Section 1: England and Its Colonies
... product raised for sale rather than for the farmer’s own use. Cash crops included tobacco, rice, and indigo. These planters raised their crops on large farms, called plantations, along the region’s rivers. Southern society was mostly rural. Charles Town (later called Charleston), in South Carolina, ...
... product raised for sale rather than for the farmer’s own use. Cash crops included tobacco, rice, and indigo. These planters raised their crops on large farms, called plantations, along the region’s rivers. Southern society was mostly rural. Charles Town (later called Charleston), in South Carolina, ...
Colonial Recruitment Poster
... 4. Lumbering. The great forests of New England were another important source of income for the colonists. Woodsmen felled the trees and hauled them overland by oxen or floated them downstream to nearby sawmills. Here the lumber was prepared for such commercial uses as building ships and houses. Othe ...
... 4. Lumbering. The great forests of New England were another important source of income for the colonists. Woodsmen felled the trees and hauled them overland by oxen or floated them downstream to nearby sawmills. Here the lumber was prepared for such commercial uses as building ships and houses. Othe ...
the terrible transformation
... rivals could be held in check. After agreeing to peace with Spain and giving up control of Northeast Brazil at mid-century, Dutch slave traders were actively looking for new markets. In England, after Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 he rewarded supporters by creating the Royal African ...
... rivals could be held in check. After agreeing to peace with Spain and giving up control of Northeast Brazil at mid-century, Dutch slave traders were actively looking for new markets. In England, after Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660 he rewarded supporters by creating the Royal African ...
(Survey) Chapter 3
... product raised for sale rather than for the farmer’s own use. Cash crops included tobacco, rice, and indigo. These planters raised their crops on large farms, called plantations, along the region’s rivers. Southern society was mostly rural. Charles Town (later called Charleston), in South Carolina, ...
... product raised for sale rather than for the farmer’s own use. Cash crops included tobacco, rice, and indigo. These planters raised their crops on large farms, called plantations, along the region’s rivers. Southern society was mostly rural. Charles Town (later called Charleston), in South Carolina, ...
Middle Colonies
... Penn designed the city himself, making him America’s first town planner. Penn also wrote Pennsylvania’s first constitution. ► Penn ...
... Penn designed the city himself, making him America’s first town planner. Penn also wrote Pennsylvania’s first constitution. ► Penn ...
Unit 1: Beginnings to 1861
... c. should now allow the colonies to sell to other countries, or engage in manufacturing; and should use English ships for transporting raw materials i. want maximum profit for England D. Controlling Colonial Trade a. Navigation Act – tightened control; sell certain goods only to England (sugar, toba ...
... c. should now allow the colonies to sell to other countries, or engage in manufacturing; and should use English ships for transporting raw materials i. want maximum profit for England D. Controlling Colonial Trade a. Navigation Act – tightened control; sell certain goods only to England (sugar, toba ...
APUSH Summer Assignment
... 1. Explain why England was slow to enter the colonization race and what factors finally led it to launch colonies in the early seventeenth century. (Pages 24-27) - Protestant Reformation/Ireland (Example from Torres) - In England, King Henry broke with the Roman Catholic Church - This break caused c ...
... 1. Explain why England was slow to enter the colonization race and what factors finally led it to launch colonies in the early seventeenth century. (Pages 24-27) - Protestant Reformation/Ireland (Example from Torres) - In England, King Henry broke with the Roman Catholic Church - This break caused c ...
New England Uprising
... ”Don’t fire ‘til you see the whites of their eyes!” --Israel Putnam or William Prescott ...
... ”Don’t fire ‘til you see the whites of their eyes!” --Israel Putnam or William Prescott ...
HIST101LectureGuidePartI
... Massachusetts several miles down the coast from today’s Boston. William Bradford was elected governor and the colonists cleared land together, and for a short while, owned the land communally before dividing up into parcels for each settler or family household. So, democracy and capitalism began alm ...
... Massachusetts several miles down the coast from today’s Boston. William Bradford was elected governor and the colonists cleared land together, and for a short while, owned the land communally before dividing up into parcels for each settler or family household. So, democracy and capitalism began alm ...
Chapter 4 - Northside Middle School
... 81 way to attract immigrants; gave 50 acres of land to anyone who paid their way and/or any plantation owner that paid an immigrants way; mainly a system in the southern colonies. 82 In the 1600's, Puritan preachers noticed a decline in the religious devotion of second-generation settlers. To combat ...
... 81 way to attract immigrants; gave 50 acres of land to anyone who paid their way and/or any plantation owner that paid an immigrants way; mainly a system in the southern colonies. 82 In the 1600's, Puritan preachers noticed a decline in the religious devotion of second-generation settlers. To combat ...
lee,robert u.s. history chapter 1 section 3
... The colonists responded by killing as many Native Americans as they could, even some from friendly tribes. For over a year the two sides waged a war of mutual brutality and destruction until food shortages, disease, and heavy casualties wore down the Native Americans’ resistance. ...
... The colonists responded by killing as many Native Americans as they could, even some from friendly tribes. For over a year the two sides waged a war of mutual brutality and destruction until food shortages, disease, and heavy casualties wore down the Native Americans’ resistance. ...
File - Tryon Palace
... America from England. Interestingly, Ogilby never travelled to America, instead trusting the work of explorers who had traveled to the New World. The interior of the North Carolina colony was produced by a map from John Lederer, a German explorer who journeyed into the mountains of North Carolina fo ...
... America from England. Interestingly, Ogilby never travelled to America, instead trusting the work of explorers who had traveled to the New World. The interior of the North Carolina colony was produced by a map from John Lederer, a German explorer who journeyed into the mountains of North Carolina fo ...
