Chapter 6 review

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Land
Lottery
Yazoo
Land Fraud
To
distribute Indian
lands to new settlers
Alexander
McGillivray
He
signed a treaty giving up
the last Creek lands in
Georgia to the federal
government.
Creeks
Cherokees
Trail
of Tears
Oklahoma
Sequoyah
made a syllabary
– Cherokee alphabet
Gold
John
Ross
John
Marshall
Spain,
England,
France
Gold,
Glory & God
Hernando
de Soto
state
income tax
property
taxes
education
fiscal
St.
Augustine
More
exports than
imports
Fort
King George
mercantilism
Jamestown
Paleo,
Archaic,
Woodland, Mississippian
To
find food
Archaic
Began
to cultivate
plants
Paleo
Temple
mound
Woodland
Woodland
checking
when
interest is low
decline
Savannah
trucks
5
Coastal
Plain
Piedmont
Ridge and Valley
Appalachian Plateau
Blue Ridge
Piedmont
&
Coastal Plain
Alabama
Tennessee
North
Carolina
South Carolina
Florida
Piedmont
Appalachian
Plateau
Coastal
Plain
Okefenokee
Swamp
Coastal
Plain
Brasstown
Bald
John
Reynolds
Henry Ellis
James Wright
royal
malcontents
13
St.
Mary’s River
Great
Britain
France
To
get money to repay war
debts, Great Britain taxed the
colonists on the premise that
the war had been necessary
to protect the colonies from
France
Boston
Massacre
Declaration
of
Independence
Proclamation
1763
of
Intolerable
Acts
Battle
of Kettle
Creek
Stamp
Act
Thomas
Jefferson
George
Washington
Elijah
Clarke
Nancy
Hart
Savannah
remained
in British hands.
Patriots
Austin
Dabney
George Walton
Lyman Hall
Button Gwinnett
municipality
159
Savannah
Athens-Clarke
Augusta-Richmond
mayor-council
council-manager
commission
Special
district government
mayor-council
Articles
of
Confederation
John
Adam Treutlen
Abraham
Baldwin
William Few
To
Revise the Articles
of Confederation
James
Oglethorpe,
1733
Yamacraws
Catholics,
liquor
dealers, lawyers, blacks
Savannah
King
George II
The
Ann
 In
the past, the governor showed
too much loyalty to the king.
Mary
Musgrove
squares
Savannah
River
Ebenezer/New
Ebenezer
The
Salzburgers
slavery
sale
of rum
land ownership
Highland
Scots
Yamacraw
Bluff
Battle
of Bloody
Marsh
Could
not hold office.
Could not get paid.
Could not own land.
40
days
No—that
is a federal
issue
appropriation
bills
 21
years old
 a citizen of GA for at least one year
 a resident of the district from which
elected for one year
 25
years old
 a citizen of Ga. for at least 2 years
 a resident of the district from
which he is elected for at least
one year
2
years
senate
180
Georgia
General
Assembly
standing
becomes
a law
56
committee
Lieutenant
Governor
A
majority
Speaker
of the House
2/3
vote of both houses
conference
UGA
To
follow the major
part of the population
Methodists
Baptists
cotton
gin
Land
for the university
was donated by the
federal government.
Eli
Whitney
Western
and
Atlantic
Federalists
Anti-Federalists
to
pay taxes
naturalization
Republican
and
Democratic
Secretary
of State
18
northern
states
John
Brown
states’
rights
Maine
Harriet
Beecher
Stowe
California
sectionalism
Joseph
Brown
The
Georgia Platform
To
require the return of
runaway slaves to their owners
The
Dred Scott Decision
Alexander
Stephens
blockade
runners
Anaconda
Plan
General
William T. Sherman
Gettysburg
Pennsylvania
Atlanta
Campaign
Savannah Campaign
Andersonville
Antietam
It
was the railroad
center.
Emancipation
Proclamation
To
punish the southern
rebelling states
th
13
Amendment
10%
Plan
Gave
blacks the
right to vote
Freedmen’s
Bureau
Black
Codes
Made
blacks
citizens
Abolish
slavery
 Sharecroppers
owned nothing but
their labor, while tenant farmers
owned animals and equipment to
use working other people’s land.
Ku
Klux Klan
5
Years
 He
did not have the right to hold
political office according to the
constitution.
th
14
Amendment
Jim
Crow Laws
Plessy
v. Ferguson
Plessy
v. Ferguson, 1896
 Poll
taxes
 grandfather clause
 Gerrymandering
 literacy tests
Drought
Boll
weevil
Boll
weevil
 stock
speculation
 borrowing more money than
could be repaid
 overproduction
Black
Thursday – October 24
Black Tuesday – October 29
Herbert
Hoover
Georgia
was already in
a depression.
Laissez-faire
Eugene
Talmadge
4
rural
voters
Franklin
D. Roosevelt
The
New Deal Programs
Agricultural
Adjustment Act
Rural
Electrification
Agency (REA)
property
owners
Social
Security
England
and Soviet
Union
Germany,
Austria-Hungary,
Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire
the
assassination of Franz
Ferdinand of the Austrian
Hungarian empire by a Serbian
terrorist
 Growing
food
 Making uniforms and material for them
 Transporting arms and soldiers
Great
Britain, France,
United States and
Russia
Poland
Germany,
Italy
Japan,
Great
Britain, the United
States, the Soviet Union
the
Holocaust
The
Japanese
bombing of
Pearl Harbor
Adolf
Hitler
the
lend-lease aid
suburban
diversified
economy
technology
Over
50%
urban
sprawl
William
Hartsfield
Hispanics
Hartsfield
air
pollution
Ivan
Allen
Ivan
Allen
Ellis
Arnall
Ellis
Arnall
Ellis
Arnall
Lester Maddox
Jackie
Robinson
Brown
v. Board of Education
Topeka, Kansas 1954
Civil
Rights Act of 1964
Nonviolent
protests
Sibley
Commission
March
on Washington,
1963
Black
Panthers
Benjamin
Mays
Ellis
Arnall

