The Colonies
... King Charles II to colonize the region south of Virginia. The proprietors planned to siphon settlers from Barbados and other colonies and encourage them to develop an export crop. They established a permanent English beachhead in the southern part of the colony at Charles Towne (later Charleston) in ...
... King Charles II to colonize the region south of Virginia. The proprietors planned to siphon settlers from Barbados and other colonies and encourage them to develop an export crop. They established a permanent English beachhead in the southern part of the colony at Charles Towne (later Charleston) in ...
chapter 4powerpoint
... New England Confederation New England Confederation was a Union of four colonies consisting of the two Massachusetts colonies (The Bay colony and Plymouth colony) and the two Connecticut colonies (New Haven and scattered valley settlements) in 1643. The purpose of the confederation was to defend ag ...
... New England Confederation New England Confederation was a Union of four colonies consisting of the two Massachusetts colonies (The Bay colony and Plymouth colony) and the two Connecticut colonies (New Haven and scattered valley settlements) in 1643. The purpose of the confederation was to defend ag ...
Chapter 03 - Expansion and Diversity
... representatives, or burgesses, initially met as a single body with the council to pass laws. During the 1650s the legislature split into two chambers—the House of Burgesses and the Governor’s Council, whose members held lifetime appointments. Maryland o 1632 land grant went to Lord Baltimore (Ceci ...
... representatives, or burgesses, initially met as a single body with the council to pass laws. During the 1650s the legislature split into two chambers—the House of Burgesses and the Governor’s Council, whose members held lifetime appointments. Maryland o 1632 land grant went to Lord Baltimore (Ceci ...
Class Expectations - Cabarrus County Schools
... Twenty years passed before England tried to establish another colony (“Lost Colony”). ...
... Twenty years passed before England tried to establish another colony (“Lost Colony”). ...
The Early English Colonies
... Self-governing colonies, including Rhode Island and Connecticut, formed when the king granted a charter to a joint-stock company, and the company then set up its own government independent of the crown. The king could revoke the colonial charter at any time and convert a self-governing colony into a ...
... Self-governing colonies, including Rhode Island and Connecticut, formed when the king granted a charter to a joint-stock company, and the company then set up its own government independent of the crown. The king could revoke the colonial charter at any time and convert a self-governing colony into a ...
The American Colonies: Introduction This chapter begins with a
... Notwithstanding, more than once the Indians refused to trade their corn to the settlers, but the English brutally broke that boycott by attacking the uncooperative Indians, pillaging their villages, and confiscating their corn. Despite receiving or taking food from the Indians, Jamestown failed t ...
... Notwithstanding, more than once the Indians refused to trade their corn to the settlers, but the English brutally broke that boycott by attacking the uncooperative Indians, pillaging their villages, and confiscating their corn. Despite receiving or taking food from the Indians, Jamestown failed t ...
Colonial America
... • A colony governed directly by the King or Queen (usually a royal governor) ...
... • A colony governed directly by the King or Queen (usually a royal governor) ...
England`s Early Colonies
... B) He received help from the Spanish governor of Florida. C) He had the colonists grow tobacco and send it to England. D) He got the Indians to supply the colony with food and supplies. ...
... B) He received help from the Spanish governor of Florida. C) He had the colonists grow tobacco and send it to England. D) He got the Indians to supply the colony with food and supplies. ...
Chapter 2
... opposition to England’s separation from the Roman Catholic Church – not allowed to worship freely Lord Baltimore (Cecilius Calvert) given charter to start Maryland as refuge for English Catholics; named in honor of England’s queen Henrietta Maria Proprietary colony – owners controlled the govern ...
... opposition to England’s separation from the Roman Catholic Church – not allowed to worship freely Lord Baltimore (Cecilius Calvert) given charter to start Maryland as refuge for English Catholics; named in honor of England’s queen Henrietta Maria Proprietary colony – owners controlled the govern ...
Present - Images
... – Originally part of New York, it was signed over to two other English Nobleman. ...
... – Originally part of New York, it was signed over to two other English Nobleman. ...
chapter3
... All colonial trade had to be carried out on English ships New rules on nationality of captain and crew of ships Enumerated commodities that could be shipped from the colony of origin only to England or another English ...
... All colonial trade had to be carried out on English ships New rules on nationality of captain and crew of ships Enumerated commodities that could be shipped from the colony of origin only to England or another English ...
Middle Colonies
... council to deal with colonial affairs. The colonists wanted to have a representative government like the other English colonies. The Duke resisted but the people of New York would not give up. In 1691, the English government finally allowed New York to elect a legislature. ...
