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Louisiana State University - HIST 2055 Chapter 3 Colonial Ways of Life TRUE/FALSE 1)British immigrants to America tended to retain much of their British culture
Louisiana State University - HIST 2055
Chapter 3 Colonial Ways of Life
TRUE/FALSE
1)British immigrants to America tended to retain much of their British culture.
- When British settlers reached the New World, they entered a pristine environment little changed by human intervention.
- People in the American colonies generally married at a younger age than those in Britain.
- By 1700, rice and indigo were Virginia’s most important export crops.
- Most indentured servants contracted to work for ten to fifteen years.
- By 1750, New England had as many slaves as Virginia.
- New Englanders, more than southerners, turned to the sea for their livelihood.
- Puritans wore colorful clothes and enjoyed secular music.
- The half-way covenant addressed the problem of New England’s unfavorable balance of trade.
- The settlers known as Pennsylvania Dutch were actually Germans.
- Nearly one third of American colonists lived in cities at the end of the seventeenth century.
- A good example of the Great Awakening in American society was John Bartram’s study of American plant life.
- Jonathan Edwards owned the largest plantation and the greatest number of slaves in South Carolina.
- George Whitefield was a great preacher who even impressed Ben Franklin with his eloquence.
- Most colonists strongly believed in the inferiority of women.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
- Colonists arriving in the New World found that Indians:
- had no concept of a supreme being
- maintained large herds of horses and cattle
- had left the landscape virtually unchanged
- regularly burned forests to promote new growth
- supported themselves strictly through hunting
- English farm animals allowed to roam free:
- devastated Indian lands and cornfields
- increased the fertility of colonial farm fields
- was a practice quickly outlawed in New England
- introduced deadly diseases to North America
- generally died from thirst or starvation
- Benjamin Franklin believed a major reason for colonial population growth was:
- government bounties for large families
- English immunity to contagious diseases
- rapid advances in medical science
- couples marrying later than in Europe
- an abundance of cheap land
- In the first century of colonization, mortality rates among settlers were highest in which region?
- New England
- the middle colonies
- the South
- the western frontier
- Canada
- Throughout the colonies, husbands expected from their wives:
- submission to their authority
- an equal partnership managing the household
- instruction in religion and morality
- romantic love as the basis of marriage
- toleration of sex outside of marriage
- In regard to religion, women:
- frequently served as ministers
- were more likely to be churchgoers than men
- experienced most equality in Puritan churches
- were more likely than men to question religious authority
- were frequently employed as faith-healers
- Women in the American colonies:
- generally had a lower status in society than did women in Europe
- often remained confined to the domestic sphere
- could vote and hold office
- were not likely to find eligible men to marry
- lived lives of quiet and leisure
- During the colonial period, prostitution:
- was practically unknown
- was legal
- was especially common in port cities
- resulted in equal punishment for men and women
- was legal in official red light districts
- In the seventeenth century, the staple crop that was the basis of the economy in Virginia and Maryland was:
- rice
- tobacco
-
- indigo
- cotton
- barley
- The economy of the southern colonies centered on which fundamental fact?
- Labor was plentiful and land was scarce.
- The native population must be moved west.
- The British military had to protect its farms.
- Land was plentiful and laborers were scarce.
- The growing season was limited by lack of rain.
- The indentured servants who came to the colonies:
- were mainly convicts shipped over as part of their sentence
- were essentially the same as slaves
- usually worked four to seven years to pay off their debt
- provided mainly household labor
- arose in several major rebellions
- Which is NOT true of early colonial slavery?
- Far more slaves went to the West Indies than to North America.
- Slavery was present in all the English colonies.
- Slaves had higher survival rates in North America than in the West Indies.
- No colony had a majority slave population.
- Slaves could expect a lifetime in bondage.
- Of all the slaves brought to the New World from Africa, how many came to the colonies of British North America?
