Life in the Colonies

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Life in the Colonies

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Life in the Colonies Chapter 4, Section 1 Questions Why did the population in the American colonies increase between 1700 and 1770? Describe the farming technique ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life in the Colonies


1
Life in the Colonies
  • Chapter 4, Section 1

2
The Colonies
  • Between 1700 and 1770 the English colonies in
    America experienced a huge increase!
  • 1700------? 250,000
  • 1770------? 2.5 million
  • The slave population also grew during this time.
    In 1700 you had approximately 28,000 slaves but
    by 1770 there were around 500,000!

3
New England Colonies
  • Why do you think growth occurred so quickly in
    the colonies?

4
The Colonies
  • Growth occurred for several reasons
  • Immigration
  • Increase in African slaves
  • Women in the colonies tended to marry early,
    sometimes as young as fifteen. People in the
    colonies also tended to have very large families.

5
New England Colonies
  • New Hampshire
  • Massachusetts
  • Rhode Island
  • Connecticut

6
New England Colonies
  • Surprisingly the New England colonies were
    actually a very healthy place to live.
  • New England consisted of well organized towns.
  • Most farmers tended to their farms which were
    located on the outskirts of town.

7
New England Colonies
  • Farming was the main activity in all the
    colonies, however, farms were much smaller in New
    England than those in the south.

8
Subsistence farming
  • New England practiced subsistence farming which
    means that they grew just enough to support their
    family.
  • New England colonies relied on children for much
    of the labor.

9
Commerce in New England
  • New England also had a variety of small
    businesses.
  • People living near streams would create grinding
    mills or saw mills.

10
New England Commerce
  • Many women made candles, soap and garments that
    could be sold or traded.
  • Large towns had shoemakers, furniture makers,
    printers, gunsmiths and blacksmiths.

11
New England Commerce
  • Port cities became involved in shipbuilding.
  • Fishing was also important commerce.

12
Middle Colonies
  • New York
  • Pennsylvania
  • New Jersey
  • Delaware

13
Life in the Middle Colonies
  • The Middle colonies enjoyed better soil than did
    New England. Farms were larger and produced
    better harvests.

14
The Bread Basket
  • The large quantities of wheat and grain produced
    in places such as New York and Pennsylvania were
    known as cash crops because they were sold
    easily in markets and overseas.

15
Life in the Middle Colonies
  • The middle colonies also had industry such as
    carpentry, flour making, mining and iron mills.

16
Diversity in the Middle Colonies
  • Immigrants from Germany, Sweden and other
    European countries came to these places because
    of their tolerance for religious differences.
  • Types of Religious Peoples
  • Quakers, Baptists, Anglicans, Presbyterians,
    Lutherans, Mennonite, Dutch Reformed, German
    Reformed, Jews

17
Southern Colonies
  • Maryland
  • Virginia
  • North Carolina
  • South Carolina
  • Georgia

18
The Southern Colonies
  • With their fertile soil and large harvest many
    people in the south were either small or large
    scale farmers.

19
Plantation System
  • Plantation system type of farming with large
    pieces of land mostly run by slave labor.
  • This system is the main reason for the growth of
    slavery in the south.

20
The Southern Colonies
  • Tobacco was the main cash crop in both Maryland
    and Virginia. Preparing tobacco for sale required
    much labor so indentured servants or African
    slaves were used.

21
Life in the Southern Colonies
  • The main cash crop in South Carolina and Georgia
    was rice. Rice fields have to be flooded and
    drained. When harvested you would have to often
    work in knee deep mud, in the blazing sun with no
    protection from things such as mosquitoes. Thus,
    Georgia and South Carolina relied heavily on
    slave labor.

22
Slavery
  • Slaves could have various jobs. Some would work
    in the plantation home, however, the majority
    would work as field hands.
  • Many slaves suffered great cruelty. Large
    plantation owners would hire overseers, or
    bosses, to keep slaves working hard.

23
Slavery
  • In the early 1700s, colonies created slave codes
    which governed how slaves could be punished.
  • Slaves could not leave plantations without
    written permission from the master. The codes
    also stated that slaves could be whipped for
    minor offenses and hanged or burned to death for
    serious crimes. Those who tried to run away
    would be punished severely.

24
Social Levels of Colonial Society
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