American Journey Textbook

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American Journey Textbook

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Title: American Journey Textbook


1
Chapter 4
  • American Journey Textbook
  • Ms. Armand

2
New England Colonies
  • A man named Burnaby thought that the colonies
    would never come together, however the colonies
    grew.
  • In the 1700s colony started out with 250,000 and
    grew to have 2.5 million people in the mid
    1770s.the African Americans population grew at an
    even faster rate starting at 28,000 to more than
    500,000.
  • Many immigrants moved into the colonies.
  • Many of them were Europeans and Africans.
  • Another reason the population grew so fast is
    because colonial women planed on marrying early
    and having large families.

3
Population And Farming
  • Another reason the population grew so fast is
    because colonial women planed on marrying early
    and having large families.
  • People wanted to live there because New England
    became an unusually healthy place to live.
  • People in New England lived in well organized
    towns.
  • In the middle of colony stood the meeting house
    it was used for church services and town
    meetings.
  • Farming was difficult because of the long winters
    and thin rocky soil.

4
Commerce in new england
  • New England had very small businesses. Women who
    made cloth,garments,candles,soap,and other
    various items for their family sometimes made
    enough of these products to sell or trade. Very
    large towns attracted skilled crafts people who
    set themselves up as blacksmiths,shoemakers,furnit
    ure makers, gunsmiths,metalsmiths,and printers.
    Shipbuilding was very important industry the
    region
  • really relied on fishing.

5
Colonial Tradesouthern colonies and northern
colonies are linked with other parts of the world
New England ships sailed south sailed along the
Atlantic coast trading with colonies and with
islands in the West Indies. They crossed the
Atlantic carrying fish,furs,and fruit to
trade.kahlil brown
6
The Middle Passage
  • The inhumane part of the triangular trade,
    shipping enslaved Africans to the West India ,
    was known as the Middle Passage.
  • Olaudah Equiano, a young Africans forced onto a
    ship to America , later described the voyage
  • With its trade, shipbuilding, and fishing, New
    England s economy flourished.

7
The Cities Developed
  • Although good farmland was lacking in much of the
    region, New Englands population grew and towns
    and cities developed.
  • The Middle passage enjoyed fertile soil and a
    slightly milder climate than New Englands .
  • Farmers in this region cultivated larger areas of
    land and produced bigger harvests than did the
    New Englanders.
  • The Middle Passage farmers sent cargoes of wheat
    and livestock to New York City and Philadelphia
    for shipment and these cities became busy ports.

8
The middle colonies
  • The main idea of this passage is about New York,
    and Philadelphia.
  • In this passage they also talked about how the
    middle colonies enjoyed fertile soil and also a
    slightly milder climate than New Englands
    climate.
  • Farmers in their region cultivated larger areas
    of land and produced bigger harvests which it
    made easier to sell.

9
  • In New York and Philadelphia farmers grew large
    quantities of wheat and other cash crops, cash
    crops are things such as food that can be sold
    easier.
  • Cash crops could be sold in markets and overseas.
  • Farmers sent their cargoes to New York, and
    Philadelphia for shipment and these cities
    became busy ports.
  • By the 1760s New York with 18,000 people, and
    Philadelphia with 24,000 people were the largest
    cities in the American colonies.

10
Industries of the Middle Colonies
  • The Middle Colonies also had industries some
    were home-based such as carpentry and flour
    making .Others included larger businesses like
    lumbering,mining,and small-scale manufacturing.
    Several hundred were employed in an iron mill in
    northern New Jersey many were German.

11
German Immigrants
  • Most of 100,000 German immigrants who came to
    America and lived in Pennsylvania.
  • They became successful farmers. They belonged to
    many different protestant groups. With the Dutch,
    and other non-English immigrants .They gave the
    middle colonies a cultural diversity, or variety
    that wasnt in New England .

12
Tidewater
  • Many of the large plantations were located in the
    tidewater a region of flat low-lying plains
    laying along the seacoast so they could be
    shipped to market by boat. the planters wife
    supervised the main house and the household
    servants.
  • A plantation also included slave cabins, barns ,
    and stables and outbuildings such as carpenters
    and even blacksmith shops and storerooms even
    kitchens were in separate buildings a large
    plantations might have a chapel and a school.

