APUSH Unit 3
Across
- 2. First ten amendments enumerating individual liberties and limiting federal power (1791)
- 6. Constitutional agreement counting enslaved people as three fifths of a person for representation (1787)
- 8. Opponents of Constitution who feared strong central government
- 9. Document asserting natural rights and colonial separation from Britain (1776)
- 13. British courts that tried colonial smugglers without a jury
- 16. Essays by Hamilton and Madison arguing for ratification of Constitution (1787-1788)
- 18. Colonial women's movement to make own cloth and boycott British textile imports
- 19. Distinct social and ethnic mix emerging as settlers moved westward
- 22. Thomas Paine pamphlet arguing for American independence from Britain (1776)
- 23. Colonial refusal to purchase British goods as protest against taxation
- 24. Laws limiting immigration and criminalizing criticism of the government (1798)
- 25. First American national government creating a weak central authority
Down
- 1. Law admitting new states and banning slavery in Northwest Territory (1787)
- 3. War in which Britain defeated France and gained major territorial holdings in North America (1754-1763)
- 4. British tax on colonial documents that united colonists against taxation without representation (1765)
- 5. Native American rebellion resisting British colonial encroachment after French defeat (1763)
- 7. Northern state laws slowly phasing out slavery after the Revolution
- 10. Turning point victory that convinced France to ally with Americans (1777)
- 11. System dividing power between national and state governments (1787)
- 12. Ideal calling on women to teach republican values within the family
- 14. Washington's warning against political factions and permanent foreign alliances (1796)
- 15. Uprising of Pennsylvania farmers against federal tax (1794)
- 17. British law preventing colonists from settling west of Appalachian Mountains (1763)
- 20. Controversial agreement resolving tensions with Britain over trade and frontier posts (1794)
- 21. Enlightenment philosopher whose ideas about natural rights influenced the Declaration of Independence