- about 5 percent
- about 33 percent
- about 50 percent
- about 90 percent
- about 25 percent
- All of the following are true EXCEPT:
- there were important differences between slavery as practiced in Africa and the New World
- a significant number of slaves died during the Atlantic crossing
- most slaves came from West Africa
- Africans had a nature-based religion with a Creator and numerous lesser spirits
- Africans hunted and gathered, but practiced no agriculture
- The “Middle Passage” referred to:
- the Anglican belief in entire sanctification
- the transportation of slaves to the West Indies
- certain features of domestic architecture in the southern colonies
- social customs in Pennsylvania
- Puritan belief in moderation in all things
- By 1750, the smallest percentage of slaves lived in:
- New England
- Virginia and Maryland
- the Carolinas
- the middle colonies
- the West Indies
- The events surrounding a suspected slave revolt in New York City in 1741 offer parallels to:
- the English Civil War
- the Salem witch craze
- the American Revolution
- Bacon’s Rebellion
- the Great Awakening
- A major theme of slave Christianity was:
- deliverance in heaven
- the wickedness of white people
- submission to the authority of slave masters
- depression over the condition of bondage
- the evil of drinking and dancing
- One major reason for the willingness of the English to enslave Africans was the of the Africans.
- blackness
- docility
- physical strength
- religiosity
- hostility
- All of the following are true of the southern gentry EXCEPT:
- their great houses became centers of luxurious living
- they were often dependent on outside capital
- they were mainly in Virginia and South Carolina
- they loved to gamble on horses and games of chance
- they were ethnically and religiously diverse
- Which church dominated the Chesapeake region by 1700?
- Anglican
- Quaker
- Puritan
- Baptist
- Presbyterian
- Early settlers of Puritan New England typically lived:
- on plantations
- in large seaports
- on isolated farmsteads
- in towns modeled on English villages
- in log cabins
- New England’s most important commodity for export was:
- corn
- molasses
- fish
- turkeys
- rum
- Which of the following did NOT spur shipbuilding in New England?
- the abundance of fish and whales off its coast
- the region’s extensive forests
- British purchase of American-made ships
- the variety of jobs and businesses it created
- southern purchases of New England-made ships
- One chronic problem facing colonial trade was:
- the lack of foreign markets for American products
- a way to pay for goods imported from the mother country
- the French blockade of the Atlantic coast
- an oversupply of hard currency, which caused rampant inflation
- an absence of rich soil for agricultural products
- New England was settled by:
- a joint-stock company
- religious fundamentalists
- military officers
- the king and his family
- ex-convicts and debtors
- New England’s Puritans did all of the following EXCEPT:
- sue each other
- have sex
- drink alcoholic beverages
- regularly read the Bible
- tolerate adultery
- The covenant theory from which the Puritans drew their ideas contained:
- the justification for New England’s strict theocracy
- the notion that the king replaced God as the head of the government of the people
- the notion that men were capable of governing themselves well because they had been absolved of all sin when they entered the church
- a fundamental belief in democracy
- certain kernels of democracy in both church and state
- The “half-way covenant” adopted in 1662 was a Puritan attempt to address the problem of:
- declining church membership
- economic hardship and growing social inequality
- eligibility of ministers to hold public office
- whether to interpret the Bible or follow it literally
- increasing materialism
- The witch craze in Salem started when:
- a slave named Tituba cursed the village minister
- Indians attacked and looted the village
- several people died of a mysterious illness
- adolescent girls began to exhibit strange afflictions
- the town minister was caught in a sex scandal
- The best explanation for the Salem witch craze is:
- the play-acting and false accusations of teenage girls
- the presence of real witches in Salem village
- social division and anxieties within the village
- the low rate of literacy among the villagers
- natural hallucinogens in the local water supply
- The middle colonies:
- included Rhode Island and Maryland
- lacked a suitable base for commerce
- for many years had a black majority population
- were dominated by plantation agriculture
- included New York and Pennsylvania
- The largest number of German immigrants to the colonies settled in:
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- New York
- Delaware
- Pennsylvania
- The Pennsylvania Dutch:
