Bond Defaults and the Dilemma of the Indenture Trustee
... The Standard of Care for Indenture Trustees. Absent default, the indenture trustee’s duties to bondholders are straightforward and, indeed, even ministerial.15 In the event of default, however, those duties are governed by a post-Depression “prudent man” standard.16 Both payment and non-payment (so ...
... The Standard of Care for Indenture Trustees. Absent default, the indenture trustee’s duties to bondholders are straightforward and, indeed, even ministerial.15 In the event of default, however, those duties are governed by a post-Depression “prudent man” standard.16 Both payment and non-payment (so ...
Chapter 5 The Economy Revolution
... Revolutionary War. This is not to say most Americans know very much about this political revolution. The simple fact is that many contemporary Americans are almost wholly uneducated about the details of the American Revolution, do not know very much about even its surface causes, and many seem to kn ...
... Revolutionary War. This is not to say most Americans know very much about this political revolution. The simple fact is that many contemporary Americans are almost wholly uneducated about the details of the American Revolution, do not know very much about even its surface causes, and many seem to kn ...
2 The Middle Colonies: Farms and Cities
... The tolerant attitude of many settlers in the Middle Colonies did not prevent slavery in the region. In 1750, about 7 percent of the Middle Colonies’ population was enslaved. As in New England, many people of African descent lived and worked in cities. New York City had a larger number of people of ...
... The tolerant attitude of many settlers in the Middle Colonies did not prevent slavery in the region. In 1750, about 7 percent of the Middle Colonies’ population was enslaved. As in New England, many people of African descent lived and worked in cities. New York City had a larger number of people of ...
g. The Thirteen Colonies
... New England colonies included: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusettes, and New Hampshire. New England had thin, rocky soil, difficult for farming. Natural resources included wild game, berries and wood. Roger Williams believed in freedom of religion and was against taking land from Native America ...
... New England colonies included: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusettes, and New Hampshire. New England had thin, rocky soil, difficult for farming. Natural resources included wild game, berries and wood. Roger Williams believed in freedom of religion and was against taking land from Native America ...
Religion, Culture - Eisenhower Junior High School
... if those ships offered cheaper rates. The Navigation Acts also prevented the colonists from sending certain products, such as sugar or tobacco, outside the area that made up England's empire. The colonists at first accepted the trade laws because they were guaranteed a place to sell their raw materi ...
... if those ships offered cheaper rates. The Navigation Acts also prevented the colonists from sending certain products, such as sugar or tobacco, outside the area that made up England's empire. The colonists at first accepted the trade laws because they were guaranteed a place to sell their raw materi ...
Summary
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
3 - The English Colonies in North America
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
The Middle Colonies later became the states of New
... the Hudson attracted diverse business. Abundant forests attracted the lumbering and shipbuilding industries to the Middle Colonies. New York and Philadelphia became important ports. While the Middle Colonies had far more industry than the Southern Colonies, it still did not rival the industry of New ...
... the Hudson attracted diverse business. Abundant forests attracted the lumbering and shipbuilding industries to the Middle Colonies. New York and Philadelphia became important ports. While the Middle Colonies had far more industry than the Southern Colonies, it still did not rival the industry of New ...
In the mid-1700s, a German schoolteacher named Gottlieb
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
... When the nightmarish voyage ended, Mittelberger had to stay on board until his service was bought. Most indentured servants had to work for their masters for three to six years, but commitments varied according to the servants’ age and strength. As Mittelberger noted, “young people, from 10 to 15 ye ...
Colonial America - Lincoln Co Schools
... at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Investors in the London Company were disappointed that gold and silver were not found in Virginia, but the company did establish various kinds of trade, with the biggest breakthrough being in the cultivation and processing of tobacco. ...
... at Plymouth, Massachusetts. Investors in the London Company were disappointed that gold and silver were not found in Virginia, but the company did establish various kinds of trade, with the biggest breakthrough being in the cultivation and processing of tobacco. ...
Colonial Recruitment Poster
... the outside world. It was worked by slaves and indentured servants who lived on the plantation. It not only raised a cash crop but produced most of its own food and other necessities. Usually located along a riverbank, it had its own docking facilities to enable ocean‐going sailing ships to load and ...
... the outside world. It was worked by slaves and indentured servants who lived on the plantation. It not only raised a cash crop but produced most of its own food and other necessities. Usually located along a riverbank, it had its own docking facilities to enable ocean‐going sailing ships to load and ...
Terms for Those Owning or Controlling Those in Servitude
... If you want to go directly to a definition, you can click on its name below. Some words are repeated because they belong in more than one category. If you need help, just ask. Terms in the Column Headings in the History Changes Link ................................................................... ...
... If you want to go directly to a definition, you can click on its name below. Some words are repeated because they belong in more than one category. If you need help, just ask. Terms in the Column Headings in the History Changes Link ................................................................... ...
Chapter 3 Colonial Ways of Life 1607-1763
... • Mercantilist also believed that a country should be self-sufficient in raw materials; therefore, a country needed colonies so that it would not have to pay out gold and silver, but could sell products back to the colonies to make money. • FOR COLONIES – it gave them a market for their raw material ...
... • Mercantilist also believed that a country should be self-sufficient in raw materials; therefore, a country needed colonies so that it would not have to pay out gold and silver, but could sell products back to the colonies to make money. • FOR COLONIES – it gave them a market for their raw material ...
Scholarship Research
... class, but their origins tended to be similar. Most shared the same faith, most were of the same generation, and most came from the same area in the south of England. Reasons for coming also tended to be similar. England, during this time period, had an economy of scarcity where land, work, and food ...
