New England Colonies
... Church (Church of England) of Catholic practices Their original colonies were Plymouth and the second was Massachusetts Bay colony. Puritan were viewed by King James I of England as a threat to his religious and political authority. He ordered many of them jailed. ...
... Church (Church of England) of Catholic practices Their original colonies were Plymouth and the second was Massachusetts Bay colony. Puritan were viewed by King James I of England as a threat to his religious and political authority. He ordered many of them jailed. ...
Lesson 4 Colonization Stations
... persecution (harassment because of one’s beliefs) in England. Although the 1600s saw much less outright violence than in the 1500s, Catholics were still a persecuted minority in the seventeenth century. For example, Catholics were not even permitted to be legally married by a Catholic priest. So in ...
... persecution (harassment because of one’s beliefs) in England. Although the 1600s saw much less outright violence than in the 1500s, Catholics were still a persecuted minority in the seventeenth century. For example, Catholics were not even permitted to be legally married by a Catholic priest. So in ...
Chapter 3 Colonial America 1587-1770
... daughter gave birth Virginia Dare was the first English child born in North America White explored the area and drew pictures of what he saw In a book illustrated by white, another colonist described the Native American towns the settlers encountered: “Their towns are small… a village may contain bu ...
... daughter gave birth Virginia Dare was the first English child born in North America White explored the area and drew pictures of what he saw In a book illustrated by white, another colonist described the Native American towns the settlers encountered: “Their towns are small… a village may contain bu ...
Mid-Atlantic Colonies
... colonists and Native Americans. It was named after the leader of the Native Americans. King Philip’s Native American name was Metacom. Many colonists died in the war, but it caused such a heavy loss of life among the Native American population that large areas of southern New England became English ...
... colonists and Native Americans. It was named after the leader of the Native Americans. King Philip’s Native American name was Metacom. Many colonists died in the war, but it caused such a heavy loss of life among the Native American population that large areas of southern New England became English ...
PDF sample
... colonists became discouraged and returned to Britain. Thereafter the Plymouth Company folded. The Virginia Company of London, in 1607, sent out an expedition of three ships with 104 men to plant a colony some forty miles up the James River from Chesapeake Bay. Like the river on which it was located, ...
... colonists became discouraged and returned to Britain. Thereafter the Plymouth Company folded. The Virginia Company of London, in 1607, sent out an expedition of three ships with 104 men to plant a colony some forty miles up the James River from Chesapeake Bay. Like the river on which it was located, ...
Chapter 2, Section 1 Did You Know? The Aztec started Tenochtitlán
... E. To attract more settlers to Jamestown, the Virginia Company gave the colony the right to elect its own general assembly. The elected representatives were called burgesses, and the legislative body was called the House of Burgesses. F. The Virginia Company also introduced the system of headrights. ...
... E. To attract more settlers to Jamestown, the Virginia Company gave the colony the right to elect its own general assembly. The elected representatives were called burgesses, and the legislative body was called the House of Burgesses. F. The Virginia Company also introduced the system of headrights. ...
Unit 1 PPT 2 - Henry County Schools
... ■ The 1st “middle” colony was New Netherland created by the Dutch West India Co: –To attract settlers, the Dutch recruited Swedes, Germans, Finns, & Africans (very diverse) –Britain seized the Dutch colony in 1664 & renamed it, New York ...
... ■ The 1st “middle” colony was New Netherland created by the Dutch West India Co: –To attract settlers, the Dutch recruited Swedes, Germans, Finns, & Africans (very diverse) –Britain seized the Dutch colony in 1664 & renamed it, New York ...
The First Americans
... Connecticut, the first written constitution in the colonies 6.New Hampshire – was started by a royal ...
... Connecticut, the first written constitution in the colonies 6.New Hampshire – was started by a royal ...
New England Colony - White Plains Public Schools
... • Visible Saint A person who experiences public conversion, a public profession of faith, and has worldly success which confirms membership in the elect ...
