iroquois in North America rapidly deteriorated.
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65
The Stamp Act was a direct attempt by Parliament to raise revenues in the colonies without the consent of the colonial legislatures.
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66
The Proclamation of 1763 failed to meet even the modest expectations of the Indians.
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67
The Paxton Boys and the Regulators were examples of colonists who objected to the Mutiny Act of 1765.
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68
The character of the royal officials in America contributed to the overall looseness of the British imperial system.
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69
The Treaty of Utrecht (1713)signaled a rare French victory over the English.
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70
In their competition for the allegiance of native tribes,the English could offer more and better goods than the French.
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71
The Stamp Act was a British attempt to regulate commerce.
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72
Despite the flurry of parliamentary legislation after 1763,most colonists found ways either to live with or to get around these laws.
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73
Creole refers to a white immigrant of French descent.
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74
Resistance to British imperial authority was centered among western farmers.
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75
The Proclamation of 1763 decreed that Parliament had the right to pass laws dealing with the colonies.
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76
Eighteenth-century parliamentary leaders were less inclined than seventeenth-century English monarchs to exert control over their empire.
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77
The British were more tolerant of Indian culture and Indian religions than were the French.
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78
During the Seven Years' War the British relied on the colonies to tax themselves and contribute financially to the war effort.
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79
In general,the colonists regarded the political burden of the post-1763 imperial program to be worse than the economic burden.
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80
The Peace of Paris (1763)saw the French retain a portion of their North American holdings.
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