13
Backcountry
  • West of the Tidewater lay a region of hills and
    forests climbing up toward the Appalachian
    Mountains. This region was known as the
    backcountry and was settled in part by hardy
    newcomers to the colonies. The backcountry
    settlers grew corn and tobacco on small farms.
    They usually worked alone or with their families,
    although some had one or two enslaved Africans to
    help.
  • In the Southern Colonies, the independent small
    farmers of the backcountry outnumbered the large
    plantation owners. The plantation owners,
    however, had greater wealth and more influence.
    They controlled the economic and political life
    of the region

14
The Enlightenment
  • By the middle of 1700 many educated colonists
    were influenced by the enlightenment.
  • It began in Europe which spread the idea that
    knowledge, reason, and science could improve
    society.
  • The Enlightenment increased interest in science.
    It made people observe nature, staged experiments
    and their findings.
  • There best known scientist was Benjamin Franklin

15
Freedom Of The Press
  • 1735 Governor of New York John Peter Zenger of
    the New York weekly journal faced charges of
    libel for printing a critical report about the
    royal governor of New York.
  • Andrew Hamilton argued that free speech was a
    basic right of English people. He defended
    Zenger by asking the jury to base there decision
    on whether Zengers article was true. not whether
    it was offensive. The jury found Zenger NOT
    GUILTY!!
  • This was considered the mark of FREEDOM OF THE
    PRESS!!

16
Slavery
  • The enslaved Africans on plantations
  • By the early 1700s many of the colonies had
    issued slave codes these codes sometimes did not
    allow slaves to leave the plantations some made
    reading and learning illegal to teach the
    enslaved the punishments were to get whipped
    hanged or burned for their serious crimes.

17
  • The main idea of the section is that with their
    rich soil and warm climate The Southern Colonies
    were well suited to certain kind of farming.

18
The Southern Colonies
  • With there rich soil and warm climates they were
    well suited to certain kind of farming.
  • Because most settlers in the Southern colonies
    made there living from the farming land, they did
    not have the need to develop commerce or industry.

19
Tobacco and Rice
  • Tobacco was the principal cash crop of Maryland
    and Virginia. Most tobacco was in Europe, were
    the demand for it was strong growing tobacco and
    preparing it for sale required a good deal of
    labor.
  • Planters used indentured servants who became
    scarce and really expensive, Southern Planters
    used enslaved Africans instead.

20
African Traditions
  • African traditions is about how slaveholders
    could sell a family member to another
    slaveholder. They developed a culture that drew
    on the languages and customs of their west
    African homelands. Some enslaved African learned
    trades such as carpentry , blacksmithing or
    weaving. Those lucky enough to be able to buy
    freedom joined the small population of free
    African Americans.

21
Criticism of Slavery
  • The majority of the white southerners were not
    slaveholders slavery was played important role in
    the economic success of the southern colonies.
    The success idea was built on one human being
    could own another, some of the colonist didnt
    believe in slavery

22
English colonial rule
  • Since Charles II was restored on the throne, some
    people werent satisfied.
  • In1688 Parliament took action and James II
    (Charles II successor) took over the throne.
  • This change ,which showed the power of the
    elected representatives over the monarch, came to
    be known as Glorious Revolution.
  • Then Willam and Mary signed an ENGLISH BILL OF
    RIGHTS in 1689 guaranteeing certain basic rights
    to all citizen.
  • Mercantilism The theory that a states or
    nations power depended on its wealth.
  • Export To sell goods aboard.
  • Import To buy goods from foreign markets.
  • Smuggling Trading illegally with other nations.
  • Navigation Act Directed the flow of goods
    between England and the colonies.

23
Charter Colonies
  • The charter colonies were Connecticut and
    Rhode Island and they were established by
    settlers who had been given a charter or grant of
    privileges. Colonists elected whom ever they
    chose for governor and members of the
    legislature. Great Britain had the priviledge to
    approve the governor whom they chose but there
    was a twitch the governor could not veto the
    acts of the legislature.

