Colonial North America: Part I - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Colonial North America: Part I

Description:

Colonial North America: Part I – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1182
Slides: 52
Provided by: rayshep@gmail.com
Tags:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Colonial North America: Part I


1
Colonial North America
  • Chapter 3
  • Pages 52-67

2
Introduction.
  • 1603 Queen Elizabeth dies.
  • James of Scotland becomes James I of England.
  • Determined to tap into the wealth of the merchant
    class.
  • Create a British Empire in North America.

3
Introduction.
  • Joint-Stock Company.
  • Created to avoid excessive risk.
  • Merchants were able to distribute risk.
  • Accumulate money by selling shares.
  • No single investor would suffer devastating loss.
  • The shared profits could be very good.
  • 1606 King James I granted royal charters to two
    groups of merchants and landowners.
  • Encouraged them to create colonies in Virginia.
  • Joint-Stock companies the financial machine
    that funded colonization during this time.

4
Introduction.
  • The Chesapeake.
  • Virginia
  • Maryland
  • New England.
  • Plymouth
  • Massachusetts

5
Jamestown.
  • 1607
  • Virginia Company.
  • Chesapeake Bay.
  • Fort named Jamestown.
  • In honor of King James.
  • Site selected
  • Easy to defend.
  • An unseen enemy
  • Disease.
  • Salt water.

6
Jamestown.
  • 1607 cont
  • Summer months
  • Diseases (typhoid dysentery).
  • Winter months
  • Starvation.
  • English Gentlemen
  • Not accustom
  • Cooperating.
  • Taking orders.
  • Worrying about shelter/food.
  • Refused to clear fields or planting or build
    houses/stockades.

7
Jamestown.
  • As a result of disease and unpreparedness the
    colonists were not ready for the winter of
    1607-1608.
  • By January 1608
  • Only 38 survived.
  • Capt. John Smith.
  • Skilled.
  • Studied local natives (how they gathered food,
    etc).
  • When things got tough, Smith took charge.
  • Imposed military discipline.
  • Forced the gentlemen to work (fish, oyster
    gathering, building, etc).

8
Jamestown.
  • Fall 1608
  • The deaths continued.
  • 1609
  • The Starving Time.
  • Spring 1610
  • Virginia Company sent more colonists.
  • Only sixty survivors left to meet them.
  • For six more years
  • Virginia company had to keep replacing the dead
    at Jamestown.
  • An investors nightmare.

9
Jamestown.
  • The salvation of Jamestown
  • Indian tobacco.
  • Virginia tobacco too harsh for English tastes.
  • John Rolfe
  • Transplanted a milder West Indian tobacco.
  • Rewarded
  • Profit.
  • Celebrity marriage (Pocahontas).
  • Tobacco
  • Difficult to grow.
  • Exhausted the soil.
  • Required constant care.
  • By 1611 colonists planting/harvesting as much
    tobacco as they could.

10
Jamestown.
  • Tobacco (Brown Gold)
  • Dominated every aspect of life.
  • Colonists spread themselves over large areas
    because they needed large tracts of land for
    tobacco.
  • Improved the health situation.
  • Made them less secure against Indian attacks.
  • Could not save the Virginia Company.
  • 1618 Sacrificed control of the colony.
  • Head right system Any person who paid the cost
    of transporting and supplying a settler had the
    right to find, survey, and obtain a deed to 50
    acres per settler.

11
Jamestown.
  • Civil government took hold in Jamestown.
  • 1618
  • Elected, representative lawmaking body.
  • House of Burgesses.

12
Jamestown and the Powhatan
  • Settler/Indian relations a major weakness of
    Jamestown.
  • Governors chose confrontation over compromise or
    negotiation.
  • Smiths cooperation with Chief Powhatan eroded by
    the growth of the English settlement and inland
    expansion.

13
Jamestown and the Powhatan
  • Several years of armed Powhatan resistance
  • Anglo-Powhatan Wars.
  • Brutal retaliation by the settlers.
  • Refusal to deal (in good faith) with Chief
    Opechancanough.
  • Powhatan Uprising 1622.
  • Good Friday.
  • King James I revoked charter.
  • Colony placed under royal control.

14
Jamestown The Royal Colony
  • King James I
  • Satisfied with first steps towards an American
    Empire.
  • Understood tobacco would determine Virginias
    success/failure.
  • Tobacco
  • 1630 Exports skyrocketed to 1.5 million pounds.
  • Profits remained high even when the price of
    tobacco fell.