... • Visible Saint A person who experiences public conversion, a public profession of faith, and has worldly success which confirms membership in the elect ...
Brief History of Jamestown
... colonists decided to abandon Jamestown in the Spring of 1610, settlers with supplies arrived from England, eager to find wealth in Virginia. This group of new settlers arrived with new orders from King James I. His orders provided for stronger leadership under a governor who served with a group of a ...
... colonists decided to abandon Jamestown in the Spring of 1610, settlers with supplies arrived from England, eager to find wealth in Virginia. This group of new settlers arrived with new orders from King James I. His orders provided for stronger leadership under a governor who served with a group of a ...
Colonization Powerpoint
... VA dominated by aristocratic planters who were generally Church of England members. ...
... VA dominated by aristocratic planters who were generally Church of England members. ...
Chapter 3 PowerPoint
... • New Hampshire becomes a royal colony in 1679 after the king separated it from Massachusetts Bay ...
... • New Hampshire becomes a royal colony in 1679 after the king separated it from Massachusetts Bay ...
Chesapeake Colonization
... Chesapeake Bay. Attacked by Indians and move on. May 24, 1607 about 100 colonists [all men] land at Jamestown, along banks of James River Easily defended, but swarming with disease-causing mosquitoes ...
... Chesapeake Bay. Attacked by Indians and move on. May 24, 1607 about 100 colonists [all men] land at Jamestown, along banks of James River Easily defended, but swarming with disease-causing mosquitoes ...
The New England, Middle and Southern Colonies Summary
... The Middle Colonies are Settled: The Dutch (Netherlands) settled the area between England’s New England and Chesapeake colonies Henry Hudson explored the region that the Dutch claimed as “New Netherland” The main settlement, on Manhattan Island, was called “New Amsterdam” ...
... The Middle Colonies are Settled: The Dutch (Netherlands) settled the area between England’s New England and Chesapeake colonies Henry Hudson explored the region that the Dutch claimed as “New Netherland” The main settlement, on Manhattan Island, was called “New Amsterdam” ...
The New England, Middle, and Southern Colonies
... the last major stand of Indians against New Englanders How did Chesapeake and New England colonists compare in their relationships with American Indians? ...
... the last major stand of Indians against New Englanders How did Chesapeake and New England colonists compare in their relationships with American Indians? ...
Unit 1: American Beginnings
... Rhode Island. Shipping, fishing, small scale farming, & lumber and rum. Middle—New York, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Traders & shipbuilders, and small scale farming. Southern—Virginia, Maryland, NC, SC, Georgia. Cash croppers…mainly tobacco & cotton. ...
... Rhode Island. Shipping, fishing, small scale farming, & lumber and rum. Middle—New York, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Traders & shipbuilders, and small scale farming. Southern—Virginia, Maryland, NC, SC, Georgia. Cash croppers…mainly tobacco & cotton. ...
8-1.3 England`s 13 Colonies PPT Notes English and European
... The New England colonies were founded as a ____________ (safe place) for religious groups persecuted (mistreated) in England. The Separatists, also known as the ________________, sailed across the Atlantic Ocean and landed at Plymouth, Massachusetts. The pilgrims signed the Mayflower _______________ ...
... The New England colonies were founded as a ____________ (safe place) for religious groups persecuted (mistreated) in England. The Separatists, also known as the ________________, sailed across the Atlantic Ocean and landed at Plymouth, Massachusetts. The pilgrims signed the Mayflower _______________ ...
CHAPTER 2 Putting Down Roots Opportunity and
... crisis of authority in New York Jacob Leisler seized control Maintained position through 1690 March 1691—Governor Henry Sloughter arrested and executed Leisler ...
... crisis of authority in New York Jacob Leisler seized control Maintained position through 1690 March 1691—Governor Henry Sloughter arrested and executed Leisler ...
Exploration, Discovery, and Settlement, 1492-1700
... slaves to colonists at Jamestown. This was the beginning of slavery in the American colonies. While many of these blacks were eventually granted their freedom, other African slaves were later brought in. However, it took some time for Africans to be used on a large scale as slave labor. The price of ...
