New England, Middle Colonies, and Southern Colonies (including Chesapeake and lower South) ... an abundance of trade goods, such as gold, rum, and firearms. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
2 Review of June 28th What we covered so far . . .
Early American Civilizations and Cultures
Diversity among Native American cultures
Effect of agriculture technology horses etc. on Native American cultures
Effect of Europeans on interaction between and among Indian tribes
New World Encounters
Columbian exchange
Exchange of people disease food plants animals
European Exploration and early settlements
Reasons for explorations (national level and personal level)
Early settlements harsh conditions ideologies and beliefs of settlers and differences among New England and Chesapeake settlements
3 Settling the American Colonies 17th and early 18th centuries
Growth of Settlements
Bacons Rebellion
Slave Trade
Ideas of Race Social Construction of Race
4 (No Transcript) 5 (No Transcript) 6 (No Transcript) 7 Settlements
Growth of English settlements along the Atlantic Coast
Why here
Close to water
French inland
Indian tribes inland
Spanish in Southern east coast Spanish also are in the western lands as well (we will be examining some of these settlements later in the class)
8 English Settlements
Spread out from initial settlements colonize new land
New York New Jersey Pennsylvania
Rapid development during this time period (mid-late 1600s)
New England Middle Colonies and Southern Colonies (including Chesapeake and lower South)
9 Settlements
Rapid growth
Pressures
Economic
Political
Social
Religion in the new settlements
Quakers
Society of Friends
Believed all people equal in Gods sight
Radical Egalitarianism
No formal Clergy
Men women anyone welcome to speak at meetings
Persecuted and fled to new areas - Pennsylvania
10 New Jersey
Governor Carteret Arrives at Elizabeth NJ Date 1665
East Jerseys proprietary government began to exercise local authority with the arrival of Governor Philip Carteret at Elizabeth New Jersey in the summer of 1665 portrayed here by artist Howard Pyle.
11 Map of New Amsterdam (New York) Date 1665This map drawn by Johannes Vingboons shows the extent of development by 1665. A large fort dominated the western end of Manhattan and development had not yet expanded north of modern Wall Street. The wall from which Wall Street took its name appears quite clearly as the citys northern boundary. 12 Settlements
Settlements faced turmoil and pressures
English Civil War turmoil in colonies
New England migration ceased around 1642 but natural increase resulted in growing population
New England settlers (after initial years of settlement) experienced good health longevity and large family units (different experience from Chesapeake settlers)
Clashes with Indian groups over land
Penn attempted to treat native peoples fairly (p. 65)
many European groups also came to Pennsylvania
liberal and tolerant policies attracted all groups
this led to clashes over land with Indians in PA
13 Empire
During the 17th century the American colonies increasingly becoming a part of the international world
Trade goods and people
Increased economical stability increased wealth
With this wealth English leaders attempted to heighten their control on the colonies
Mercantilism view of economic world as collection of national states who competed for shares of finite wealth (when 1 country gained another lost)
Each nation sought to be economically self-sufficient
Colonies played important role
Impact on slave trade
Impact on lack of diversification in southern colonies (England wanted raw materials and only certain goods)
Impact on colonists eventual resentment of English control
14 1670s Time of crisis
Turmoil in the 1670s in the American colonies
Conflicts between and among
English settlers and
Indian tribes
French
Dutch
Spanish
Between and Among
Indian tribes
Dutch French Spanish
15 1670s - Conflicts
French and English conflicts with Indians
What part did race play Economics
Importance of trade and control of trade
King Philips War New England
Iroquois controlled trade with western Indian tribes
French unhappy about this arrangement and wanted direct trade
After neutrality treaty in 1701 Iroquois maintained their power through trade and skillful diplomacy
Pueblo Revolt
1680 revolt by Pueblo Indians was longest-lasting and most successful Indian resistance movement
Spanish changed policies no longer made them slaves and no longer tried to violate their cultural integrity and force them to stop their traditions
16 Beginnings of Rebellion
Nathaniel Bacon
Small farmers and the government
Economic situation
Quest for power and land power with ownership of land
Wealthy elite viewed as having too much control
Rebellious sentiments
17 Bacons Rebellion
Colonial planter and rebel Nathaniel Bacon led an armed uprising known as Bacons Rebellion against Governor William Berkeley of Virginia to protest the governors tolerant policies toward American Indians. In 1676 Bacon raised an army and led unprovoked attacks on local Indian tribes before directing his forces against Governor Berkeley. Bacon took control of Virginia until he died later that year. Upon his death the rebellion collapsed and the aristocracy returned to power.
