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Title: Lecture 3: New Colonies


1
Lecture 3 New Colonies
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(No Transcript)
3
Puritan Refugees Connecticut and Rhode Island
  • The Puritan migration to New England was very
    marked in its effects in the two decades from
    1620 to 1640, after which it declined sharply for
    a while.
  • The term Great Migration usually refers to the
    migration in this period of English settlers,
    primarily Puritans to Massachusetts and the warm
    islands of the West Indies, especially the sugar
    rich island of Barbados, 1630-40.

4
  • They came in family groups, rather than as
    isolated individuals and were motivated chiefly
    by a quest for freedom to practice their Puritan
    religion.
  • Famous Puritans
  • Thomas Hooker
  • Roger Williams
  • Anne Hutchinson

5
Propriety Colonies Maryland and Pennsylvania
  • Maryland named after the King of England's wife
    Henrietta Maria, who was a catholic.
  • Many of the people living in Maryland practiced
    the catholic faith making it unique in the
    colonies as most were protestants.
  • Its economy was based on tobacco.

6
Pennsylvania
  • Given land by King Charles the II as payment,
    William Penn was giving a large pact of land west
    of the Delaware River.
  • Penn and his family belonged to the Quaker sect,
    a religious group that favored religious
    toleration and pacifism.
  • The Quakers had been prosecuted in England for
    their unwillingness to pay taxes to support the
    English military or the church.
  • This led to Penn opening up his colony for anyone
    who was being persecuted.

7
  • Pennsylvania attracted many farmers from Germany
    and England.
  • Philadelphia comes from the Greek meaning city
    of brotherly love.

8
The Carolinas
  • Named after King Charles II
  • The economy was based on tobacco plantations.
  • By 1675 North Carolina had a population of over
    5,000.
  • Settlers from the overcrowded islands of Barbados
    founded another colony.
  • The settlers brought over many slaves who made up
    almost half of the colonys population.

9
New York
  • During the early 17th century the independent
    Netherlands established a fur trading colony
    along the Hudson river-at the tip of Manhattan
    Island- called New Amsterdam.
  • The Dutch West-India Companys alliance with the
    Iroquois soon enabled it to dominate the fur
    trade throughout the Great Lakes.

10
Societies in Conflict
  • Relations between the colonists and native
    Americans were at first peaceful, but with new
    diseases and the need for expansion, violence
    once again reared its head.
  • Major Conflict include
  • King Philips War 1675
  • Nathanial Bacons Rebellion 1676
  • Salem Witch Trials 1692
  • King Williams War 1689

11
King Philips War
  • King Philip's War, sometimes called Metacom's
    War, Metacomet's War, or Metacom's Rebellion,1
    was an armed conflict between Native American
    inhabitants of present-day southern New England
    and English colonists and their Native American
    allies in 1675-1676.

12
  • The war is named after the main leader of the
    Native American side, Metacomet, known to the
    English as "King Philip".
  • Major Benjamin Church emerged as the Puritan hero
    of the war it was his company of Puritan rangers
    and Native American allies that finally hunted
    down and killed King Philip on August 12, 1676.

13
  • The war continued in northern New England
    (primarily on the Maine frontier) after King
    Philip was killed, until a treaty was signed at
    Casco Bay in April 1678.
  • The war was the single greatest calamity to occur
    in seventeenth-century Puritan New England.
  • In little over a year, nearly half of the
    region's towns were destroyed, its economy was
    all but ruined, and much of its population was
    killed, including one-tenth of all men available
    for military service.5

14
  • Proportionately, it was one of the bloodiest and
    costliest wars in the history of North America.
  • More than half of New England's ninety towns
    were assaulted by Native American warriors.
  • King Philip's War was the beginning of the
    development of a greater American identity, for
    the trials and tribulations suffered by the
    colonists gave them a group identity separate and
    distinct from subjects of the English Crown.

15
Bacons Rebellion
  • Bacon's Rebellion was an uprising in 1676 in the
    Virginia Colony in North America, led by a
    29-year-old planter Nathaniel Bacon.
  • About a thousand Virginians rose because they
    resented Virginia Governor William Berkeley's
    friendly policies towards the Native Americans.
  • When Berkeley refused to retaliate for a series
    of Indian attacks on frontier settlements, others
    took matters into their own hands, attacking
    Indians, chasing Berkeley from Jamestown,
    Virginia, and torching the capitol.

16
  • It was the first rebellion in the American
    colonies in which discontented frontiersmen took
    part a similar uprising in Maryland occurred
    later that year.
  • A protest against raids on the frontier some
    historians also consider it a power play by Bacon
    against Berkeley, and his policies of favoring
    his own court.
  • Their alliance disturbed the ruling class, who
    responded by hardening the racial caste of
    slavery.
  • While the farmers did not succeed in their goal
    of driving Native Americans from Virginia, the
    rebellion did result in Berkeley being recalled
    to England.

17
Salem Witch Scare
18
Salem Witch Trials
  • In 1691 several young women in the Massachusetts
    port of Salem were accused of witchcraft.
  • Throughout 1692 the community was in turmoil,
    with over 100 women and a few men accused of
    involvement in witchcraft.
  • 20 individuals were convicted and executed before
    the new governor ordered a halt to the trials.

19
  • Most commonly those accused of witchcraft were
    old women, unmarried or widowed, who were
    denounced by their neighbors out of fear and
    jealousy.
  • The accused came from the more prosperous
    commercial parts of the town and were members of
    religious minorities, such as Anglicans and
    Quakers.
  • Their accusers were largely from areas of the
    town that were suffering economically, and were
    mostly Puritans.

20
King Williams War
  • In the final decade of the 17th cent a lengthy
    struggle began b/w France and England for control
    of North America.
  • The first part of the conflict, known in North
    America as King Williams War, began in 1689 when
    a combined force of English and Iroquois attacked
    Montreal.
  • The French who were allied with the Algonquins
    also raided frontier settlements.

21
  • The importance of this war is that it
    foreshadowed the imperial struggle of the 18th
    cent and led governments to increase their
    control over the American colonies in order to
    ensure a more coordinated defence.
  • In 1701, the English took direct control over the
    proprietary colonies, ensuring that each colony
    had a royal governor.

22
Emerging Patterns
  • Impact of contact b/w natives and colonists.
  • Natives struggle to adapt
  • Equality disappearing b/w groups
  • People came for economic and religious freedom
  • Differences were emerging between urban and
    frontier society

23
Check your understanding
  • 1. What reasons did Anne Hutchinson and Roger
    Williams have for leaving Massachusetts and
    establishing a colony in Rhode Island?
  • 2. Why were the colonies of Maryland and
    Pennsylvania founded?
  • 3. What were the common factors in King Philips
    War, Bacons Rebellion, and other conflicts with
    Native Americans?
  • 4. How did the Iroquois use their relations with
    the English?
  • 5. What relationships are shown between the
    Native Americans and the English and French in
    King Williams War?
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