Download - 13 colonies jeopardy review.pptx
Question 1 - 10
• Established in 1607, and named in honor of King James I, ____________ was the first permanent English colony in North America.
Question 1 - 30
A business formed by a group of people who jointly make an investment and share in the profits and losses.
Question 1 - 50
• People who could not pay their way to Virginia would often become an __________ and work for someone for 4-7 years.
Question 2 - 30
• Farmers from __________ moved to the northern part of the colony Carolina to grow __________?
Question 2 - 50
• Who led an attack against Native Americans and the colonial government of Virginia in 1676 because he was upset with the governor’s decision to restrict settlement in Virginia south of the James River.
Question 3 - 30
• The __________ were a very strict religious group that emphasized education and hard work.
Question 3 - 40
• __________ and __________ were two Native Americans that assisted the Pilgrims in surviving the first winter.
Question 3 - 50
• Between 1629-1640, nearly 40,000 Puritans came to settle in North America. What is this event called?
Question 4 - 20
• The __________ occurred in Massachusetts after the daughter and niece of a Puritan minister experienced unexplainable fits and claimed other women had cursed them.
Question 4 - 30
• __________ was forced out of the Massachusetts colony for speaking out about the treatment of Native Americans. He founded the colony of Rhode Island.
Question 4 - 40
• Who founded the colony of Connecticut after being forced out of Massachusetts for wanting all men, not just church members, to be able to vote?
Question 4 - 50
• _________ was forced to leave Massachusetts after she was discovered leading worship and saying that ministers were not necessary.
Question 5 - 10
• The middle colonies could grow large amounts of __________ - crops that are always needed, such as, wheat, barley, and oats.
Question 5 - 30
• This religious group called themselves the Society of Friends, believed in equality of men and women, supported nonviolence and religious tolerance, and made up a large percentage of colonists from Pennsylvania and New Jersey.