... slaves to colonists at Jamestown. This was the beginning of slavery in the American colonies. While many of these blacks were eventually granted their freedom, other African slaves were later brought in. However, it took some time for Africans to be used on a large scale as slave labor. The price of ...
Lesson 3 Middle Colonies
... New York and New Jersey Why did the Middle Colonies grow? By 1660, England had two groups of colonies in North America. In the north were the New England colonies. In the south was Virginia, and also the colony of Maryland, which was settled in 1634. Between these two groups of colonies were lands u ...
... New York and New Jersey Why did the Middle Colonies grow? By 1660, England had two groups of colonies in North America. In the north were the New England colonies. In the south was Virginia, and also the colony of Maryland, which was settled in 1634. Between these two groups of colonies were lands u ...
Chapter 3
... • Pa. Was an immediate success. By 1700 surpassed in pop. And wealth by just 2 • Penn’s story is a sad one….. ...
... • Pa. Was an immediate success. By 1700 surpassed in pop. And wealth by just 2 • Penn’s story is a sad one….. ...
HIST101LectureGuidePartI
... worship God, but the Chesapeake colonies were established more for profit and individual self interest. Virginia has already been covered. But, in the lands north of Virginia, George Calvert (Lord Baltimore in the House of Lords) was a Catholic convert who wanted to establish a haven for British Cat ...
... worship God, but the Chesapeake colonies were established more for profit and individual self interest. Virginia has already been covered. But, in the lands north of Virginia, George Calvert (Lord Baltimore in the House of Lords) was a Catholic convert who wanted to establish a haven for British Cat ...
All of the Colonies
... controlled by the Dutch and other non-British groups like the Swedes and Germans. New Netherlands founded in the Hudson River area (NY) between 1623-1624. Netherlands was interested for the fur trade with Native Americans. Manhattan was the center of this colony [New Amsterdam]. Purchased by Compa ...
... controlled by the Dutch and other non-British groups like the Swedes and Germans. New Netherlands founded in the Hudson River area (NY) between 1623-1624. Netherlands was interested for the fur trade with Native Americans. Manhattan was the center of this colony [New Amsterdam]. Purchased by Compa ...
Province of Maryland
The Province of Maryland was an English and later British colony in North America that existed from 1632 until 1776, when it joined the other twelve of the Thirteen Colonies in rebellion against Great Britain and became the U.S. state of Maryland. Its first settlement and capital was St. Mary's City, in the southern end of St. Mary's County, which is a peninsula in the Chesapeake Bay and is also bordered by four tidal rivers.The province began as a proprietary colony of the English Lord Baltimore, who wished to create a haven for English Catholics in the new world at the time of the European wars of religion. Although Maryland was an early pioneer of religious toleration in the English colonies, religious strife among Anglicans, Puritans, Catholics, and Quakers was common in the early years, and Puritan rebels briefly seized control of the province. In 1689, the year following the Glorious Revolution, John Coode led a rebellion that removed Lord Baltimore from power in Maryland. Power in the colony was restored to the Baltimore family in 1715 when Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, insisted in public that he was a Protestant.Despite early competition with the colony of Virginia to its south, and the Dutch colony of New Netherland to its north, the Province of Maryland developed along very similar lines to Virginia. Its early settlements and populations centers tended to cluster around the rivers and other waterways that empty into the Chesapeake Bay and, like Virginia, Maryland's economy quickly became centered on the cultivation of tobacco, for sale in Europe. The need for cheap labor, and later with the mixed farming economy that developed when tobacco prices collapsed, led to a rapid expansion of indentured servitude and, later, forcible immigration and enslavement of Africans.The Province of Maryland was an active participant in the events leading up to the American Revolution, and echoed events in New England by establishing committees of correspondence and hosting its own tea party similar to the one that took place in Boston (The Boston tea party). By 1776 the old order had been overthrown, as Maryland citizens signed the Declaration of Independence, forcing the end of British colonial rule.