Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

 Alabama  Tennessee  North Carolina  South Carolina  Florida.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: " Alabama  Tennessee  North Carolina  South Carolina  Florida."— Presentation transcript:

1

2

3  Alabama  Tennessee  North Carolina  South Carolina  Florida

4 5

5  Coastal Plain  Piedmont  Ridge and Valley  Appalachian Plateau  Blue Ridge

6  Piedmont

7  Appalachian Plateau

8  Coastal Plain

9

10  Brasstown Bald

11  Piedmont & Coastal Plain

12  Okefenokee Swamp

13

14  Paleo

15  To find food

16  Archaic

17  Woodland

18

19  Began to cultivate plants

20  Paleo, Archaic, Woodland, Mississippian

21  Hernando de Soto

22  Gold, Glory & God

23  Spain, England, France

24  Jamestown

25  St. Augustine

26  mercantilism

27  More exports than imports

28  Fort King George

29  King George II

30  Savannah

31  James Oglethorpe, 1733

32  Catholics, liquor dealers, lawyers, blacks

33  Yamacraws

34  The Ann

35  Yamacraw Bluff

36  squares

37  Mary Musgrove

38  Savannah River

39  The Salzburgers

40  Ebenezer

41  St. Simons Island

42  Highland Scots

43  Battle of Bloody Marsh

44  slavery  sale of rum  land ownership

45  They could not hold office.

46  malcontents

47  royal

48  John Reynolds  Henry Ellis  James Wright

49  Great Britain  France

50  Proclamation of 1763

51  St. Mary’s River

52  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

53  Boston Massacre

54  Declaration of Independence

55  13

56  Thomas Jefferson

57  Battle of Kettle Creek

58  Stamp Act

59  Intolerable Acts

60  George Walton  Lyman Hall  Button Gwinnett

61  Elijah Clarke

62  George Washington

63  Nancy Hart

64  Savannah remained in British hands.

65  Austin Dabney

66  Patriots

67  In the past, the governor showed too much loyalty to the king.

68  John Adam Treutlen

69  Articles of Confederation

70  To Revise the Articles of Confederation

71  Abraham Baldwin  William Few

72  To distribute Indian lands to new settlers

73  Yazoo Land Fraud

74  Land Lottery

75  Alexander McGillivray

76  He signed a treaty giving up the last Creek lands in Georgia to the federal government.

77  Creeks  Cherokees

78  Trail of Tears

79  Oklahoma

80  Sequoyah made a syllabary – Cherokee alphabet

81  Gold

82  John Marshall

83  John Ross

84  Land for the university was donated by the federal government.

85  UGA

86  Methodists  Baptists

87  To follow the major part of the population

88  cotton gin

89  Western and Atlantic

90  Eli Whitney

91  Harriet Beecher Stowe

92  northern states  states’ rights

93  Maine

94  sectionalism

95  California

96  John Brown

97  Alexander Stephens

98  Joseph Brown

99  The Dred Scott Decision

100  The Georgia Platform

101  To require the return of runaway slaves to their owners

102  Anaconda Plan

103  blockade runners

104  Atlanta Campaign  Savannah Campaign

105  General William T. Sherman

106  Andersonville

107  It was the railroad center.

108  The South could keep their slaves if they stopped fighting.

109  Antietam

110  Gettysburg  Pennsylvania

111  10% Plan

112  13 th Amendment

113  To punish the southern rebelling states

114  Abolish slavery

115  Made blacks citizens

116  Gave blacks the right to vote

117  Freedmen’s Bureau

118  Sharecroppers owned nothing but their labor, while tenant farmers owned animals and equipment to use working other people’s land.

119  Black Codes

120  Ku Klux Klan

121  He did not have the right to hold political office according to the constitution.

122  5 Years

123  Leo Frank

124  The rural areas of the state

125  The Knights of Mary Phagan

126  The Atlanta Race Riot of 1906

127  The Rural Free Delivery Bill

128  The New South

129  The Bourbon Triumvirate

130  The International Cotton Exposition

131  Joseph Brown  Alfred Colquitt,  John Gordon

132  Henry Grady

133  farmers

134  cotton

135  Rebecca Latimer Felton

136  Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896

137  Jim Crow Laws

138  Plessy v. Ferguson

139  14 th Amendment

140  Poll taxes  grandfather clause  Gerrymandering  literacy tests

141  Drought  Boll weevil

142

143  stock speculation  borrowing more money than could be repaid  overproduction

