Chapter 6: Life in the 13 Colonies: 1620-1763
... Colonial merchant ships followed regular trading routes. Some ships went directly from the colonies to England and back. Others followed what came to be called the triangular trade routes because the routes formed a triangle. On one leg of such a route, ships took fish, grain, meat, and lumber to th ...
... Colonial merchant ships followed regular trading routes. Some ships went directly from the colonies to England and back. Others followed what came to be called the triangular trade routes because the routes formed a triangle. On one leg of such a route, ships took fish, grain, meat, and lumber to th ...
Reforms, Revolutions, and War
... • The story of independence was a bit different in the Portuguese colony of Brazil. • When Napoleon invaded Portugal in 1807, the Portuguese royal family fled to Brazil. Lived their for ten years. • King John VI named the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro as the capital of the entire Portuguese empir ...
... • The story of independence was a bit different in the Portuguese colony of Brazil. • When Napoleon invaded Portugal in 1807, the Portuguese royal family fled to Brazil. Lived their for ten years. • King John VI named the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro as the capital of the entire Portuguese empir ...
Comparing Regional Cultures
... Community Life The New England Colonies granted land to men who banded together to establish a town. New England leaders favored compact settlement in towns to support public schools and to sustain a local church. As a result, more adults were literate in New England than in the other colonial regio ...
... Community Life The New England Colonies granted land to men who banded together to establish a town. New England leaders favored compact settlement in towns to support public schools and to sustain a local church. As a result, more adults were literate in New England than in the other colonial regio ...
The Thirteen Colonies
... ►Originally part of the Carolina Colony. ►Had great land for growing indigo (called the Blue Gold) & tobacco. ►Rice became the leading crop ►Many enslaved Africans worked in rice fields ...
... ►Originally part of the Carolina Colony. ►Had great land for growing indigo (called the Blue Gold) & tobacco. ►Rice became the leading crop ►Many enslaved Africans worked in rice fields ...
Reviewing Facts and Ideas
... the defeat of the Spanish Armada boosted English confidence. Spain was still the strongest country in Europe. However, English sea power was growing. In the 1600s England would soon plant permanent colonies of its own along the Atlantic Coast of North America. Yet England would not be the only Europ ...
... the defeat of the Spanish Armada boosted English confidence. Spain was still the strongest country in Europe. However, English sea power was growing. In the 1600s England would soon plant permanent colonies of its own along the Atlantic Coast of North America. Yet England would not be the only Europ ...
Jamestown in Founded (cont.)
... Why did England come to the aid of the Dutch in the mid-1500s? The Dutch were Protestant and part of the Spanish Empire, which was Catholic. Spain was trying to check the spread of Protestantism in the Netherlands. The Dutch rebelled, and England came to their aid against the Spanish. Click the mous ...
... Why did England come to the aid of the Dutch in the mid-1500s? The Dutch were Protestant and part of the Spanish Empire, which was Catholic. Spain was trying to check the spread of Protestantism in the Netherlands. The Dutch rebelled, and England came to their aid against the Spanish. Click the mous ...
Georgia History: Midterm Exam, Covering Units 1-5
... -Malcontents: Petitioned the trustees to allow slavery in Georgia, they argued that they would never be able to produce enough products to export. -Highland Scots: Were war like people that protected the Colony from Spanish and Native American Attacks and was stationed in Fort King George in Darien. ...
... -Malcontents: Petitioned the trustees to allow slavery in Georgia, they argued that they would never be able to produce enough products to export. -Highland Scots: Were war like people that protected the Colony from Spanish and Native American Attacks and was stationed in Fort King George in Darien. ...
Reading Summaries
... dismember, brand, hang, and burn thousands; privy searches rounded up thousands more masterless men and women” (50). forced into labor “Through the transatlantic institution of indentured servitude, merchants and their ‘spirits’ (i.e., abductors of children and adults) shipped some two hundred t ...
... dismember, brand, hang, and burn thousands; privy searches rounded up thousands more masterless men and women” (50). forced into labor “Through the transatlantic institution of indentured servitude, merchants and their ‘spirits’ (i.e., abductors of children and adults) shipped some two hundred t ...
