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Title: Experience of Empire: Eighteenth-Century America


1
4
  • Experience of Empire Eighteenth-Century America
  • 1680?1763

2
Experience of Empire Eighteenth-Century America,
1680?1763
  • Tensions in the Backcountry
  • What difficulties did Native Americans face in
    maintaining their cultural independence on the
    frontiers of English and Spanish settlement?
  • The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
  • How did European ideas affect eighteenth-century
    American life?

4.1
4.2
3
Experience of Empire Eighteenth-Century America,
1680?1763
  • Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
  • How did the Great Awakening transform the
    religious culture of colonial America?
  • Clash of Political Cultures
  • Why were eighteenth-century colonial assemblies
    not fully democratic?

4.3
4.4
4
Experience of Empire Eighteenth-Century America,
1680?1763
  • Century of Imperial War
  • Why did colonial Americans support Great
    Britain's wars against France?

4.5
5
Video SeriesKey Topics in U.S. History
  1. Great Britains Empire in North America
    1713?1763
  2. Scots-Irish Migration
  3. The First Great Awakening
  4. Seven Years War

Home
6
Constructing an Anglo-American Identity The
Journal of William Byrd
  • Eighteenth-century backcountry
  • Many cultures, independent families
  • Older Atlantic settlements
  • Growing populations
  • Many immigrants and slaves arrived
  • Less isolated from one another
  • Eighteenth-century colonists powerfully attracted
    to Great Britain

Home
7
Tensions in the Backcountry
  • Scots-Irish Flee English Oppression
  • Germans Search for a Better Life
  • Native Americans Stake Out a Middle Ground
  • Conquering New Spains Northern Frontier
  • Peoples of the Spanish Borderlands

Home
8
Tensions in the Backcountry
  • 17001750 - colonial population rose
  • From 250,000 to over 2 million
  • Backcountry
  • Inland area
  • Complex society
  • Spanish borderlands - multicultural
  • Southwest
  • California
  • Florida

Tensions in the Backcountry
9
Tensions in the Backcountry
10
Scots-Irish Flee English Oppression
  • Origins of Scots-Irish
  • Lowland Scottish Presbyterians transported to
    northern Ireland
  • Emigrated to America
  • Concentrated - Pennsylvania frontier
  • Welcomed by colonys proprietors, at first
  • Barrier between Indians and coastal communities
  • Quick to challenge authority

Tensions in the Backcountry
11
Germans Search for a Better Life
  • Germans approximately 100,000
  • Early migrants - small Protestant sects, similar
    to Quakers
  • Later waves - Lutherans
  • A third of Pennsylvania population by 1766
  • Religious institutions important
  • Germans and Scots-Irish push south
  • Backcountry of Virginia and the Carolinas

Tensions in the Backcountry
12
Tensions in the Backcountry
13
Native Americans Stake Out a Middle Ground
  • Many eastern Indians moved
  • Middle Ground - trans-Appalachian region
  • Escaped confrontations with Europeans
  • Relied on white traders
  • Traditions eroded by European contact
  • Earliest encounters controlled by Indian leaders
  • Middle ground individual Indians bargained for
    themselves
  • French and British conflict

Tensions in the Backcountry
14
Conquering New SpainsNorthern Frontier
  • Spanish settle north of Rio Grande in late 1500s
  • Pueblo Indians resisted in New Mexico
  • St. Augustine, Florida - 1565
  • 1769 missions in California

Tensions in the Backcountry
15
Peoples of the Spanish Borderlands
  • Slow growth in Spanish borderlands
  • Mainly males priests, soldiers, and
    administrators
  • Few European women
  • Influence on Native American culture
  • Spanish exploited native labor
  • Lowest social class
  • Natives resisted conversion to Catholicism
  • Retained Spanish culture

Tensions in the Backcountry
16
Discussion Questions
  • What difficulties did Native Americans face in
    maintaining their cultural independence on the
    frontier?
  • Why was the Spanish empire unable to control its
    northern frontier?

Tensions in the Backcountry
17
The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
  • American Enlightenment
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Economic Transformation
  • Birth of a Consumer Society

Home
18
The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
  • Rapid change in eighteenth-century colonies
  • Growth of urban cosmopolitan culture
  • Aggressive participation in consumption

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
19
American Enlightenment
  • Intellectual thought swept Europe
  • Basic assumptions of the Enlightenment
  • American Enlightenment
  • Appeal was practical knowledge
  • Applied reason to social and political problems

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
20
Benjamin Franklin
  • Franklin regarded as Enlightenment thinker by
    Europeans
  • Started as printer, then satirist in Boston
  • Achieved wealth through printing business
  • Made important scientific discoveries and
    inventions
  • Promoted reason

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
21
The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
22
Economic Tranformation
  • Early eighteenth-century growth
  • Population increased eightfold
  • Economic success
  • Mercantilist restrictions expanded
  • Benefited mother country
  • Not enforced

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
23
The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
24
Birth of a Consumer Society
  • Consumer Revolution
  • English exports to colonies increased
  • Credit available
  • Intercoastal trade
  • Movement of goods between regions
  • Great Wagon Road
  • Change in American culture
  • Erosion of local and regional identities
  • Frequent contact

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
25
The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
26
Discussion Question
  • How did European ideas affect eighteenth-century
    American life?