18 Bacons Rebellion
Handout Nathaniel Bacons writings
What do you think
What were Bacons demands What were his motivations
If you were an indentured servant would you have followed Bacon
19 Bacons Rebellion
Class Race Gender Economics
All these were factors
Class small farmers didnt want elite to have all the wealth
Race attitudes toward Indians in Bacons opinion was getting in the way of seeing the real problem of the aristocracy
Gender wives used to shield them
Economics wanted land with land came wealth
20 Settlement in America
Not just English (although English settlements are the focus of the course)
What about other areas that ended up becoming part of US
California
21 Spanish settlements
California
Missionaries Report on California Missions
1772 and 1775
What similarities and differences do you see between English conflicts and ideas (stereotypes) about Native Americans and these accounts from Spanish missionaries
22 Slavery in the Colonies
Why
Labor issues tobacco cultivation
Indentured servants - problematic (especially after Bacons Rebellion and similar smaller rebellions)
Why not enslave Native Americans
Why African slaves Why did the Atlantic Slave Trade develop
23 Slave Trade Timeline
1448 Portuguese slave traders expand their business sending approximately 700 to 1000 slaves each year across the Sahara by the end of the century they were arranging the sale of perhaps 2500 slaves each year.
1502 Portuguese slavers expand their operations in West Africa.
The first African slaves arrive in Spanish America representing an expansion of the slave trade across the Atlantic Ocean.
16061700 The Dutch monopolize the slave trade.
1619 Africans arrive and are sold in Virginia.
1640s New England merchants begin their engagement in the African slave trade.
17151730 The volume of the African slave trade doubles.
1799 Leading free black Philadelphians including Absalom Jones Richard Allen and James Forten unsuccessfully petition Congress to halt the slave trade.
1807 Congress passes the Slave Trade Abolition Act of 1807 which outlaws the African slave trade.
24 Slave Trade
25 Slave Trade
Examine map of Atlantic Slave trade on page 74
Look back at the Columbian Exchange map on page 26
26 African Population in Colonies
In the British West Indies sugar became the dominant crop beginning in the mid-17th century. Because the sugar plantations required a large labor force the islands quickly became major importers of enslaved Africans. The system of plantation slavery implemented in the West Indies led to a large demographic disparity on Jamaica for example blacks outnumbered whites 10 to 1 by the mid-18th century.
The British colonies in Virginia Georgia and the Carolinas also developed slavery-dependent plantation economies growing tobacco cotton rice and sugar as main crops. Significant importation of African slaves to the southern colonies began in the 1670s. By 1750 about 40 percent of the colonial population in southern North America was black rising to 80 to 90 percent in rice farming areas.
27 Slave Trade
Only 4.5 percent of Africans carried into slavery in the New World were imported to North America more than 95 percent were imported to work on plantations in South America and the West Indies.
After 1770 wealthy planters attempted to suppress the slave trade. By this time slaves on the largest plantations were self-replenishing populations. Plantation owners hoped to end the importation of new slaves in order to curb the labor supply to smaller farms thereby eliminating competition from these farms.
28 Slave Trade
By the early 1700s North American colonists considered Africans to be the answer to colonial labor shortages.
Set apart by race Africans were quickly categorized as a separate class of people.
African resistance to European and other diseases such as malariaa major problem in the southern colonieswas also a factor in growth of slavery.
Many of North Americas principal export crops such as rice and cotton were grown extensively in western African countries. Slaves from these areas were highly valued by North American plantation owners for their agricultural skills. These qualities combined with Great Britains increased role in the slave trade inflated the number of slaves imported to British North America from less than 10000 in 1730 to over 60000 in 1770.