24
Proprietary Colony
  • The proprietary colonies were Delaware,
    Maryland, and Pennsylvania which were ruled by
    proprietors. Proprietors generally ruled who they
    wished. Proprietors appointed which governors and
    members of the upper house of the legislature ,
    while the colonists elected the lower house.

25
Royal Colonies
  • By the time the 1760s came these colonies
    existed and they were Georgia, Massachusetts, New
    Hampshire, New jersey, New York, North Carolina,
    South Carolina, and Virginia so they became
    known as the royal colonies. Britain basically
    ruled all the royal colonies. In each colony the
    king appointed a governor and council which was
    known as the upper house. So as you can see the
    royal colonies did not have that kind of
    privilege like the Charter colony to elect their
    own governor and council.

26
Royal Colonies
  • Colonists elected an assembly called the
    lower house. Many of the governors and members of
    the council did what they were told and it led to
    many altercations. These altercations mainly
    happened when colonists in the assembly enforced
    tax laws and trade restrictions.

27
British-French Rivalry
  • Britain and France began competing to be the most
    powerful nation in Europe .
  • In 1700 British and French were the two
    strongest powers in Europe.
  • In the early 1700s Britain had gained control of
    nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and the Hudson bay
    region.

28
An Emerging Culture
  • From the 1720s through the 1740s, a religious
    revival called the Great Awakening swept through
    the colonies.
  • In New England and the Middle Colonies,
    ministries called for a new birth, a return to
    the strong faith of earlier days.
  • Jonathan Edwards was one of their outstanding
    preachers of Massachusetts, his sermons were
    convincing and powerful.
  • George Whitefield, an English preacher, had
    arrived in the colonies in 1739, he helped spread
    the religious revival.
  • He inspired worshipers in churches and open field
    form New England to Georgia, The Great awakening
    led to formations of new churches.

29
Family Roles
  • Throughout colonies people adopted their
    traditions to the new traditions of life in
    America.
  • Religion, education, and the arts contributed to
    a new American culture.
  • A colonial farm was both home and work place,
    women had had to cook, they made butter, cheese,
    and preserved food.
  • They did things such as spun yard, made clothes,
    and tended chickens and cows.
  • Men worked in the fields and built barns, houses,
    and fences, women in cities sometimes held jobs
    outside the home.

30
Native Americans Take Side The Iroquois
Confederacy
  • The main idea of this passage is. That it was a
    trade between the French an the British.
  • They ware going to spilt the Native American.
  • But most of the Native Americans went to the
    French.
  • The French won the trade because they trade it
    furs for the Native.

31
Washington first command
  • In 1754 Dinwiddie made Washington a lieutenant
    and sent him back to Ohio with a militia.
  • Washington established a small post called fort
    necessity.
  • the French surrounded Washington's soldiers were
    later released and returned to Virginia.

32
The Albany plan of union
  • While Washington struggled with French
    representatives from new England, New York,
    Pennsylvania, and Maryland met to discuss the
    threat of war.
  • In 1754 the representatives gathered in Albany
    ,new York.
  • Known as the Albany plan of union, Franklins plan
    for 11 of the American colonies.

33
The British take action
  • During the French and Indian war some native
    Americans fought on the British side and others
    against it.
  • The war raged in in north America between the
    1750s and 1760s.
  • England and France fought for the control of
    world trade and power on the seas.
  • the British knew that the French were building
    forts.
  • Their alliances with the native Americans allowed
    the French to control large areas of land.
  • The French and their native Americans seemed to
    be winning control of the American frontier.
  • The British colonist fought the French and the
    native Americans with little help from Britain..
  • In 1754 the government in London decided to
    intervene in the conflict.
  • Great Britain appointed general Edward Braddock
    commander in chief of the British forces in
    America.
  • Braddock was sent to drive the French out of the
    Ohio valley.