15
Maryland
  • 1632
  • King Charles I (1625-1649).
  • Granted land at the northern end of the
    Chesapeake Bay.
  • Calvert Family.
  • Important Catholic family.
  • Supporters of the monarch.
  • Maryland (Land of Mary) Virgin Mary.
  • Actively encouraged settlement by English
    Catholics.
  • Proprietary Colony
  • The family held sole authority.
  • Appoint civil officers.
  • Tobacco
  • Head right system.

16
Servitude in the Chesapeake
  • Tobacco
  • Land Intensive exhausts soil.
  • Labor Intensive hard work.
  • Indentured Servants.
  • In exchange for the cost of transportation to the
    new world they were contracted to work for a
    farmer for a set period of time.
  • Young males.
  • Unskilled (some skilled artisans).
  • Unmarried women,
  • Orphans.
  • Difficult life.
  • Many died.
  • Masters sometimes cruel.

17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
Servitude in the Chesapeake
  • 1670s
  • Planter aristocracy entrenched in Virginia.
  • Governor carefully guarded their political/social
    interests.
  • Nathaniel Bacon.
  • Well educated.
  • Planter.
  • Unable to purchase the most desirable coastal
    lands.
  • Forced to compete with poor men and freed white
    servants for land in the back country.

20
Bacons Rebellion
  • Back country planters faced two constraints
  • Indian resistance.
  • Self-serving planter government.
  • High taxes.
  • 1676
  • Anger erupts into violence between Indians and
    back country planters.
  • Killed five Indians (Iroquois).
  • Indians killed 500 colonists in retaliation.
  • Planters demanded a military response.

21
Bacons Rebellion
  • Virginia Governor Berkeley refused to provide
    protection for the colonists.
  • Bacon led a large number of planters to
    Jamestown.
  • Governor agreed to meet Bacons demands.
  • After Bacon left, the Governor declared him to be
    a rebel and traitor.
  • Bacon and his men head back to Jamestown.
  • Jamestown residents flee.
  • Bacons men loot the town.
  • Headed home to fight the Indians.
  • Bacon dies (fatal attack of lice and dysentery).
  • Rebellion fell apart.
  • Berkeley executed 23 rebels.

22
Bacons Rebellion
  • Resistance to the old planter government
    continued until 1683.
  • The last of Bacons men were pulled out of hiding
    by Royal troops.

23
New England Colonies
  • The Church of England
  • Protestant.
  • Two groups not satisfied
  • Separatists
  • Believed the church to be too corrupt.
  • Believed they must separate from the church.
  • Puritans
  • Believed the church was corrupt.
  • Believed the church could be reformed.
  • Sought to purify the church from within.
  • James I persecuted both groups.

24
New England Colonies
  • Charles I (1625-1649)
  • Not popular with the Puritans.
  • 1629
  • Dismissed Parliament.
  • Launched campaign of repression against the
    Puritans.
  • Political unrest provides the context for the
    migration of English Puritans to the new world.

25
Plymouth Colony
  • Separatists.
  • The Pilgrims.
  • 1609
  • Left Scrooby, England.
  • Moved to Holland.
  • Religious freedom in Holland.
  • Downsides
  • Poverty (child labor).
  • Children influenced by Dutch culture.
  • Decided to leave Holland for America.

26
Plymouth Colony
  • Backed by the Virginia Company of London they
    sailed for Virginia.
  • Separatists (families).
  • The strangers.
  • Two ships
  • The Mayflower.
  • The Speedwell.
  • Leaky bucket.
  • Difficult trip.
  • Storms.
  • Sickness.

27
Plymouth Colony
  • Arrived at Cape Cod
  • Native village Pawtuxet.
  • New Plimouth.
  • Originally heading to Virginia.
  • Weather pushed the ship north.
  • Needed a governing document.
  • The Mayflower Compact.
  • First self governing document in America.

28
Plymouth Colony
  • Winter 1620-1621.
  • Very harsh.
  • No starving time.
  • Local natives (Wampanoag).
  • Sachem (Chief) Massasoit (ruled from Pokanoket).
  • Provided colony with food, supplies, and
    training.
  • Plymouth supported themselves
  • Farming.
  • Used cod fishing to pay investors.