29 During the transatlantic slave trade ships from Europe arrived on the African coast carrying an abundance of trade goods such as gold rum and firearms. Sometimes European captains themselves captured natives to be enslaved. More often however they acquired these captives from local dealers in exchange for the European goods they brought. This print shows traders haggling with dealers. The caption reads Fort des Maures Sur lIsle Moyella. 30 During the development of the African slave trade Europeans established settlements along Africas west coast known as slave factories. The factories were like compounds manned by agents called factors who negotiated to gather slaves and initiated slave-hunting expeditions. This drawing shows four slave factories set up by traders from different European countries in what is now Nigeria. 31 Slaves Thrown Overboard
Many Africans sold into slavery died from disease and malnutrition during the Middle Passage the journey by ship from Africa to the Americas. Traders who saw their slaves as property lost potential profit for each slave that died along the way. However if slaves died through unnatural causesif for instance the captain threw them overboard to avoid supposed insurrectionsthe financial responsibility fell to the insurer. Accordingly traders sometimes threw weak slaves overboard to guarantee insurance payments that they would not receive if the slaves died of disease. The practice is depicted in this print.
32 Why slaves Why Africa
Indentured servants had provided most of the labor on the plantations and farms prior to 1680s
English men and women no longer as willing to indenture themselves
Population pressures lessened in England
More choice in where to settle as new colonies founded
Scarcity of land in the Maryland and Virginia made it unappealing
Caribbean islands sugar plantations
Since 1640s Dutch French English and Spanish planters had purchased slaves
Spanish colonies Catholic Church prevented enslavement of Indians turned to Africans
33 Atlantic Slave Trade
Triangular Trade
Middle passage
Complex commercial relationships that linked Europe Africa North and South America and the Caribbean
Complicated web of exchange
Oceanic slave trade was new (even though slavery itself was not new)
Expanded network of commerce
34 Atlantic Slave Trade
Middle Passage voyage
Death en route 10-20
Disease prevalent on ships
Majority of slaves came from West Africa long tradition of West African leaders trading with Europeans
Land location why West Africa
Warfare in Africa increased with demand for slaves
Europeans benefited the most from slave trade
Europeans vying for power in new world
Vying to control trade and looking to increase wealth of colonies
35 Atlantic Slave Trade
While Europeans benefited the most from slave trade coastal kings in West Africa also did benefit
Highly profitable for kings to trade slaves with the Europeans brought them great wealth and power
36 Slavery in North America
First laws in Virginia related to religion and geography not race
all servants not being Christians imported to this colony by shipping shall be slaves for their lives (African)
Servants who shall come by land would serve only for a term of years (Indian)
By 1682 Racial terminology used to distinguish slaves and non-slaves
Virginia Negroes Moors Mollatoes or Indians arriving by sea or land could all be held in bondage for life
By 1700 African slavery firmly established in economy of Chesapeake and South Carolina
37 Slavery in America
Text on pages 72-73 states
The convoluted and contradictory early attempts to define slave status and how it would descend to the next generation suggest that seventeenth century English colonists nevertheless initially lacked clear conceptual categories defining both race and slave. They developed such categories and their meanings over time through their experience with the institution of African and Indian slavery originally adopted for economic reasons.
What are the authors arguing
Do you agree Why or why not Why do you think slavery started in America
38 Social Construction of Race
Race is socially constructed
Race is a creation of the society - Race is culturally invented
Ideas about race are dependent on the particular society and culture
Latin America has vastly different notions of race than the US
Power and difference
Race changes as the dynamics of power change and as people need to find and label others as different
Economics gender roles social beliefs religious beliefs demographics family life social classes
All affect how race is defined in a society
Race and views on racial groups change as conditions change
39 Slaves Indian v. African
Why did Latin America and the American colonies end up with completely different systems of slavery
Why did the enslavement of Africans prevail in the American colonies
Why was Indian slavery not as prevalent as African slavery in America Why not capture Indians and use for slaves rather than slaughter them This would have eliminated the need to trade for slaves.
RACE and IDEAS OF RACE
40 Slavery in English French and Spanish territories
Why did it differ
Some reasons offered by historians (still much debate)
Spanish
one of their main goals was converting Indians to Christianity
Religious reasons led to less hash treatment
Mainly males came with no intent to stay long and formed relationships with Indian women
English
Not all settlers wanted to or tried to convert Indians was not a top goal
Came with families and intended to stay
Wanted to establish new life and new community structures not posts mainly for trade
Interests lay beyond just trade yet trade was key
41 Slavery in America and Legacy
Decisions by early Americans profoundly impacted the development of this country the dichotomy of northern and southern societies and the current state of race relations and tensions in the United States.
When did slavery end
What legacy did the racial ideologies of the 17th century leave on modern day racial ideologies
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