Strayer Atlantic Revolutions pgs 778-804
... that excluded black slaves and, in some ways, white women as well.These conditions made for less poverty, more economic opportunity, fewer social differences, and easier relationships among the classes than in Europe.The famous economist Adam Smith observed that British colonists were “republican in ...
... that excluded black slaves and, in some ways, white women as well.These conditions made for less poverty, more economic opportunity, fewer social differences, and easier relationships among the classes than in Europe.The famous economist Adam Smith observed that British colonists were “republican in ...
A Store Almost in Sight - Iowa State University Digital Repository
... Even as the region was being transferred to Spain, the city of St. Louis was founded in 1763. St. Louis sat in the middle of a vast wilderness, at the meeting point of two of the greatest rivers on the continent. The town operated as a free-trade zone, outside the boundaries of French restrictions a ...
... Even as the region was being transferred to Spain, the city of St. Louis was founded in 1763. St. Louis sat in the middle of a vast wilderness, at the meeting point of two of the greatest rivers on the continent. The town operated as a free-trade zone, outside the boundaries of French restrictions a ...
The First English Settlements in America
... illnesses, starvation, and Native American attacks. The Native Americans who lived in the surrounding area were the tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy. They were ruled by Chief Powhatan, who took the name from the people he conquered. These Native Americans would prove to be a friend and a foe. Som ...
... illnesses, starvation, and Native American attacks. The Native Americans who lived in the surrounding area were the tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy. They were ruled by Chief Powhatan, who took the name from the people he conquered. These Native Americans would prove to be a friend and a foe. Som ...
Creating the New World Empire
... of the colonies to directly benefit the English government. They dictated to the colonists what they could and could not make or trade, and with whom they could and could not trade. One of the targets of the English Navigation Acts was the Netherlands. In the mid-seventeenth century, the Dutch poss ...
... of the colonies to directly benefit the English government. They dictated to the colonists what they could and could not make or trade, and with whom they could and could not trade. One of the targets of the English Navigation Acts was the Netherlands. In the mid-seventeenth century, the Dutch poss ...
Curriculum Map - Crawford Central School District
... World Empire led to the creation of enormous wealth for Spain but decimated Native culture. ...
... World Empire led to the creation of enormous wealth for Spain but decimated Native culture. ...
ENGLISH_COLONIZATION_Notes
... for which the company could trade and no gold existed in the area making agriculture the key to wealth and industry. b. Many early settlers were not used to gathering or producing their own food , "gentlemen" ignorant of woodlore who did not know how to get their own game and fish (although the area ...
... for which the company could trade and no gold existed in the area making agriculture the key to wealth and industry. b. Many early settlers were not used to gathering or producing their own food , "gentlemen" ignorant of woodlore who did not know how to get their own game and fish (although the area ...
3 - The English Colonies in North America
... be met with; for all commonly Marry before they are Twenty Years of Age.” Penn named his capital city Philadelphia, which is Greek for “City of Brotherly Love.” From there, he wrote great documents of government that made Pennsylvania the first democracy in America. 8. Maryland: A Southern Colony Th ...
... be met with; for all commonly Marry before they are Twenty Years of Age.” Penn named his capital city Philadelphia, which is Greek for “City of Brotherly Love.” From there, he wrote great documents of government that made Pennsylvania the first democracy in America. 8. Maryland: A Southern Colony Th ...
The Colonies
... • The colonies were beginning to prosper. Who gets the wealth? Who deserves to rule? • 1651: England’s Parliament passed a series of laws known as the Navigation Acts • These laws restricted the colonies shipping and trade ...
... • The colonies were beginning to prosper. Who gets the wealth? Who deserves to rule? • 1651: England’s Parliament passed a series of laws known as the Navigation Acts • These laws restricted the colonies shipping and trade ...
1.5-18th_Century_Colonies-Historysage
... 1. Only 1 in 7 Northerners were church members; less in the South 2. Toleration came about in large part due to non-church members. 3. The Anglican Church in the South and New York and the Congregational Church in New England were established and collected taxes from all colonists regardless of reli ...
