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Colonial America, 16501750

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Title: Colonial America, 16501750


1
Colonial America, 1650-1750
  • Regional Variations in Settlement Patterns and
    Economic Development
  • Dr. Lucia McMahon
  • William Paterson University
  • July 2007

2
English Civil War/Restoration Colonies
  • 1642 Civil War begins in England
  • Disputes over religion, taxation, etc.
  • 1649 (Stuart King) Charles I is executed
  • Government led by Parliament (under leadership of
    a Puritan, Oliver Cromwell)
  • 1658 Cromwell dies
  • 1660 Restoration of Stuart Monarchy
  • Charles II ascends throne but monarchs power
    diminished monarch agrees to seek Parliaments
    consent on key taxation issues, etc.
  • After Charles II ascends throne, SIX new colonies
    are formed in British North America

3
British North American Colonies
  • British settlers to North America now have more
    choice/opportunity
  • Colonies embedded in trans-Atlantic world of
    trade and commerce
  • Colonies help increase strength/centralization of
    Britain as a national power

4
Restoration Colonies
  • Colony Founders Date Economic Base
  • NY James, duke of York 1664 Farming/Fur Trade
  • NJ George Carteret/ 1664 Farming
  • Lord Berkeley
  • NC Carolina proprietors 1665 Tobacco/Timber
  • SC Carolina proprietors/ 1670 Rice/Indigo
  • Barbados settlers
  • PA William Penn 1681 Farming
  • DE (part of PA at this time)

5
Pennsylvania
  • Founder William Penn offered liberal land grants
    religious tolerance
  • Envisioned a neat, orderly pattern of settlement
    laid out Philadelphia in a grid pattern
  • At first tried to live peacefully with the
    Indians, and initiated trades/treaties
  • Population grew fast by 1682, 4,000 by 1690,
    12,000 people settled
  • Early settlement marked by rapid growth
    prosperity
  • Diverse, independent-minded group of settlers

6
Quakers in Pennsylvania
  • Quakers preached a doctrine of spiritual equality
  • Believed both men women had an inner light of
    salvation
  • Radical egalitarian social/religious vision
  • Quakers were unwelcome in NE several were
    hanged in 1660s for preaching radical doctrines

Mary Dyer, banished from New England and
eventually executed in 1660 http//www.loc.gov/exh
ibits/religion/rel01-2.html
7
South Carolina
  • Many early settlers were emigrants from Barbados
  • By 1690, SC develops it own cash crop Rice
  • Settlers probably learned how to plant/harvest
    rice from African slaves

8
Emergence of Slave Societies
  • By 1720, South Carolina is a black majority
  • Over 70 of population consists of black slaves
  • Wealth/status/power concentrated in hands of
    small elite planter population
  • Emergence of slave societies in southern colonies
  • Slavery central to economic and social
    organization

9
Defining Characteristics of North American Slave
Societies
  • Lifelong
  • Racial
  • Hereditary
  • -- passed on through mothers (codified into law
    in VA in 1662)
  • Slave has no legal family relationships
  • Freeing of slaves (manumission) becomes more
    difficult and occurs less often

Tobacco Plantation. Image from America A
Narrative History, Media Library
10
Slave Societies, contd
  • Slavery sustained through violence or threat of
    violence/coercion
  • -- any slave who runs away may be lawfully
    killed
  • Attempt to limit free-choice sexual/social
    relations between blacks whites
  • -- 1691 interracial marriage banned in VA
  • Attempt to limit movement/freedom of slaves
  • -- 1682 slaves may not gather for more than
    4 hours at another plantation
  • -- 1680, 1705 slaves denied right to own
    livestock, to carry a weapon, denied right to
    testify in court or hold office

The Old Plantation circa 1790
http//www.africanaheritage.com/Gullah_and_Sierra_
Leone.asp
11
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12
Regional Variations
  • New England -- MA, CT, RI, NH
  • mostly self-sufficient but also involved in
    export of surplus crops fish timber
  • Middle Colonies NY,NJ, PA, DE
  • farming (export of wheat flour) trade
    networks/markets, urban development,
    manufacturing
  • Chesapeake VA, MD, northern NC
  • tobacco although more small farmers also began
    to grow corn wheat
  • Lower South SC, southern NC, Georgia
  • rice indigo plantations cash-crop economy
  • Caribbean Barbados, Leeward Islands, Jamaica
  • Sugar plantations cash-crop economy

