Virginia SOL Virginia and US History test: important concepts

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Revision as of 14:51, 14 June 2022 by Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Important concepts for the Virginia & US History SOL test * this page follows the units structure of the actual test * important concepts and facts are highlighted * source = SOL Standards and Released tests 2011, 2012, 2014 == Early America Through the Founding of the New Nation == === Native Americans === * negative impact from European settlements ** disease *** led to decline in population *** disrupted Native American tribes ** loss of land *** pushed westward...")
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Important concepts for the Virginia & US History SOL test

  • this page follows the units structure of the actual test
  • important concepts and facts are highlighted
  • source = SOL Standards and Released tests 2011, 2012, 2014

Early America Through the Founding of the New Nation[edit | edit source]

Native Americans[edit | edit source]

  • negative impact from European settlements
    • disease
      • led to decline in population
      • disrupted Native American tribes
    • loss of land
      • pushed westward by colonial settlements and western settlers
      • led to reorganization of tribal alliances
  • other impacts
    • fur trade with Europeans, especially the French

American Colonies[edit | edit source]

Thirteen Colonies of North America: Dark Red = New England colonies. Bright Red = Middle Atlantic colonies. Red-brown = Southern colonies.
MAJOR REGIONS OF THE 13 COLONIES
Major Region Sub regions Colonies
Middle colonies Mid-Atlantic Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York
New England colonies n/a Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island,
Southern colonies Chesapeake Virginia & Maryland
Colonial South Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virgina
Population & Economic Characteristics of Colonial Regions
Region Population Economic General notes
Middle colonies
  • higher population
  • major port city in each colony w/ large populations, esp. New York City & Philadelphia
  • inland small towns
  • ocean & inland trade
  • ship building
  • small manufacture
  • independent farming
  • religious tolerance
  • townships with independent governments & citizen involvement
New England
  • higher population
  • major port city in each colony w/ large population, esp.. Boston
  • inland small towns
  • ocean & inland trade
  • ship building
  • small manufacture
  • independent farming
  • Massachusetts: puritanism (lack of religious tolerance)
  • Other colonies: religious tolerance, esp. Rhode Island
Southern colonies
  • lower population
  • larger slave population
  • major port city in each colony
  • small towns inland
  • ocean trade to sell agricultural products
  • growing slave-based economy
  • focus on "cash crops" for bulk (large quantity) export
  • Chesapeake: tobacco planting with large plantations
  • Colonial South: rice, indigo, tobacco
  • Maryland tolerated Catholics
  • Virginia mostly Protestant with some Catholics called "Cavaliers"