... 1. Only 1 in 7 Northerners were church members; less in the South 2. Toleration came about in large part due to non-church members. 3. The Anglican Church in the South and New York and the Congregational Church in New England were established and collected taxes from all colonists regardless of reli ...
The Thirteen Colonies
... of the world. Salem and Boston became two of the largest Massachusetts Bay Colony settlements. In the following years, religious leaders like Thomas Hooker and Roger Williams would find the religious polic ...
... of the world. Salem and Boston became two of the largest Massachusetts Bay Colony settlements. In the following years, religious leaders like Thomas Hooker and Roger Williams would find the religious polic ...
1.3-New_England_Colonies-Historysage
... their faith and England's future. 1. Cambridge Agreement: signed in England; turned the corporate charter into a government that served as MBC’s constitution for many years. 2. Puritans now out of easy reach of royal authority & archbishop C. The "Great Migration" (1630’s) 1. By 1631, 2,000 colonist ...
... their faith and England's future. 1. Cambridge Agreement: signed in England; turned the corporate charter into a government that served as MBC’s constitution for many years. 2. Puritans now out of easy reach of royal authority & archbishop C. The "Great Migration" (1630’s) 1. By 1631, 2,000 colonist ...
The American Revolution and the Birth of the
... The first black slaves landed in Virginia in 1619. Their numbers at first grew slowly. In the eighteenth century, however, the importation of slaves soared. By 1763 there were 350,000 slaves – one in six of the overall population. Most came from west Africa. The demand for slaves was so high that th ...
... The first black slaves landed in Virginia in 1619. Their numbers at first grew slowly. In the eighteenth century, however, the importation of slaves soared. By 1763 there were 350,000 slaves – one in six of the overall population. Most came from west Africa. The demand for slaves was so high that th ...
The Huguenot Ancestry of Jane “Jinny” Sally
... came the Peter and Anthony, the Nassau, and a fourth ship whose name is lost to history. All together over 500 Huguenots arrived to claim the offer of a free homestead. They were pointed upstream toward an old Indian settlement that had been abandoned by the Monikan tribe. Another group of refugees ...
... came the Peter and Anthony, the Nassau, and a fourth ship whose name is lost to history. All together over 500 Huguenots arrived to claim the offer of a free homestead. They were pointed upstream toward an old Indian settlement that had been abandoned by the Monikan tribe. Another group of refugees ...
2014 ap summer reading study guide questions
... Chapter 17-The Great Plains Geographically, where is the Great Plains located? This was the most important animal in the Great Plains. Why did this animal’s population rapidly decline? Chapter 18-Imperial Wars and Crisis How did the French and Indian or Seven Years War start? In what ways ca ...
... Chapter 17-The Great Plains Geographically, where is the Great Plains located? This was the most important animal in the Great Plains. Why did this animal’s population rapidly decline? Chapter 18-Imperial Wars and Crisis How did the French and Indian or Seven Years War start? In what ways ca ...
The Middle Colonies later became the states of New
... Seutter's soninlaw, Tobias Conrad Lotter, was charged with the preparation and engraving of this map and it is his hand and style that we see here. The Seutter firm issued and reissued this map in several variants over the upcoming decade. In 1756 Lotter, following Suetter's death and his subseque ...
... Seutter's soninlaw, Tobias Conrad Lotter, was charged with the preparation and engraving of this map and it is his hand and style that we see here. The Seutter firm issued and reissued this map in several variants over the upcoming decade. In 1756 Lotter, following Suetter's death and his subseque ...
- The American Experience in the Classroom
... Hooper Jr., lent their names to a published address to Hutchinson lauding his performance in office. The address read as follows: We, the subscribers, merchants, traders, and others, inhabitants of Marblehead, beg leave to present your our valedictory address on this occasion . . . our most sincere ...
... Hooper Jr., lent their names to a published address to Hutchinson lauding his performance in office. The address read as follows: We, the subscribers, merchants, traders, and others, inhabitants of Marblehead, beg leave to present your our valedictory address on this occasion . . . our most sincere ...
Colonial American military history
Colonial American military history is the military record of the Thirteen Colonies from their founding to the American Revolution in 1775.