13
Trans-Atlantic Networks
Map from America A Narrative History, Media
Library
14
British Mercantilism Empire
  • Economic world view there exists a finite
    amount of wealth
  • Thus what one nation gained, another nation
    inevitably lost.
  • Importance of Colonies
  • Colonies supply the mother country with raw
    materials to be consumed at home or abroad
  • Provide a market for the mother countrys
    manufactured goods.
  • Navigational Acts 1651-1673
  • Aimed at centering American trade around England
  • Only English or colonial ships could trade in
    their colonies
  • Certain American products could ONLY be sold in
    England or other English colonies such as wool,
    sugar, tobacco, indigo, dyes, etc
  • All foreign goods destined for sale in colonies
    first had to pass through England pay import
    duties

15
18th-Century Colonial Exports
  • Colonial Economy part of trans-Atlantic networks
    of trade and commerce

16
Exports by Region
17
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18
An Empire of Goods
  • Rising Standard of Living for most Americans
  • Larger, more comfortable homes
  • More access to comfort and luxury items
  • Furniture
  • Housewares
  • Linens
  • Teapots
  • Books
  • Culture of Refinement

Colonial Family . Image from America A
Narrative History, Media Library
19
Population Growth
  • British North America
  • 1700 250,000
  • 1750 1 million
  • 1775 2.5 million
  • -- Some immigration
  • -- Mostly from natural increase
  • Other North America Populations in 1775
  • New Mexico 20,000
  • New France 70,000

20
Population Diversity
Also achieves natural population growth unlike
Caribbean
21
Rural Life
  • 90 of population is rural
  • Centered on farming and household production
  • Everyday life governed by seasonal
    rhythms/daylight hours

Farming Community in PA, circa 1750
22
Urban Areas
Philadelphia, 1756 http//www.nypl.org/research/c
hss/spe/art/print/exhibits/cities/captions/image20
.html
23
Urban Life
  • Urban dwellers tend to purchase more foodstuff
    and everyday goods than rural counterparts
  • Lived by clock, rather than sun
  • Emergence of elite, merchant class with more
    opportunities for leisure and sociability tea
    parties, balls, theater, clubs, etc.

18th-Century Boston Image from America A
Narrative History, Media Library
24
Internal Tensions
  • Religious
  • Great Awakening fuels religious fervor, but also
    creates competition among denominations
  • Racial/Ethnic
  • 20 of population is African-American most are
    slaves
  • New ethnic distribution of immigrants
  • Economic
  • Growing gap between rich/poor, especially in
    urban areas
  • Conflict between large land owners and small
    farmers
  • Disenfranchised groups at times resort to rioting
    and violent resistance

25
Religion The Great Awakening
  • Series of Religious Revivals in 1730s 1740s
  • George Whitefield
  • Traveled throughout England and colonies,
    preaching to large audiences
  • Outdoors in public spaces
  • Reached out to entire community
  • Drew audiences in the thousands
  • Between 1738-1770, made 7 tours of the colonies
  • Visited every colony from Maine to Georgia

George Whitefield Preaching http//rylibweb.man.ac
.uk/data1/dg/methodist/exhibition/exhib3.html
26
George Whitefield
  • When I see Mr. Whitefield come upon the
    Scaffold, he looked almost angelical a young,
    slim, slender youth before some thousands of
    people, and with a bold, undaunted countenance. .
    . .He looked as if he was cloathed with authority
    from the great God.
  • Nathan Cole, 1740, describing Whitefields visit
    to Middletown, CT

George Whitefield Image from America A
Narrative History, Media Library
27
Consequences of Great Awakening
  • Split American Protestants into Old Light
    traditionalists and New Light evangelicals
  • Proliferation of new denominations/choice
  • Fostered Religious Tolerance
  • Challenged Deference and Existing Leadership of
    Church
  • Promoted Individualism and Egalitarianism

28
September 1739 Stono Rebellion
  • Slave rebellion begun with 20 slaves near Stono
    River (20 miles from Charlestown)
  • Grew to 100 as slaves made their way south
    towards Florida
  • Killed 20 white residents and burned/plundered
    several homes
  • Group of armed planters killed many of the
    rebels then an intensive manhunt to capture
    remaining rebels
  • 31 blacks were executed for rebellion
  • New, Harsher Slave Codes Enacted

29
1741 New York Slave Conspiracy
  • 1712 slave rebellion took place in NY 18
    slaves were executed
  • 1741 1,600 slaves live in NY (18 of
    population)
  • Suspicious fires break out, sparking fears of
    slave conspiracy/rebellion
  • 70 slaves and accomplices tried for conspiracy
    31 slaves and 4 whites found guilty and executed

Colonial New York
30
1765-66 Land Riots in Hudson Valley
  • Conflicts between large land-owners (proprietors)
    and squatters/small farmers (Dutch German
    migrants and New England emigrants) over land
    titles
  • Similar conflicts occurred in NJ, Vermont, and
    Carolinas
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