Transcript SOL Quiz 10
SOL Quiz
10
Critical Period II
1. How did Shays's Rebellion (1786-1787) affect public opinion?
a. Most people thought that Shays did a good job of getting the British
out of the Northwest.
b. Shays's actions encouraged demands for changes in the Articles of
Confederation.
c. Merchants and tradesmen favored Shays, while farmers opposed him.
d. The British were unhappy with the results of Shays's behavior.
During the mid-1780s, farmers led by Revolutionary War veteran
Daniel Shays, marched on the Massachusetts government in order to
protect their family farms. Though the Massachusetts militia was able
to put down the rebellion, many feared larger rebellions in the future.
Increasingly, people demanded that a stronger national government be
established in order to more easily crush such rebellions in the future.
2. Which document established the guidelines by which new states
would be added to the United States?
a. Proclamation of 1763
b. Articles of Confederation
c. Land Ordinance of 1785
d. Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Prior to the Northwest Ordinance, there were real questions about what
should happen with western lands. Should they be ruled by the national
government in perpetuity? Should the people living there be allowed to
have a voice in the national government? The Northwest Ordinance of
1787 stated that a territory could apply for statehood when its population
numbered 60,000 or more. The Ordinance also stated that new states
would be on equal footing with the original 13 states.
3. Which document banned slavery in the Northwest Territory?
a. The Articles of Confederation
b. The Declaration of Independence
c. The Land Ordinance
d. The Northwest Ordinance
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 banned slavery in the
Northwest Territory (lands west of the Appalachians, north of
the Ohio River, east of the Mississippi River, and south of the
Great Lakes). Later, this precedent would be followed when
Congress passed the Missouri Compromise (1820) and the
Compromise of 1850, which also banned slavery in some parts of
U.S. territory.
4. Which difficulty led to the calling of the Annapolis Convention?
a. Indian attacks
b. commercial problems
c. restrictions on westward expansion
d. Shays's Rebellion
Each of the 13 states was invited to send delegates to Annapolis
in 1787 to resolve commercial problems among the states.
Organizers of the convention wanted to explore solutions to
commercial problems, such as restrictions on interstate trade
and the chaotic money system in the states.
5. Which of the following most CORRECTLY describes the results of
the Annapolis Convention?
a. They wrote a new government for the United States.
b. They solved the problems of conflicting claims for land in the West.
c. They were a stepping stone to the Constitutional Convention.
d. They created the basis for an agreement for fishing rights in the
Atlantic Ocean.
In 1786, a group of gentlemen met at Annapolis to discuss commercial
problems that were common to all the states. Many reached the
conclusion that the Articles would have to be strengthened. They sent
a petition to Congress asking it to call for a convention of all the states
to explore ways to accomplish that goal. After some delay, Congress
agreed. The convention met in Philadelphia in 1787.