... class, but their origins tended to be similar. Most shared the same faith, most were of the same generation, and most came from the same area in the south of England. Reasons for coming also tended to be similar. England, during this time period, had an economy of scarcity where land, work, and food ...
Three Cultures Meet
... • The middle colonies were home to multiple religious groups who generally believed in religious tolerance, including Quakers in Pennsylvania, Huguenots and Jews in New York, and Presbyterians in New Jersey. • These colonies had more flexible social structures and began to develop a middle class of ...
... • The middle colonies were home to multiple religious groups who generally believed in religious tolerance, including Quakers in Pennsylvania, Huguenots and Jews in New York, and Presbyterians in New Jersey. • These colonies had more flexible social structures and began to develop a middle class of ...
The Colonies
... Chesapeake, and one out of eight was black. In 1650, slavery was still a relatively minor institution in Virginia and Maryland but, beginning in the 1670s, tobacco planters began a transition from servant to slave labor that portended slavery's full adoption and institutionalization in the American ...
... Chesapeake, and one out of eight was black. In 1650, slavery was still a relatively minor institution in Virginia and Maryland but, beginning in the 1670s, tobacco planters began a transition from servant to slave labor that portended slavery's full adoption and institutionalization in the American ...
The American Colonies: Introduction This chapter begins with a
... chance to acquire land and wealth. The planter paid the cost of transportation and provided the servant with food and shelter. As many as half of the indentured servants died before their servitude ended, but those who survived were likely to acquire their own farms. More than two‐ thirds of the s ...
... chance to acquire land and wealth. The planter paid the cost of transportation and provided the servant with food and shelter. As many as half of the indentured servants died before their servitude ended, but those who survived were likely to acquire their own farms. More than two‐ thirds of the s ...
Chapter 4 - Northside Middle School
... 1. Southern Society. As slavery spread so did the gap in the social structure 2. The 18th century was marked with an increase of wealth and status esp in the middle colonies 3. 70% of the leaders of the Virginia legislature came from the “FFV’s” 4. Social Structure went Plantation owners on top, the ...
... 1. Southern Society. As slavery spread so did the gap in the social structure 2. The 18th century was marked with an increase of wealth and status esp in the middle colonies 3. 70% of the leaders of the Virginia legislature came from the “FFV’s” 4. Social Structure went Plantation owners on top, the ...
Unit Outline: North America, 1492-1763 - AP Central
... IV. Political development in the colonies until 1750 A. Official designations 1. Royal colonies (Virginia, New York, later Georgia) 2. Governance set up in charters (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island) 3. Proprietary colonies (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Carolinas, New Jersey) B. Political struct ...
... IV. Political development in the colonies until 1750 A. Official designations 1. Royal colonies (Virginia, New York, later Georgia) 2. Governance set up in charters (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island) 3. Proprietary colonies (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Carolinas, New Jersey) B. Political struct ...
DIFFERENTIATING INSTRUCTION: TIERED ACTIVITIES
... landlord paid for their passage to America. After they had served for the time specified in the contract—usually about 4 to 6 years—the landlord restored their freedom. In 1619 the first Africans arrived in Jamestown. It is not known whether they arrived as indentured servants or as enslaved workers ...
... landlord paid for their passage to America. After they had served for the time specified in the contract—usually about 4 to 6 years—the landlord restored their freedom. In 1619 the first Africans arrived in Jamestown. It is not known whether they arrived as indentured servants or as enslaved workers ...
8-1.3 England`s 13 Colonies PPT Notes English and European
... system would help create large tobacco plantations. Growing tobacco required a lot of land and it also required a lot of workers. _________________ were used at first. Indentured servants were poor people who agreed to work for someone who paid their travel expenses to a colony. Indentured servants ...
... system would help create large tobacco plantations. Growing tobacco required a lot of land and it also required a lot of workers. _________________ were used at first. Indentured servants were poor people who agreed to work for someone who paid their travel expenses to a colony. Indentured servants ...
Chapter 2
... Indentured servants – signed a contract to work for 4 – 7 years for those who paid their ship fare to America approx. 75% of early colonists arrived as indentured servants Living conditions were poor, sickness was common; many died before term ended Those who survived gained freedom and could cl ...
... Indentured servants – signed a contract to work for 4 – 7 years for those who paid their ship fare to America approx. 75% of early colonists arrived as indentured servants Living conditions were poor, sickness was common; many died before term ended Those who survived gained freedom and could cl ...
Honors U
... resulted in eight years of peace between the Jamestown settlers and the Native Americans, which would have helped Jamestown to grow and prosper, mainly through its cultivation of tobacco. Indentured Servant – People who work for a certain period of time in exchange for passage. Historians believe th ...
... resulted in eight years of peace between the Jamestown settlers and the Native Americans, which would have helped Jamestown to grow and prosper, mainly through its cultivation of tobacco. Indentured Servant – People who work for a certain period of time in exchange for passage. Historians believe th ...
Unit 1 Notes
... i. Both sides wanted to protect their economic interests in fur trade ii. Long-standing dispute between British and French over land holdings iii. War started in colonies, but spread to Europe as part of the Seven Years War E. Albany Plan of Union - planned united defense with the Iroquois to help a ...
... i. Both sides wanted to protect their economic interests in fur trade ii. Long-standing dispute between British and French over land holdings iii. War started in colonies, but spread to Europe as part of the Seven Years War E. Albany Plan of Union - planned united defense with the Iroquois to help a ...