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Colonial Ways of Life (1608-1763)

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Colonial Ways of Life (1608-1763) Chapter 3 The Southern Colonies Southern Economy Tobacco was a cash crop in Virginia & Maryland South Carolina grew rice & indigo ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Colonial Ways of Life (1608-1763)


1
Colonial Ways of Life (1608-1763)
  • Chapter 3

2
The Southern Colonies
3
Southern Economy
  • Tobacco was a cash crop in Virginia Maryland
  • South Carolina grew rice indigo
  • Plantation large commercial (for profit) estate
    where labors lived and cultivated crops for owner
  • Indentured Servants VA MD had plenty of land,
    but not enough labor. England had poor willing to
    come to America
  • Indentured Servant laborers bound to land owner
    working off debt of travel,
  • Contract lasted 4-11 years

4
Southern Society
  • Plantations were self-contained communities that
    had schools, churches, and workshops
  • 1600s, plantations small 1700s, plantations
    large due to slave labor
  • Small land owners lived in the backcountry
    (frontier), close to Native American land
  • Small farmers known as yeoman
  • Practiced subsistence farming only growing
    enough crops for themselves
  • Corn, beans, potatoes, barley, rye

5
Social Classes in Southern Society
6
Bacons Rebellion
  • Sir William Berkeley governor of Virginia
  • Allowed wealthy planters to dominate society
  • Controlled by appointing supporters to the
    governing council and giving land to burgesses
  • Restricted vote to wealthy land owners almost ½
    lost right to vote
  • Angered backcountry farmers and tenant farmers
  • Native American relations will spark the rebellion

7
Bacons Rebellion Crisis Over Land
  • LAND!!! Thats why people came to America!
  • Indentured servants tenant farmers wanted to
    own land eventually
  • Backcountry farmers wanted to expand their land
    holdings
  • Colonists did not want war with Native Americans
  • Berkeley asked burgesses for to build forts
    along the frontier to protect backcountry farmers

8
Bacon Leads a Revolt
  • Backcountry farmers will meet at Nathaniel
    Bacons house
  • Bacon member of governors council but he took up
    cause of small farmers because he had been
    attacked by Native Americans
  • Organized a militia (army)
  • Berkeley restored voting rights to all FREE men
  • Changes did NOT satisfy Bacon his men, they
    went to Jamestown, seized power, and charged
    Berkeley with corruption

9
Slavery in the Colonies
  • 1450-1870 10-12 million Africans enslaved
  • 1450-1870 2 million will die in transit
  • 500,000 taken to North America first arrive in
    1619
  • Chattel Slavery humans owning other humans
    slaves first treated like indentured servants
    enslaved because they werent Christian

10
Slavery in the Colonies
  • Maryland was the first to formally recognize
    slavery when it denied Africans same rights as
    English citizens
  • 1705, VA enacted a slave code
  • Set of laws to regulate rights and behaviors of
    slaves
  • Because slaves played an important role in growth
    of colonies plantation economy

11
New England Middle Colonies
  • Section 2

12
Puritan Society
  • Puritan law banned card games, dice, plays,
    dancing
  • Salem Witchcraft
  • Devout Puritans believed Satan used witches to
    work evil in the world
  • Salem, MA 1692 20 residents of Salem were
    charged with witchcraft executed
  • Began because a group of teenage girls accused an
    African servant of being a witch

13
Trade Rise of Cities
  • New England wanted to buy ceramic plates,
    hardware, fine cloth, and linens
  • Triangular Trade
  • New England bought goods from England by selling
    NE products to foreign countries in exchange for
    goods England wanted
  • Bill of exchange credit slips English merchants
    gave planters in exchange for sugar could buy
    English goods with them

14
Triangular Trade
  • This trade made many New England merchants
    wealthy.
  • Many of these wealthy merchants built factories
    to refine raw sugar distill molasses into rum
  • NE will sell their rum to Southern colonies for
    rice, tobacco, and indigo

15
The Imperial System
  • Section 3

16
Mercantilism
  • Mercantilism a set of ideas about the world
    economy how it worked popular in the
    1600s-1700s.
  • Country had to keep a favorable balance of trade
  • Country should be self-sufficient in raw
    materials
  • Should establish colonies where raw materials
    were available
  • Raw materials in exchange for manufactured goods
  • Negative colonies could not sell goods for gold
    or silver NE turned to triangular trade
    smuggling