The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
27
Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
  • The Great Awakening
  • Evangelical Religion

Home
28
Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
  • Great Awakening
  • Spontaneous, evangelical revivals
  • People began to rethink basic assumptions about
    church and state, institutions, and society

Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
29
The Great Awakening
  • Widespread movement
  • Americans looked backward with nostalgia
  • Varied times in different regions
  • Leaders
  • Sparked by Jonathan Edwards
  • George Whitefield
  • Audience
  • All walks of life

Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
30
Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
31
Evangelical Religion
  • Itinerant Preachers
  • Followed Whitefields example
  • Split established churches
  • Established ministers were suspicious
  • Gilbert Tennent
  • New Lights formed colleges
  • Cultural change
  • Active, questioning role
  • African Americans

Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
32
Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
33
Discussion Question
  • How did the Great Awakening transform the
    religious culture of colonial America?

Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
34
Clash of Political Cultures
  • Governing the Colonies The American Experience
  • Colonial Assemblies

Home
35
Clash of Political Cultures
  • Colonists attempted to emulate British political
    institutions
  • Parliament model for American assemblies
  • Unwritten constitution English system of checks
    and balances
  • Study of British political theory and practice
    led to discovery of how different Americans were
    from English people

Clash of Political Cultures
36
Governing the ColoniesThe American Experience
  • Erroneous belief that American governments
    modeled on England
  • Royal governors
  • Council
  • Colonial assemblies
  • Participation varied
  • When big issues at stake
  • Assemblies mostly gentry

Clash of Political Cultures
37
Colonial Assemblies
  • Aggressive colonial assemblies
  • Felt obligation to preserve colonial liberties
  • Assemblies controlled colonys finances
  • Conflict with governors
  • No incentive for cooperation
  • Governors wanted patronage system
  • Shaped American culture
  • Weekly journal
  • Law

Clash of Political Cultures
38
Discussion Question
  • Why were the eighteenth-century colonial
    assemblies not fully democratic?

Clash of Political Cultures
39
Century of Imperial War
  • The French Threat
  • King Georges War and Its Aftermath
  • Seven Years War
  • Perceptions of War

Home
40
Century of Imperial War
  • Britains conflicts with continental rivals like
    France spilled over to colonies
  • Security threats from these conflicts forced
    colonists into more military and political
    cooperation
  • British colonies overwhelmingly militarily
    superior to New France but ineffective

Century of Imperial War
41
The French Threat
  • France - limited New World military
  • French army of 100,000, but not sent abroad
  • Defense left to companies in fur trade
  • English colonists theoretical advantage
  • Larger population, but divided
  • English and French suspicious
  • English being encircled by French
  • English seizing French land

Century of Imperial War
42
Table 4.1 A Century of ConflictMajor Wars,
1689?1763
Century of Imperial War
43
King Georges War and Its Aftermath
  • King Georges War - 17431748
  • In Europe - War of Austrian Succession
  • Victory over the French
  • French built Fort Duquesne
  • English population growing
  • Virginia advised to expel French
  • British army also unsuccessful
  • Albany Plan
  • Colonial unity

Century of Imperial War
44
Century of Imperial War
45
Century of Imperial War
46
What Did the Global Seven Years War Mean for
North America?
  • How did other colonial claims in North America
    create instability for the thirteen British
    mainland colonies?
  • What made this eighteenth-century war a world
    war?
  • In what ways did the territorial results of the
    war impact British mainland colonies?

Century of Imperial War
47
Century of Imperial War
48
Seven Years War
  • 1756 Seven Years War began
  • England declared war on France
  • European warfare Frances advantage
  • Shifted strategy to focus on North America
  • Peace of Paris 1763 - France lost
  • British got large piece of North America
  • Spanish added Louisiana to their empire
  • French kept Caribbean sugar islands

Century of Imperial War
49
Century of Imperial War
50
Century of Imperial War
51
Perceptions of War
  • Deep impression on American society
  • Colonists had to cooperate
  • Closer contact with Britain
  • British and Colonial views of each other
  • Created trained officer corps
  • British felt colonists ungrateful
  • Colonists saw themselves as junior partners to
    British

Century of Imperial War
52
Discussion Question
  • Why did colonial Americans support Great
    Britains wars against France?

Century of Imperial War
53
Conclusion Rule Britannia?
  • 1763 - most Americans bound to Great Britain
  • Culture and religion
  • Lifestyle
  • Politics and war
  • Identity
  • British had different perception
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