<p>Yeah does anybody remember the other options for the Puritan question?</p>
<p>And I don't think the Henry Clay answer with Canada in it was correct.</p>
<p>What was the question about increased domestic manufacturing? Other answers?</p>
<p>Yeah does anybody remember the other options for the Puritan question?</p>
<p>And I don't think the Henry Clay answer with Canada in it was correct.</p>
<p>What was the question about increased domestic manufacturing? Other answers?</p>
<p>feigning illness and slow production is a 1000 percent correct they took it from the 1988 released ap exam :)</p>
<p>I put slowing down/feigning illness... it asked for the most common way (or something like that) so I figured that was more common. Actually, not a lot of slaves went North on the Underground RR... just enough to freak out the Southern farmers.</p>
<p>Drkornruns, for once, I agree with you. It was E, dissenters.</p>
<p>henry clay was for war of 1812 and the answer was a its in amsco! he was a hawk who wanted to rid the english and spanish off western lands :)</p>
<p>I don't think it's the Canada answer for Henry Clay... it was the one about colonial merchants feeling threatened by British trade... right? wasn't that an answer?</p>
<p>Drkornruns they were definitely dissenters (anne hutchinson roger williams etc) and feigning illness.</p>
<p>what was the war of 1812 question? and choices?</p>
<p>I thought puritans (early ones) were rejected from England to Holland, and then made way to the Americas, and wanted to live a life of their own religion? It may be wrong</p>
<p>Definitely dissenters. Read it in my AP book just this morning.</p>
<p>ok uh...what was the answer to the home to factories question in the 19th century</p>
<p>choices were textile...womens clothing...soap and i forgot the other two</p>
<p>i know i got it wrong ugh but what was it?</p>
<p>Was the Monroe Doctrine an executive order? and yea ^ i put textiles</p>
<p>i put textile. the soap choice was really random lol</p>
<p>and does anyone remember the chart with the cotton/slave prices? what were the choices??</p>
<p>Slaves went up while cotton remained relatively constant.</p>
<p>What exactly did the 16th century puritan problem say?</p>
<p>The answer was soap, not textiles.</p>
<p>Any more opinions on the Henry Clay question? I don't remember what I put :</p>
<p>How many can I get wrong if I omitted 4 and still get above 750</p>
<p>^ According to the Official SAT II College Board book's scale, at least 10, I'm sure.</p>
<p>Is the generous curve in that book really accurate though?</p>
<p>No it was textiles - remember Lowell?</p>