This Act (1764) lowered duties on British molasses by half,…
This Act (1764) lowered duties on British molasses by half, from six pence per gallon to three. Grenville designed this measure to address the problem of rampant colonial smuggling with the French sugar islands in the West Indies.
Read DetailsDuring the winter of 1777–1778, the British occupied Philade…
During the winter of 1777–1778, the British occupied Philadephia while Washington’s army camped at this spot in Pennsylvania. Washington’s winter was a low point for the American forces. A lack of supplies weakened the men, and disease took a heavy toll. Amid the cold, hunger, and sickness, soldiers deserted in droves.
Read DetailsDirections: Choose the appropriate answer identify the pat…
Directions: Choose the appropriate answer identify the pattern or patterns in each reading. England made three initial attempts at colonizing America with the 1587 Roanoke colony, 1607 Jamestown colony, and 1620 Plymouth colony. The French and Spanish colonies, how-ever, predated the English by several decades. In the 1500s, France began to actively colonize North America, and in 1513 and 1521, Juan Ponce de Leon led expeditions to Florida, claiming the territory for Spain. In the 1560s, French Protestants tried to establish two colonies on the Atlantic coast. The first one, in present-day South Carolina, was unsuccessful; its starving inhabitants had to be rescued by a passing ship. The second, which was established near present-day Jacksonville, Florida, was destroyed in 1564 by a Spanish army. The next year, in 1565, Spain sent Pedro Menendez de Aviles to build the city of St. Augustine, which today remains the oldest continuously inhabited European city in the United States. Afterward, the French concentrated their efforts further north. By the early 1600s, a large area that included not only Canada but also what is now America’s Great Lakes region and Mississippi River Valley was under French rule and named New France. (Sources of information: Carol Berkin et al., Making America, 3rd ed., Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2003, pp. 34–40; Mary Beth Norton et al., A People and a Nation, 6th ed., Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001, pp. 28–29, 34.)
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