34
Braddock marches to Duquesne
  • In June1755 Braddock set out from Virginia with
    soldiers and a colonial militia.
  • It took Braddock's army several weeks to trek
    through the dense forest to fort Duquesne.
  • On July 9 a combined force of native Americans
    warriors and French troops in ambushed the
    British .
  • The British could not see their uniforms so they
    began to become confused in battle.
  • Braddock called for an orderly retreat but the
    panic was great and he did not succeed.
  • Braddock was killed and British was defeated.
  • The survivors were lead back to Virginia.

35
The Fall Of New France
  • The year 1759 brought so many British victories.
  • The British captured several French islands in
    the West Indies and the city of Havana in Cuba.
  • They defeated the French in India, and destroyed
    a French fleet that had been sent to reinforce
    Canada.
  • The greatest victory of the year, took place in
    the heart of New France.

36
The Battle Of Quebec
  • Quebec, the capital of New France, was thought to
    be impossible to attack.
  • In September 1759, British general James Wolfe
    found a way.
  • One of Wolfes scouts spotted a poorly guarded
    path up the back of the cliff.
  • Wolfes soldiers overwhelmed the guards, and
    scrambled up the path during the night.

37
  • The British troops assembled outside of Quebec on
    a field called the Plains Of Abraham.
  • There they surprised and defeated the French
    army. The British had won!
  • James Wolfe died in the battle.

38
Pitt takes charge
  • William Pitt oversaw the war effort from London
    he was the secretary of the prime minister.
    Britain prospects in America.
  • Pitt decided that Britain will pay for supplies
    need in the war. After the French and Indian war
    Britain raised the colonists taxes to help pay
    the debt.
  • Pitt had the moment when the colonists had to pay
    their share of the bill.
  • Pitt sent Britain troops to North America under
    the command of such energetic officers .

39
  • 1758 Amherst and Wolfe led Britain that
    recaptured at the Louisburg .
  • Britain force marched across Pennsylvania and
    forced the French to abandon Fort Duquesne was
    renamed fort Pitt.

40
Trouble on the frontier
  • They lost their French allies and trading
    partners.
  • But they still continued to trade with the
    British.
  • The Native Americans regarded them as enemies.
  • British raised the prices on there goods.
  • The French refused to pay the native Americans
    for there land
  • British settlers began moving into the valleys of
    westerner Pennsylvania

41
Pontiacs war
  • Pontiac wanted to join native American groups to
    fight the British
  • In the spring1763 Pontiac put together an
    alliance.
  • The native Americans failed to capture the
    important strongholds of Niagara.
  • Native Americans killed stealers along the
    Pennsylvania and virgin frontiers in a series of
    raids called Pontiac's war.

42
Treaty of Paris
  • The fall of Quebec and general Amhersts capture
    of Montreal the following year brought the
    fighting in North America to an end.
  • In the treaty of Paris of 1763, France was
    permitted to keep some of the sugar producing
    islands in the west Indies, have to give Canada
    and most of its islands east of the Mississippi
    river to great Britain.
  • Great Britain gained Florida.
  • In return Spain received French lands west of the
    Mississippi river like, the Louisiana territory,
    as well as the port of New Orleans.
  • The treaty marked the end of France as a power in
    North America.
  • The Mississippi River was like a boundary between
    Great Britain and Spain

43
The Proclamation of 1763
  • In the Proclamation, King George III said the
    Appalachian Mountain was only temporary for the
    colonies, and it angered people who owned land in
    companies.
  • They ignored the Britain claims.
  • The proclamation brought some tension that led
    up to war.
  • More problems came up for the Britain colonists.

44
The Colonies Grow
  • Between the 1600s and early 1700s, thirteen
    American colonies are established some for profit
    and others by religious groups seeking freedom.
  • New England, the Middle Colonies, and the
    Southern Colonies develop diverse economies.

45
  • Although many different people live in the
    colonies, their values and beliefs, government,
    and educational institutions grow out of English
    traditions.
  • Between 1650 and 1750, Parliament passes laws
    regulating colonial trade.
  • In 1754 the French and Indian War begins.

46
  • Form 1689 to 1763, France and Britain fight a
    series of wars.
  • Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris, Britain
    obtains control of the continent.
  • North America is divided between Great Britain
    and Spain.
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