17
Navigation Acts
  • Mercantilists policies simple in 1600s, English
    government tried to encourage exports and
    restrict imports
  • Charles II, king in 1660, wanted to change the
    lax policies enact a navigation act
  • All goods imported/exported had to be shipped on
    British ships
  • Specific raw materials could only be sold in
    England sugar, tobacco, lumber, cotton, wool,
    indigo

18
Navigation Acts
  • 1663, Parliament passes the Staple Act
  • All merchants bringing European goods to the
    colonies had to stop in England to pay taxes
  • Colonial merchants were frustrated with the new
    acts broke the laws
  • As a colonial power, England had the authority to
    appoint customs officials/inspectors who directly
    reported to the English government
  • In response to colonial disobedience, Parliament
    the king created the Dominion on New England

19
Glorious Revolution
  • English were suspicious of their new king James
    II. He insisted on his divine right to rule
  • King chosen by God given all power to rule
  • James II angered people by rejecting advice of
    Parliament, prosecuted bishops in the Anglican
    Church, revoked charters of English
    towns/corporations, and offended the people by
    practicing Catholicism

20
Bloodless Revolution
  • Fearful that James II could turn England back to
    Catholic nation, Parliament asked Mary William
    to succeed James II to the throne
  • In response to invitation, James II fled England
  • Exchange of power Glorious Revolution
  • Before taking the throne William Mary had to
    sign the English Bill of Rights
  • Guaranteed freedom of speech (in Parliament), no
    excessive bail, no cruel punishment, illegal for
    king to tax or raise army without Parliaments ok

21
Legacy of John Locke
  • Glorious Revolution set a precedent it showed a
    revolution against the king was (sometimes)
    justified
  • During the turmoil, English philosopher, John
    Locke, wrote a book called The Two Treatises of
    Government
  • Locke argued kings right to rule came from the
    consent of the governed (the people)

22
Legacy of Locke
  • Locke believed everyone had certain natural
    rights life, liberty, pursuit of property
  • People form a contract with government in
    exchange for protection
  • Locke said if rights of people were violated,
    then people were justified to rebel replace the
    government
  • U.S. Constitution Declaration of Independence
    based on Lockes ideas

23
Legacy of Locke
  • Mayflower Compact Fundamental Orders of
    Connecticut were examples of how colonists
    understood the contract between government the
    people
  • Colonists will use Lockes ideas when they rebel
    in 1775 against England
  • Thomas Jefferson will use Lockes ideas in the
    Declaration of Independence in 1776

24
Diverse Society
  • Section 4

25
The Enlightenment
  • Enlightenment Period challenged authority of
    church in science philosophy while elevating
    the power of human research
  • Enlightenment thinkers believed in natural laws
    could be applied to political, social, and
    economic relationships
  • Rationalism focus on logic
  • Rousseau wrote The Social Contract argued govt
    should be formed from consent of people people
    should make laws

26
The Enlightenment
  • Baron de Montesquieu proposed three types of
    power in government judicial, executive, and
    legislative each power should be separate!
  • Three branches to protect the power of the people
  • Separation provided a system of checks and
    balances that would prevent government from
    abusing its authority
  • Ideas influenced the U.S. Constitution

27
The Great Awakening
  • Stressed dependence on God appealed to farmers,
    works, and enslaved people
  • Revival spread from England movement stressed
    piety
  • Pietism focus on devoutness emotional unity
    with God
  • Revival large public meetings for preaching
    prayer

28
Great Awakening
  • Many preachers felt religion was decreasing due
    to focus on reasoning and not a reliance on God
  • NE preacher Jonathon Edwards
  • Person had to be born again
  • Having a personal internal emotional experience
    that brought a person to God was a central part
    of Great Awakening
  • Had a profound effect on the South Baptists let
    their slaves attend revivals where preachers
    condemned brutality of slavery and all people
    were equal in eyes of God

29
Overall Effect of Enlightenment Great Awakening
  • E. last two cultural movements in the colonies
    before the American Revolution
  • F. Both movements emphasized individualism which
    supported independence. Enlightenment provided
    arguments against British rule and Great
    Awakening undermined allegiance to a traditional
    authority.
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