144  Herbert Hoover

145  Black Thursday

146  Laissez-faire

147  Georgia was already in a depression.

148  Eugene Talmadge

149 33

150  rural voters

151  Franklin D. Roosevelt

152  The New Deal Programs

153  Agricultural Adjustment Act

154  property owners

155  Social Security

156  Rural Electrification Agency (REA)

157  Great Britain, France, United States and Russia

158  Fort Benning in Columbus

159  Growing food, making uniforms and material for them, transporting arms and soldiers

160  the assassination of Franz Ferdinand of the Austrian Hungarian empire by a Serbian terrorist

161  Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire

162  Poland

163  The Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor

164  Germany, Japan, Italy

165  Great Britain, the United States, the Soviet Union

166  England & the Soviet Union

167  the lend-lease aid

168  the Holocaust

169  Adolf Hitler

170  John Hope

171  Atlanta

172  Booker T. Washington

173  W.E.B. DuBois

174  Atlanta Mutual Insurance Company

175  Carl Vinson

176  Richard Russell

177  The B-29 aircraft

178  Brunswick and Savannah

179  Rural Electrification Agency (REA)

180  Warm Springs, Ga.

181  FDR used the warm mineral waters of Warm Springs to ease his polio.

182  technology

183  diversified economy

184  Over 50%

185  suburban

186  urban sprawl

187  air pollution

188  Hispanics

189  William Hartsfield

190  Ivan Allen

191  Hartsfield

192  Ivan Allen

193  Jackie Robinson

194  Ellis Arnall

195  Lester Maddox

196  Ellis Arnall

197  Brown v. Board of Education Topeka, Kansas 1954

198  Civil Rights Act of 1964

199  Nonviolent protests

200  Sibley Commission

201  March on Washington, 1963

202  Black Panthers

203  Benjamin Mays

204  Ellis Arnall

205  education

206  3% sales tax

207  2000

208  Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)

209  NAACP

210  The Albany Movement 1961

211  Maynard Jackson

212  Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes

213  Lester Maddox

214  March on Washington

215  Andrew Young

216

217

218  trucks

219  Savannah

220  decline

221

222  urban areas

223  Jimmy Carter

224  Department of Education

225  Plains

226  Member of Plains school board, Ga. state senate, Ga. state governor, President

227  Iranian

228  Sonny Perdue

229  One political party-- Democratic

230  1996 Summer Olympics

231  employee

232  John S. Pemberton

233  advertising

234  Asa Candler

235  Coca-Cola  Home Depot  Delta Air Lines

236  Margaret Mitchell

237  Juliette Gordon Low

238

239  11

240  executive

241  voters

242  judicial

243  legislative, executive, judicial

244  separation of powers

245  veto

246  separation of powers

247  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

248  No—that is a federal issue

249  40 days

250  21 years old  a citizen of GA for at least one year  a resident of the district from which elected for one year

251  appropriation bills

252  2 years

253  senate

254  Georgia General Assembly

255  180

256  56

257  standing

258  committee

259  Lieutenant Governor

260  Speaker of the House

261  conference

262  becomes a law

263  A majority

264  2/3 vote of both houses

265 88

266  Speaker of the House

267  legislative, executive, judicial

268  30 years old  a citizen of the US for 15 years  a resident of Georgia for 6 years

269  undefined number of years

270  Attorney General

271  Secretary of State

272  assigning Senate bills to committee

273  judicial

274  municipal courts  magistrate courts  probate courts  juvenile courts

275  Grand Jury

276  6 years

277 77

278  death penalty cases

279  criminal and civil

280  felonies

281  state

282  plaintiff

283  misdemeanors

284  17

285  Appointed by superior court judges

286  bail

287  community service

288  Intake officer

289  delinquent act

290  status offense

291  Taken into custody

292  159

293  Athens-Clarke  Augusta-Richmond

294  municipality

295  Savannah

296  mayor-council  council-manager  commission

297  mayor-council

298  Special district government

299  Republican and Democratic

300  Federalists and Anti- Federalists

301  naturalization

302  to pay taxes

303  18

304  Secretary of State

305

306  fiscal

307  state income tax

308  education

309  property taxes

310  when interest is low

311  checking


Download ppt " Alabama  Tennessee  North Carolina  South Carolina  Florida."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google