Ch1 summary - Mr Clotzman
... hunted, and fished. Life revolved around the family, and older people held special rank. Religion played an important role in life. Trading networks connected these kingdoms with other lands. Portuguese sailors arrived from Europe. They started large farms, or plantations, to grow sugar cane. Soon t ...
... hunted, and fished. Life revolved around the family, and older people held special rank. Religion played an important role in life. Trading networks connected these kingdoms with other lands. Portuguese sailors arrived from Europe. They started large farms, or plantations, to grow sugar cane. Soon t ...
Lesson 3 Middle Colonies
... New Netherland's success did not go unnoticed. The English wanted to gain control of the valuable Dutch colony. England insisted it had a right to the land based on John Cabot's explorations in the late 1400s. In 1664 the English sent a fleet to attack New Amsterdam. Peter Stuyvesant, governor of th ...
... New Netherland's success did not go unnoticed. The English wanted to gain control of the valuable Dutch colony. England insisted it had a right to the land based on John Cabot's explorations in the late 1400s. In 1664 the English sent a fleet to attack New Amsterdam. Peter Stuyvesant, governor of th ...
The American Colonies
... • Unlike their Virginia counterparts, these native Americans were not united and had very separate chiefdoms. Each had a leading sachem (chief) assisted by a council of lesser sachems, shamans and prestigious warriors. The Shaman was an intermediary between the spirit world and the human world and a ...
... • Unlike their Virginia counterparts, these native Americans were not united and had very separate chiefdoms. Each had a leading sachem (chief) assisted by a council of lesser sachems, shamans and prestigious warriors. The Shaman was an intermediary between the spirit world and the human world and a ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
Georgia and the American Experience
... • Royal Colony: colony directly governed by the King • Georgia became a Royal Colony in 1752; some people returned to Georgia who had left the colony while it was proprietary ...
... • Royal Colony: colony directly governed by the King • Georgia became a Royal Colony in 1752; some people returned to Georgia who had left the colony while it was proprietary ...
Colonies
... counties caused trouble among the settlers o Eventually colony broke away and formed a separate colony – Delaware. ...
... counties caused trouble among the settlers o Eventually colony broke away and formed a separate colony – Delaware. ...
APUSH TKarnes Summary: Chapter 3,The British Empire in America
... policy. As a result, American colonial assemblies, dominated by merchant elites who routinely evaded British maritime laws and resisted the rule of corrupt governors, grew accustomed to self-rule and viewed themselves as equals in the empire. Their belief in the assemblies that responded to popular ...
... policy. As a result, American colonial assemblies, dominated by merchant elites who routinely evaded British maritime laws and resisted the rule of corrupt governors, grew accustomed to self-rule and viewed themselves as equals in the empire. Their belief in the assemblies that responded to popular ...
Exploration and Exploitation in the Americas
... Environmental conflicts among native tribes competing for resources Rapid decline of fur animals ...
... Environmental conflicts among native tribes competing for resources Rapid decline of fur animals ...
chapter three - Moore Public Schools
... A) it bound the American colonists more tightly to England than ever before and made most of them realize they needed English protection from foreign powers such as the French B) it convinced most Americans to avoid further exploration and settlement of the Ohio and Mississippi valleys until after t ...
... A) it bound the American colonists more tightly to England than ever before and made most of them realize they needed English protection from foreign powers such as the French B) it convinced most Americans to avoid further exploration and settlement of the Ohio and Mississippi valleys until after t ...
HIST 1301 Homework 1 Name
... ____ 51. The assumption among ordinary people that wealth, education, and social prominence carried with them a right to public office was called a. liberalism. b. Lockeanism. c. deism. d. deference. e. suffrage. ____ 52. Deists shared the ideas of eighteenth-century European Enlightenment thinkers ...
... ____ 51. The assumption among ordinary people that wealth, education, and social prominence carried with them a right to public office was called a. liberalism. b. Lockeanism. c. deism. d. deference. e. suffrage. ____ 52. Deists shared the ideas of eighteenth-century European Enlightenment thinkers ...
Unit I terms and questions and charts
... Many of the northern colonies were religious in government (Theocracy) the ruling class was created by religious leaders and many peoples religious zealotry. New England Town Meeting “Best school of political liberty the world ever saw” (Thomas Jefferson) ...
... Many of the northern colonies were religious in government (Theocracy) the ruling class was created by religious leaders and many peoples religious zealotry. New England Town Meeting “Best school of political liberty the world ever saw” (Thomas Jefferson) ...
Colonial period of South Carolina
The history of the colonial period of South Carolina focuses on the English colonization that created one of the original Thirteen Colonies. Major settlement began after 1651 as the northern half of the British colony of Carolina attracted frontiersmen from Pennsylvania and Virginia, while the poor parts were populated by wealthy English planters who set up large plantations dependent on slave labor, for the cultivation of cotton, rice, and indigo. The Province of South Carolina was separated from the Province of North Carolina in 1712. Its capital city of Charleston became a major port for traffic on the Atlantic Ocean, and South Carolina developed indigo, rice and Sea Island cotton as commodity crop exports, making it one of the most prosperous of the colonies. A strong colonial government fought wars with the local Indians, and with Spanish imperial outposts in Florida, while fending the threat of pirates. Birth rates were high, food conditions were abundant, and these offset the disease environment of malaria to produce rapid population growth among whites. With the expansion of plantation agriculture, the colony imported numerous African slaves, who comprised a majority of the population by 1708. They were integral to its development.The colony developed a system of laws and self-government and a growing commitment to Republicanism, which patriots feared was threatened by the British Empire after 1765. At the same time, men with close commercial and political ties to Great Britain tended to be Loyalists when the revolution broke out. South Carolina joined the American Revolution in 1775, but was bitterly divided between Patriots and Loyalists. The British invaded in 1780 and captured most of the state, but were finally driven out.