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Three Cultures Meet
Three Cultures Meet

... Interactions and consequences of interactions among Europeans, Africans, and American Indians The Indians lost their traditional territories and fell victim to diseases carried from Europe. ...
3 Colonies OH New Leaning Standards
3 Colonies OH New Leaning Standards

... economic  expansion  of  the  United  States.    Explain  how  this  sometimes  resulted  in  unintended  environmental   consequences.   ...
Untitled - cloudfront.net
Untitled - cloudfront.net

... Many factors influenced the surge m European expansion and colonization. Wrth the discovery of the Westem Hemisphere by Columbus came a tremendous amount of interest in the New Wodd. The factors cawing this rapid expansion and colonization included the need for markets, raw materials, the desire for ...
Religion, Culture - Eisenhower Junior High School
Religion, Culture - Eisenhower Junior High School

... 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 materials. Later, the colonists came to resent British restrictions. Merchants wanted to make their own manufactured goods and sell their ...
European Colonies in America
European Colonies in America

... – The difficult trip across the Atlantic from Africa was called the Middle Passage. – Kidnapped Africans were chained together in dark, filthy quarters below the decks and many died. – The African population in America grew quickly. • Slavery existed in both the North and South, but the South’s agri ...
Notes on Acts
Notes on Acts

... 1. designed to stop colonies from trading with other nations 2. colonists typically ignored 3. colonist had never questioned the right of Parliament to pass trade laws since they had regulated colonial trade for a while D. Colonists used to direct representation 1. almost all head of household white ...
Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution
Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution

... while others needed them, and therefore vetoed any bill banning the importation of slaves. Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists 1. The most honored profession in the colonial times was the clergy, which in 1775, had less power than before but still wielded a great amount of it. 2. Physicians were not hi ...
Social studies review flash cards
Social studies review flash cards

... man healthy, wealthy, and wise. Founded the first public library in the colonies, supported education; Post Master General for all the colonies Scientist: Enlightenment: believed that through study and knowledge a person could improve his position in life Member of the committee that wrote the Decla ...
The 13 Colonies During the 1500s and 1600s, Spain, France, and
The 13 Colonies During the 1500s and 1600s, Spain, France, and

... though whaling, trapping, shipbuilding, and logging were important also. Eventually, many New England shippers grew wealthy buying slaves from West Africa in return for rum, and selling the slaves to the West Indies in return for molasses. This process was called the “triangular trade.” In the Middl ...
Joint-Stock Colony
Joint-Stock Colony

... The economy and land distribution structure in the Chesapeake and points south differed greatly from New England. First, southern colonies were built around single staple crops: either tobacco, rice, or sugar. Growing tobacco was labor intensive as it was planted as seedlings and had to be staked; ...
1.2 Southern, Middle, and New England Colonies
1.2 Southern, Middle, and New England Colonies

... of the colony. It also implied the colonists' desire to be ruled by a local government, rather than England. This belief in representative government often took the form of town meetings, in which local, tax-paying citizens (usually property owners) met together to discuss and vote on issues. Once a ...
chapter three - Moore Public Schools
chapter three - Moore Public Schools

... A) eastward from the Appalachian Mountains. B) southward into Florida. C) southward from the Great Lakes. D) previously held by Britain and acquired from France. E) eastward from the Mississippi River. 34. What was likely to result from the interaction between population trends in the colonies and t ...
4.1
4.1

... Between the Tidewater and the Appalachian Mountains lay a region of hills and forests known as the backcountry. Its settlers included hardy newcomers to the colonies. They grew corn and tobacco on small family farms. Some had one or two enslaved Africans to help with the work. Backcountry farmers g ...
Final Review:
Final Review:

... List the Colonies that were founded for Religious reasons and the specific religious groups that founded the colony… Massachusetts: Pilgrims and Puritans Pennsylvania: Quakers Maryland: Catholics Rhode Island & Connecticut: founded by those who were persecuted and excommunicated from Massachusetts b ...
unit 1 workshop ppt - Bishop McGann
unit 1 workshop ppt - Bishop McGann

...  Carolinas-land grant to eight nobles as reward in 1663, 1729-two royal colonies formed (North and South Carolina) form the original proprietorship  South Carolina-by the middle of the 18th century the large rice-growing ...
Chapter 3and4and5 PPT Notes
Chapter 3and4and5 PPT Notes

... to gain religious freedom. Main Ideas • The Pilgrims and Puritans came to America to avoid religious persecution. • Religion and government were closely linked in the New England colonies. • The New England economy was based on trade and ...
STAAR card sort 3 File - Galena Park ISD Moodle
STAAR card sort 3 File - Galena Park ISD Moodle

... goods (glass, paper, tea) which were more expensive. This unequal trade would increase the wealth of the “Mother Country.” • Colonists were upset because they wanted to trade with other countries and manufacture their own goods ...
106442-lec-3-18th-century-developments0
106442-lec-3-18th-century-developments0

... E6a) Began in the colonies over the Ohio Valley area-fought for 2 years before Europeans joined in-demonstrated colonists growing independence. E6b) Lord Pitt decided that the turning point in the struggle for power between British and French is North America. As a result he focused British attentio ...
3.1 An Empire and its Colonies
3.1 An Empire and its Colonies

... growing staple crops – crops that are in constant demand. • In VA and NC the staple crop was tobacco. • In SC and GA it was rice. • African slaves supplied most of the labor on tobacco and rice plantations. trek2thecolonies.wikispaces.com ...
Copy of Ch. 1 Lecture Notes
Copy of Ch. 1 Lecture Notes

... Atlantic from Africa was called the Middle Passage. – Kidnapped Africans were chained together in dark, filthy quarters below the decks and many died. – The African population in America grew quickly. ...
Geography and Economics of the US Colonial Region
Geography and Economics of the US Colonial Region

... colonists in other regions – especially the South. It is often said that in New England the best crop that grew was rocks. New England’s soil was not very fertile. This was because glaciers had deposited rocks in prehistoric times in this area, making it hard to grow a large amount of crops. Many co ...
New York - Lee County Schools
New York - Lee County Schools

... Atlantic from Africa was called the Middle Passage. – Kidnapped Africans were chained together in dark, filthy quarters below the decks and many died. – The African population in America grew quickly. ...
Give Me Liberty (New British Policies)
Give Me Liberty (New British Policies)

... The French and Indian war went badly for the British colonies until Captain James Wolfe took Quebec in 1759. The British finally won three years later. ...
13 Colony Region Reading
13 Colony Region Reading

... southern colonies. The hot and wet summers and mild (easy) winters combined with rich fertile soil created agricultural magic. Just a few years before, the Virginia colonists had been cannibalizing one another to stay alive. But once people back in England realized that Virginia was flush with “brow ...
ch. 1 us history notes
ch. 1 us history notes

... Atlantic from Africa was called the Middle Passage. – Kidnapped Africans were chained together in dark, filthy quarters below the decks and many died. – The African population in America grew quickly. ...
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Cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies



The cuisine of the Thirteen Colonies includes the foods, eating habits, and cooking methods of the Thirteen British colonies in North America before the American revolution. It was derived from familiar traditions from the colonists’ home countries in the British Isles and particularly England. Many agricultural items came through trade with England and the West Indies. Certain familiar items grew better in the Old World than others, and this led to a dependence on imports which drove the daily lives of the colonists. However, the colonial diet was increasingly supplemented by new animal and plant foods indigenous to the New World.In the years leading up to 1776, a number of events led to a drastic change in the diet of the American colonists. As they could no longer depend on British and West Indian imports, agricultural practices of the colonists began to focus on becoming completely self-sufficient.
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