- were immigrants from Holland who settled in the backcountry of New York and Pennsylvania
- migrated to Virginia and North Carolina in the late seventeenth century to escape religious persecution
- were almost wiped out because of a genetic intolerance to New World viruses
- were a mixture of Mennonites, Lutherans, Moravians, Dunkers, and others
- built windmills and dikes as they had done in their native country
- The Scotch-Irish:
- were mainly Irish Catholics
- were mainly Presbyterians
- settled largely in New England
- were associated mainly with coastal areas
- were actually neither Scottish nor Irish
- By 1790, second only to the English in their percentage of the white population were the:
- Germans
- French
- Scottish or Scotch-Irish
- Irish
- Dutch
- The largest city in the colonies at the end of the colonial period:
- had a population of about 1,000,000
- had a population of about 2,000
- was Boston
- was Philadelphia
- had as many people as London
- By the end of the colonial period, American cities:
- were limited to the middle colonies
- were characterized by increasing social and economic equality
- held no more than 10 percent of the total population
- were cleaner, safer, and healthier than rural environments
- had majority non-English populations
- By 1700, the most democratic and important social institutions were:
- coffee houses
- churches
- theaters
- colleges
- taverns
- John Peter Zenger’s trial in 1735 established:
- that truth is a defense in libel cases
- absolute freedom of the press
- private ownership of newspapers
- the right to send newspapers through the mail
- the legal difference between libel and slander
- The Enlightenment:
- encouraged the idea that God was like a master clockmaker who planned the universe and set it in motion
- led most educated men to become atheists
- was based mainly on the writings of Martin Luther
- increased church attendance
- started in America and spread to Europe
- Enlightenment thinkers such as Isaac Newton stressed:
- the value of traditional religion
- the virtue of divine right monarchy
- the ability of reason to discover the laws of the universe
- the superiority of art over science
- the presence of God in nature
- Ben Franklin emphasized the Enlightenment in:
- his denial of God’s existence
- his rise from poverty to riches
- his passion for science and experimentation
- his scandalous sex life
-
- his work as a printer and publisher
- Education in the colonies was:
- most advanced in the South
- primarily intended for young women
- most advanced in frontier regions
- hampered in New England by the Puritans’ anti-intellectual tradition
- usually seen as the responsibility of family and church
- Puritan commitment to education is best explained by their:
- need for a literate workforce
- commitment to Enlightenment principles
- prior exposure to schools in England
- innate love of learning
- need to read the Scriptures
- The Great Awakening developed in reaction to the:
- attempt of British officials to regulate colonial churches
- increasing education and sophistication of backwoods settlers
- increasing role of emotionalism in religion
- tendency of the Enlightenment to place great emphasis on formal religion
- Deism and skepticism associated with the Enlightenment
- The religious revivals known as the Great Awakening did all the following EXCEPT:
- affect all thirteen colonies
- split a number of churches
- feature traveling ministers
- emphasize an emotional style of preaching
- further promote Enlightenment thinking
- The English revivalist who preached to thousands and so impressed Ben Franklin was:
- James Davenport
- Jonathan Edwards
- Evander Osteen
- George Whitefield
- William Tennent
- Jonathan Edwards’s famous sermon “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” described:
-
- a distant and uncaring God
- the gruesome reality of Hell
- the beauty of God’s creation
- the possibility of universal salvation
- God’s desire that Americans economically prosper
- One result of the Great Awakening was that it spurred an increase in the number of:
- slave rebellions
- suicides
- marriages
- witch crazes
e colleges
MATCHING
51 Match each description with the item below.
-
- gave the sermon “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”
- set up “Log College” to train ministers
- was a Virginia planter
- wrote Principia (Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy)
- was a clockmaker and constructed first telescope in America
- published Poor Richard’s Almanack
- was a newspaper editor tried for libel
- developed indigo as exotic staple
- wrote Essay Concerning Human Understanding
- confessed to witchcraft in Salem
- William Byrd
- Tituba
- Jonathan Edwards
- Benjamin Franklin
- John Locke
- Eliza Lucas
- Isaac Newton
- David Rittenhouse
- William Tennent
- John Peter Zenger
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