... council to deal with colonial affairs. The colonists wanted to have a representative government like the other English colonies. The Duke resisted but the people of New York would not give up. In 1691, the English government finally allowed New York to elect a legislature. ...
Henretta CHP 02 powerpoint.pptx
... mortality rate of more than 40% in the first year." • So why after 1660, were indentured servants increasingly replaced by African slaves?" ...
... mortality rate of more than 40% in the first year." • So why after 1660, were indentured servants increasingly replaced by African slaves?" ...
European Exploration and Colonization
... Who were the English nobility who received large land grants in Virginia from the King of England and helped settle the colony? ...
... Who were the English nobility who received large land grants in Virginia from the King of England and helped settle the colony? ...
COLONY NAME YEAR FOUNDED FOUNDED BY BECAME ROYAL
... Middle Colonies: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. This area was excellent for farming and included natural harbors. Farmers grew grain and raised livestock. The Middle Colonies also practiced trade like New England, but typically they were trading raw materials for manufactured item ...
... Middle Colonies: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. This area was excellent for farming and included natural harbors. Farmers grew grain and raised livestock. The Middle Colonies also practiced trade like New England, but typically they were trading raw materials for manufactured item ...
Write: Explain in your own words at least two of the rationales for
... Indies, whereby they are every where there, become most odious unto them, who would join with us or any other most willingly to shake of their most intolerable yoke, and have begun to do it already in divers places where they were Lords heretofore. […] • That the Queen of England's title to all the ...
... Indies, whereby they are every where there, become most odious unto them, who would join with us or any other most willingly to shake of their most intolerable yoke, and have begun to do it already in divers places where they were Lords heretofore. […] • That the Queen of England's title to all the ...
The Middle and Southern Colonies
... King Charles II gave the land to James, the Duke of York (hence the name New York) English, Dutch, Scandinavians, Germans, French, Native Americans, and enslaved Africans lived in New York Religious tolerance was allowed The fur trade was a major money maker for people in New York ...
... King Charles II gave the land to James, the Duke of York (hence the name New York) English, Dutch, Scandinavians, Germans, French, Native Americans, and enslaved Africans lived in New York Religious tolerance was allowed The fur trade was a major money maker for people in New York ...
Chapter 3 Section 4 p.76-83
... western Virginia, opposed the colonial government because it was dominated, or controlled, by easterners. Many westerners also resented Berkeley's pledge to stay out of Native American territory. Some settled in the forbidden areas. They then blamed the government for not protecting them. In 1676 Ba ...
... western Virginia, opposed the colonial government because it was dominated, or controlled, by easterners. Many westerners also resented Berkeley's pledge to stay out of Native American territory. Some settled in the forbidden areas. They then blamed the government for not protecting them. In 1676 Ba ...
Give Me Liberty! - Northwest ISD Moodle
... Fundamental Orders of Connecticut - based off of Massachusetts, except men could vote without being church members The Trial Of Anne Hutchinson ...
... Fundamental Orders of Connecticut - based off of Massachusetts, except men could vote without being church members The Trial Of Anne Hutchinson ...
CPUSH (Unit 1, #2)
... D. Limiting Dissent in New England 1. Puritans did not support dissent: a. Roger Williams was _____________________________ from Massachusetts when he demanded that Indians be paid for their land; He formed the _____________________________________ colony in 1636 b. Anne ___________________________ ...
... D. Limiting Dissent in New England 1. Puritans did not support dissent: a. Roger Williams was _____________________________ from Massachusetts when he demanded that Indians be paid for their land; He formed the _____________________________________ colony in 1636 b. Anne ___________________________ ...
lee,robert u.s. history chapter 1 section 3
... While English Puritans were establishing colonies in ...
... While English Puritans were establishing colonies in ...
Maryland*s Acts of Toleration
... What was the trend for Native Americans when it came to land conflict with the English Colonists? Native Americans lost land because • They were ravaged by disease • Did not have modern weapons • They were eventually outnumbered on the East Coast ...
... What was the trend for Native Americans when it came to land conflict with the English Colonists? Native Americans lost land because • They were ravaged by disease • Did not have modern weapons • They were eventually outnumbered on the East Coast ...
THE 13 ORIGINAL COLONIES
... • The climate in Virginia was mild winters and hot, humid summers. The rain and fertile soil made the colony an excellent place to farm. • The main crop was tobacco. • The Church of England was the official religion in ...
... • The climate in Virginia was mild winters and hot, humid summers. The rain and fertile soil made the colony an excellent place to farm. • The main crop was tobacco. • The Church of England was the official religion in ...
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.