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Hien Ngo

Prof. Scout
HIST 1301 001
March 12 2021
Untest 2
Part I: IDs
ID 1: The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening remarkably modified the strict environment in the American settlements.
Customary individuals were urged to make an individual association with God rather than
depending on a priest. The restoration also prompted a few famous instructive establishments,
including Princeton, Rutgers, Brown, and Dartmouth colleges.
I choose this ID because The Great Awakening obviously essentially affected Christianity. It
revived religion in America when it was consistently declining and brought thoughts that would
infiltrate into American culture for a long time to come.

ID 2: The “Middle Ground”


The "middle ground" depicts the geographic area from the Great Lakes to the Mississippi upper
bowl. It additionally demonstrates that it was socially in the middle of societies, individuals, and
realms. It was a developing time between countries. Local American Indians were in charge.
There were Iroquois-English boards that included social trade-offs.
I choose this ID because It is critical to U.S. History since it shows that Europeans were not
always in charge and can compromise.***

ID 3: Britain
Britain arose out of the conflict as the world's driving pilgrim power, acquiring all of New France
in North America, finishing France's part as a provincial force. Following Spain's entrance into
the conflict in collusion with France in the third Family Reduced, England caught the significant
Spanish ports of Havana, Cuba, and Manila, in the Philippines in 1762 and consented to return
them in return for Florida recently constrained by Spain. The Settlement of Paris in 1763
officially finished the contention, and England set up itself as the world's pre-prominent
maritime force.
I choose this ID since Incredible England was one of the significant members of the Seven Years'
Conflict, which indeed kept going nine years, somewhere in the range of 1754 and 1763. English
association in the contention started in 1754 in what got known as the French and Indian
Conflict.

Part II: Connection


Fact 1:
Fact 2:
Connection:
Part III: Geographic Connection
Fact 1:
Fact 2:
Connection:
Part IV: Overall Takeaways (200-250 words)
1st paragraph: Intro
Historical context/ Background
Thesis statement: 1 2 3 (3 keys takeaways)
2nd paragraph
3rd paragraph
4th paragraph
5th paragraph: Conclusion

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