education

3% sales tax

2000
Student Non-violent
Coordinating Committee
(SNCC)


NAACP

The Albany Movement
1961

Maynard Jackson
Charlayne Hunter
and Hamilton Holmes


Lester Maddox
March
on Washington
Andrew
Young
Andrew
Young
Plains,
Georgia
 Member
of Plains school board
 Ga. state senate
 Ga. state governor
 President
urban
areas
One
political party-Democratic
Iranian
Jimmy
Carter
Sonny
Perdue
Department
Education
of
1996
Summer Olympics
John
S. Pemberton
advertising
A
person who takes risks
to start a business
Asa
Candler
Juliette
Gordon Low
Coca-Cola
Home
Depot
Delta Air Lines
Margaret
Mitchell
executive
Legislative
Executive
Judicial
judicial
veto
11
separation
of powers
separation
of powers
voters
30
years old
a citizen of the US for 15 years
a
resident of Georgia for 6 years
assigning
Senate bills to
committee
Speaker
of the House
8
judicial
legislative,
executive,
judicial
Attorney
General
Secretary
of State
undefined
number of
years
The
Rural Free Delivery Bill
The
Atlanta Race Riot
of 1906
The
rural areas of
the state
The
Knights of Mary
Phagan
Leo
Frank
The
New South
The
International Cotton
Exposition
The
Bourbon Triumvirate
Henry
Grady
Joseph
Brown
Alfred Colquitt
John Gordon
Rebecca
Latimer Felton
farmers
cotton
 municipal
courts
 magistrate courts
 probate courts
 juvenile courts
death
penalty cases
Grand
Jury
6
years
7
criminal
and civil
state
felonies
17
plaintiff
Taken
into custody
bail
misdemeanors
delinquent
act
Appointed
by superior
court judges
community
service
Intake
officer
status
offense
W.E.B.
DuBois
John
Hope
Booker
T. Washington
Carl
Vinson
The
B-29 aircraft
Richard
Russell
 FDR
used the warm mineral waters
of Warm Springs to ease his polio.
Atlanta
Mutual
Insurance Company
Brunswick
and Savannah
Rural
Electrification
Agency (REA)
Warm
Springs, Ga.
Atlanta
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