Facts and Details in Social History from Pre-Columbian History to 1789
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AP U.S. History › Facts and Details in Social History from Pre-Columbian History to 1789
Founded in 1607, this was the first permanent English settlement in the New World.
Jamestown
Plymouth
Charleston
Boston
New York
Explanation
The first permanent English settlement in the New World was Jamestown. Plymouth, Massachusetts was founded in 1620.
The practice of primogeniture .
gives the right of inheritance solely to the firstborn son
awards government jobs on the basis of personal favor
encourages the confiscation of Native American lands
designates Africans as the lowest group in the racial hierarchy
encourages the spread of democratic ideals
Explanation
The term "primogeniture" refers to the practice of awarding all lands, titles, and finances that can be inherited solely to the firstborn son. It was practiced for hundreds of years in Europe and passed as an ideology into the nascent United States. In his important literary work, Democracy in America,Alexis de Tocqueville argues that the abolition of primogeniture would cause land to be spread much more evenly across society, encourage the overthrow of the established order, and spread democracy.
The only one of the following colonies that did not support a Protestant church was __________.
Pennsylvania
Massachusetts
Virginia
Connecticut
New York
Explanation
Almost all of the colonies were directly linked at a governmental level to a specific church. The two exceptions to this were Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, which both intentionally separated the church from the governmental structure, and provided religious freedom to anyone who wanted to come to the colony. In Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, and Maine, the Congregational Church, the sucessor to the separatist groups that founded New England, was the official church. In New York, Virginia, both Carolinas, and Georgia, the offical Anglican Church, headed by the British Crown, dominated. Maryland was set up by Catholics, but still run by Anglicans.
Which of the following groups was not a supporter of the Patriot cause in the American Revolution?
Slaves
Middle-class professionals
Farmers
Lawyers
Merchants
Explanation
The Patriots were a vast majority of American colonists in 1775 and 1776, although it was not true that every colonist was a Patriot. The key groups that remained Loyalists were colonial officials, non-English colonists, and slaves, who were promised emancipation by British officials if they fought for the British government.
Which European first discovered and crossed the Mississippi River?
Hernando de Soto
Juan Ponce de Leon
Francisco Pizarro
Hernan Cortes
Vasco Nunez del Balboa
Explanation
Hernando de Soto is the first European known to have discovered and crossed the Mississippi River. His expedition ranged across the southeastern and western United States. He was searching primarily for gold, like many Spanish explorers of the time. The motivation for Spanish exploration is often illustrated by historians with the simple phrase “God, glory, and gold.” God—the desire to spread Christianity to Native populations. Glory—the desire to make a name for oneself back in Spain. Gold—the desire for wealth. It is important to remember these three primary motivations as they explain the actions of many European explorers at the time.
Arthur Miller’s 1953 play, The Crucible, is based upon what series of prosecutions and hearings that occurred in Massachusetts Bay between 1692 and 1693?
The Salem Witch Trials
The Andover Witch Trials
The Witches of Ipswich Trials
The Witch Trials of Massachusetts
The New England Witch Trials
Explanation
The Crucible is based on the Salem Witch Trials.
What was the first European community established in the territory now called the United States?
Jamestown
Plymouth
Santa Fe
Roanoke
St. Augustine
Explanation
The city of St. Augustine was established in 1565, in what is now Florida. For many years prior the French and Spanish had tried and failed to establish a European community in Florida, Georgia and elsewhere. The city began life as a base from which the Spanish could combat both piracy and the French. After a shipment of slaves arrived the community grew at a reasonably fast rate.
What is the nickname given to the late-sixteenth-century English settlement on Roanoke Island, in present-day North Carolina, which disappeared during the Anglo-Spanish War?
The Lost Colony
The Missing Colony
The Vanishing Roanoke
The Dispersed
The Victims' Colony
Explanation
The nickname is "The Lost Colony." To this day, the colony's disappearance remains inexplicable.
Which of the following original states did not permit slavery in its borders in 1789?
Massachusetts
New York
New Jersey
Delaware
Maryland
Explanation
Slavery was fairly widespread in the American colonies before the American Revolution. Great Britain did not allow slavery until the early ninteenth century, and each colony got to decide its own laws about slavery. Slavery had become much more widespread on Southern plantations, and developed more strongly there. In the north, only a few states completely banned slavery. New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut all slowly outlawed slavery shortly after the Revolution. Massachusetts and Pennsylvania were the most notable large states to have never allowed slavery.
Maryland Colony was first founded as a haven for which of the following groups?
Catholics
Puritans
Huguenots
Loyalists
Quakers
Explanation
Maryland Colony was founded in the 1630s by the Calverts, a prominent family of English Catholics, as a haven for persecuted Catholics from Britain. Massachusetts was the colony founded by and for the Puritans, while Pennsylvania was the colony founded by and for the Quakers (also other religious groups were welcome there). Huguenots started to migrate to North America in large numbers decades after Maryland was founded, and they settled in several colonies. Loyalists only became a distinct, persecuted group once the colonies revolted and gained independence in the late 18th century, and creating a haven for them had nothing to do with the founding of Maryland roughly 150 years earlier.