Documenting United States History

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112 ChApTEr 4 | an atlantiC eMpire | period three 175 4 –18 0 0

a subordinated thesis statement allows you to give one of the topics greater signifi-
cance than the other while still acknowledging their interrelatedness. In your subor-
dinated thesis, you will subordinate either the topics to the categories, or vice versa.

steP 1 Understand the prompt, and identify the key words


As you remember from Chapter 1, you must first understand your question. Draw
a square around your topic (“pursuit of natural resources and political domina-
tion”), draw a line underneath your task (analyze “To what extent”), and draw a
circle around the categories in the question (“conflicts among the French, English,
Americans, and Native Americans in North America between 1754 and 1800”).

steP 2 Brainstorm and organize your evidence


To generate a working thesis from a historical prompt, begin by brainstorming
what you know. Review the prompt’s topic and categories above, and create a list
of facts that fit under the topics and the categories. A few have been done for you:

“pursuit of natural resources and political domination”


The British and French used their colonies for raw materials.
British: tobacco, shipbuilding materials, hemp, fish, etc.

French: furs


Stamp Act


“conflicts among the French, English, Americans, and Native Americans”


The French and English fought throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries.
French and Indian War

Pontiac’s Rebellion


American Revolution


With this information, you have two choices to subordinate:



  1. Pursuit of natural resources

  2. Political domination


When you subordinate, you often use words such as these:


However
Still
While
Although

putting it all together 113

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