29
Plymouth Colony
  • Despite the arrival of thousands more settlers
    things remained peaceful.
  • 1675-1676
  • King Philips War.
  • Sachem Metacom.
  • Angered by Puritan/English aggression.
  • Revolted.
  • Defeated.
  • War impacted Native populations.

30
Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • The Puritans.
  • Political climate of England late 1620s.
  • Convinced many Puritans they needed to leave.
  • To protect their congregations and families.
  • 1629
  • Royal Charter granted to wealthy Puritans.
  • The Massachusetts Bay Company.
  • King Charles I approved the Company.
  • 200 devout Puritans.
  • Massachusetts City on a Hill.
  • Model for Old England.
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Boston.

31
Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Boston.
  • By 1640s
  • Settlements spread 75 miles west.
  • Connecticut River Valley.
  • No lean/difficult beginnings.
  • 1629
  • Transferred company operations from England to
    Massachusetts.
  • Within a few years, transformed the company into
    a working civil government.

32
Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • The original Company Charter
  • Established a General Court
  • Governor (John Winthrop).
  • His Deputy.
  • A board of advisors.
  • Members of the corporation (Freemen).
  • 1632
  • Governor Winthrop (and advisors).
  • Gave freemen status to all white men
  • Heads of families.
  • Members of the church in good standing.
  • 1634
  • Freemen allowed to select delegates to represent
    the towns in drafting laws.
  • Freemen and delegates later became the colonys
    two legislative houses.

33
Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Doctrinal disagreements lead to the establishment
    of new settlements.
  • Thomas Hooker
  • 1636.
  • Objected to restricting male suffrage to church
    members.
  • Led followers to the Connecticut River.
  • Founded Hartford (Conn.).
  • Roger Williams
  • 1636.
  • Banished.
  • Advocating religious tolerance.
  • Founded Providence (R.I.) in Narraganset
    territory.

34
  • Not all dissenters were so lucky.
  • The Bay Colony dealt harshly with non-Puritans.
  • Persecuted Quakers.
  • Flogged, beaten, imprisoned, branded with hot
    irons, hanged.
  • Anne Hutchinson
  • 1634.
  • Daughter of clergyman.
  • Wife of a successful merchant.
  • Held beliefs the Colony would not tolerate.
  • Taught her beliefs at house meetings.
  • Popular among females and artisans and the
    merchant class.
  • Critic of the Colony.
  • Gods grace alone (not behavior or religious law)
    could save.
  • 1637 Arrested, tried before the General Court,
    banished.
  • Killed by Indians.

35
Life in New England.
  • Puritans stressed
  • The importance of well-ordered communities.
  • Clustered homes in central village.
  • Near meetinghouse (church civic center).
  • Strong communities.
  • Very different from Chesapeake colonies.
  • Well ordered families.
  • Importance of education
  • 1647 Mass. General Court
  • Towns of 50 - support a public school.
  • Towns of 100 - support a grammar school (Latin
    Harvard, 1636).
  • Literacy among men highest in America and
    England.
  • Literacy among women remained very low.

36
Life in New England.
  • Puritan society expected
  • Women to be subordinate.
  • Worked in home, garden, henhouse, dairy, etc.
  • Marry (20s) and have children (about 8).
  • Women who
  • Remained single.
  • Did not have children.
  • Aroused suspicion among their neighbors.
  • Witchcraft Scares displayed cultural distrust of
    women.
  • 1600s 300 women accused of witchcraft (most of
    those charges were dropped).
  • Single, widows, childless, or too assertive.

37
Life in New England.
  • 1692
  • Salem Witchcraft Scare.
  • Salem, Mass.
  • Girls claimed to have been bewitched by older
    women.
  • Twenty (or so) women tried, convicted, executed.
  • Massachusetts government brought an end to the
    trials.
  • Social tensions lay at the heart of the scare.
  • Insiders vs. Outsiders.
  • Outsiders wealthy, single (without male
    supervision).
  • Exposed the dark side of Puritan society.

38
The Proprietary Colonies
  • Englands Lord Protector
  • Oliver Cromwell died 1658.
  • England restored the Monarchy.
  • Charles II.
  • Took active interest in America.
  • Proprietary Colony
  • Belonged to a person or persons.
  • Granted by the English Monarchy to an individual
    or group of individuals.
  • Became Lord Proprietor/s or owners of the
    colony.

39
The Proprietary Colonies
  • The Carolinas.
  • South Carolina.
  • North Carolina.
  • New York.
  • New Jersey.
  • Pennsylvania.
  • Georgia (much later).

