The Declaration of Independence
Across
- 2. The Declaration was designed to justify breaking away from a government; the Constitution and Bill of Rights were designed to ______ a government.
- 4. The political theory of the Declaration can be summed up in one sentence: First come ______, and then comes government.
- 6. The fourth article concludes that protecting individual rights demands constant ______ against the powers of the earth.
- 8. Although Jefferson believed slavery was wrong, historian Gordon-Reed notes that he never ______ his own enslaved people during his lifetime.
- 13. The second article ends by saying that the Declaration states a ______ for the republic, which falls to later generations to keep alive.
- 14. On July 4th, 1776, Congress officially adopted what the author of the third article calls the American Theory of ______.
- 15. The Declaration and the Bill of Rights both reflect a fear of an overly ______ government imposing its will on the people of the states.
- 16. Jefferson feared that if freed Black people remained in America, the country would be in a constant state of ______.
- 18. The Constitution has been ______ 27 times in total.
- 19. Gordon-Reed compares the Declaration to a great ______, saying its meaning transcends whatever the author was thinking at the time.
Down
- 1. Every person who signed the Declaration risked being executed as a ______ if caught by the British.
- 3. The Declaration was really a declaration of ______, because its main goal was to secure alliances with other nations.
- 5. The author of the third article argues it is a mistake to characterise the Declaration's natural rights as religiously based rather than ______.
- 7. Jefferson's preamble, which later became the most famous part of the document, was at the time of writing largely an ______.
- 9. To justify their revolution, the Americans had to allege nothing short of a criminal ______ to violate their rights systematically.
- 10. The United States announced it had left the British Empire in order to join the international community of ______ states.
- 11. Ho Chi Minh placed the Vietnamese revolution into a longer revolutionary ______ while also making a bid for American support.
- 12. Without a declaration of independence, American colonists would remain ______ in the eyes of foreign courts and monarchs.
- 13. NPR staff members have read the Declaration of Independence aloud at ______ gatherings every July Fourth since 1988.
- 17. President Lincoln, in the Gettysburg Address, called the Civil War "a new birth of ______."