Across
- 2. usually refers to the United States of America.
- 4. a member of an American Indian people of the southeastern US, now living on reservations in Oklahoma and North Carolina.
- 7. a war between citizens of the same country.
- 8. is primarily concerned with the design, production and distribution of yarn, cloth and clothing.
- 9. a city in E Georgia, on the Savannah River. a city in and the capital of Maine, in the SW part, on the Kennebec RiverSavannah RiverSavannah RiverSavannah RiverAmerican Revolution
- 10. an American Indian confederacy of peoples chiefly of Muskogean stock of Alabama, Georgia, and Florida
- 11. occurring or existing before a particular war, especially the American Civil War.
- 12. a rapid movement of people to a newly discovered goldfield
- 16. The route along which the United States government forced several tribes of Native Americans, including the Cherokees, Seminoles, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Creeks, to migrate to reservations west of the Mississippi River in the 1820s, 1830s, and 1840s.
- 17. an estate on which crops such as coffee, sugar, and tobacco are cultivated by resident labor.
- 18. a state in southeastern United States; one of the Confederate states during the American Civil War
Down
- 1. a condition compared to that of a slave in respect of exhausting labor or restricted freedom.
- 3. also known as Koo-wi-s-gu-wi (meaning in Cherokee: "Mysterious Little White Bird"), was the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation from 1828–1866, serving longer in this position than any other person.
- 5. was an American inventor best known for inventing the cotton gin
- 6. a war fought from 1775-1783 and won by the 13 American colonies to achieve independence from Great Britain
- 7. a machine for separating cotton from its seeds.
- 11. is the capital of, and the most populous city in, the U.S. state of Georgia.
- 13. was an American colonial lawyer and jurist who was the last British Royal Governor of the Province of Georgia.
- 14. a soft white fibrous substance that surrounds the seeds of a tropical and subtropical plant and is used as textile fiber and thread for sewing.
- 15. was an enslaved African American man in the United States who unsuccessfully sued for his freedom and that of his wife and their two daughters in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case of 1857, popularly known as the "Dred Scott case".