40
The Carolina Colonies
  • 1663
  • King Charles II
  • Grants several million acres to eight
    proprietors.
  • South of Virginia. From the Atlantic to the
    Pacific.
  • Named Carolina.
  • Used Headright system (Virginia, Maryland) to
    encourage settlement.

41
South Carolina.
  • Attractive to settlers
  • Good natural harbor.
  • Charles Town (Charleston).
  • Became the most important city in the colony.
  • Short distance from the West Indies.
  • Business in the Colony
  • Experimented with
  • Trade.
  • Cash crops (sugar cane, tobacco, cotton, silk,
    olives).
  • First successful business
  • Cattle raising.
  • Learned skill from African slaves (West Indies).
  • 1680s Cattle money used to buy slaves and swamp
    land.

42
South Carolina.
  • Rice Cultivation
  • Brought by African slaves.
  • Made Carolina planters the richest English
    colonists on the mainland.
  • Leading rice planters Immigrants from Barbados.
  • Brought slaves with them.
  • Used trade connections in the West Indies.
  • Made South Carolina a colony of slaves.
  • 1708 Slaves outnumbered Europeans in rice
    region.
  • Mid-1700s 10 slaves to 1 European.

43
South Carolina.
  • 1719
  • Charleston planter elite gained control of South
    Carolina.
  • Dominated by small white elite.
  • Controlled the lives of
  • African slaves (men, women, and children).
  • Tied to the land via slavery.
  • South Carolina would become a Royal Colony.

44
North Carolina.
  • Northern regions of Carolina
  • Unpromising and isolated.
  • Swamps in north and south.
  • Barrier islands on the coast.
  • Blocked access.
  • No good natural harbor.
  • Settlers moved in.
  • Before Charles II granted the proprietorship.
  • Poor farmers.
  • Free white servants.
  • Virginia seeking a new life.
  • Grew tobacco produced naval stores from pine.

45
North Carolina.
  • 1729
  • Colonists overthrew proprietary rule.
  • Officially separated from the southern part of
    the colony.
  • North Carolina made a Royal Colony.

46
New York.
  • 1651
  • New Netherland.
  • Dutch owned.
  • English took without firing a shot in 1664.
  • 1667 English control the entire colony.
  • Charles II
  • Issued a proprietary charter granting the former
    Dutch colony to his brother James, the Duke of
    York.
  • 1665
  • Communities of Delaware valley split off.
  • New proprietary colony.
  • New Jersey.

47
Pennsylvania.
  • 1676
  • Proprietary rights to western part of New Jersey.
  • Sold to group of English dissenters.
  • William Penn.
  • Quaker.
  • Wanted to create a colony to serve as a safe
    haven for religious toleration and pacifism.
  • 1681
  • King Charles II.
  • Issued a proprietary grant west of the Delaware
    River.

48
Pennsylvania.
  • Holy Experiment.
  • Religious freedom.
  • Civil liberties.
  • Elected representation (republic).
  • Deal fairly with Native Americans.
  • Refused to move in until deal had been reached
    with the Delaware.
  • Pennsylvania.
  • First two decades rapid population growth.
  • 1704 Penn approved formation of Delaware.
  • Governance of the counties near the Delaware
    River.

49
Georgia The Last Colony.
  • 1732
  • James Oglethorpe (and friends).
  • Received a charter for a new colony.
  • Georgia.
  • In honor of King George II.
  • Not for-profit.
  • Reform the lives of English debtors, imprisoned
    in England.
  • New start in America.

50
Georgia The Last Colony.
  • King George II.
  • No interest in debtors.
  • Protect rich rice colony (SC).
  • Barrier between Spanish Florida and South
    Carolina.
  • Required military service (males).
  • Rules for life in Georgia
  • Parental attitude towards colonists.
  • Poverty a sign of moral weakness, addiction, or
    vice.
  • No representative assembly.
  • Small land grants.
  • No buying/selling property.
  • No slaves (or free blacks).

51
Georgia The Last Colony.
  • Oglethorpes rules
  • Few able to measure up.
  • Georgia filled with settlers from South Carolina.
  • Middle-class English.
  • Colonists challenged rules.
  • Gained right to buy/sell property.
  • Introduced slavery (though remained officially
    banned).
  • 1752
  • Oglethorpe gave up Georgia.
  • Georgia became a Royal Colony.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com