CHAPTER 2 Beginnings of English America, 1607-1660
... a. were all men, reflecting the Virginia Company’s interest in searching for gold as opposed to building a functioning society. b. included women and children, because the Virginia Company realized that a stable society would improve the settlers’ chances of success, economic and otherwise. c. inclu ...
... a. were all men, reflecting the Virginia Company’s interest in searching for gold as opposed to building a functioning society. b. included women and children, because the Virginia Company realized that a stable society would improve the settlers’ chances of success, economic and otherwise. c. inclu ...
give-me-liberty-3rd-edition-eric-foner-test-bank
... a. were all men, reflecting the Virginia Company’s interest in searching for gold as opposed to building a functioning society. b. included women and children, because the Virginia Company realized that a stable society would improve the settlers’ chances of success, economic and otherwise. c. inclu ...
... a. were all men, reflecting the Virginia Company’s interest in searching for gold as opposed to building a functioning society. b. included women and children, because the Virginia Company realized that a stable society would improve the settlers’ chances of success, economic and otherwise. c. inclu ...
Carlyle and the Tobacco Trade
... merchants of Whitehaven had grown their trade in tobacco from 1,639,193 pounds in 1712 to 4,419,218 pounds by 1740. The tobacco plantation culture in Virginia arose after 1612 when John Rolfe of the Virginia Company, showed that tobacco would grow well in Virginia and could be sold at a profit in En ...
... merchants of Whitehaven had grown their trade in tobacco from 1,639,193 pounds in 1712 to 4,419,218 pounds by 1740. The tobacco plantation culture in Virginia arose after 1612 when John Rolfe of the Virginia Company, showed that tobacco would grow well in Virginia and could be sold at a profit in En ...
chapter-3-lecture-notes
... Confederacy King James I issued royal charters to establish colonies. In 1607, Virginia Company founded Jamestown colony. Jamestown colonists saw themselves as conquistadors and were unable to support themselves. Depended on supplies and new colonists from England ...
... Confederacy King James I issued royal charters to establish colonies. In 1607, Virginia Company founded Jamestown colony. Jamestown colonists saw themselves as conquistadors and were unable to support themselves. Depended on supplies and new colonists from England ...
Chapter 3 PPT
... Confederacy King James I issued royal charters to establish colonies. In 1607, Virginia Company founded Jamestown colony. Jamestown colonists saw themselves as conquistadors and were unable to support themselves. Depended on supplies and new colonists from England ...
... Confederacy King James I issued royal charters to establish colonies. In 1607, Virginia Company founded Jamestown colony. Jamestown colonists saw themselves as conquistadors and were unable to support themselves. Depended on supplies and new colonists from England ...
Exploration and Technology
... of the explorers listed below. In the space provided, write the name of the explorer who would have been most likely to have made the statement. Balboa ...
... of the explorers listed below. In the space provided, write the name of the explorer who would have been most likely to have made the statement. Balboa ...
History in the Making
... followed the theology of Martin Luther, who broke with the Catholic Church in the late 1510s and early 1520s. When Elizabeth took the throne, hundreds of Protestants, called the “Marian exiles” because they had left England when Mary intensified persecution of non-Catholics, began to return to their ...
... followed the theology of Martin Luther, who broke with the Catholic Church in the late 1510s and early 1520s. When Elizabeth took the throne, hundreds of Protestants, called the “Marian exiles” because they had left England when Mary intensified persecution of non-Catholics, began to return to their ...
Colonies - My CCSD
... 4. ______________ was difficult in New England because of poor soil. 5. New England families had to rely on __________________ and _____________ to earn livings. 6. The climate in New England is _____________. 7. The established religion of New England was ____________. Religious ____________ did no ...
... 4. ______________ was difficult in New England because of poor soil. 5. New England families had to rely on __________________ and _____________ to earn livings. 6. The climate in New England is _____________. 7. The established religion of New England was ____________. Religious ____________ did no ...
Unit One: 1600-1763 - University City High School United States
... discovered the North American continent on October 12,1492. Though he was originally seeking a westward route to India, his fleet of ships consisting of the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria reached the island of Hispaniola, claiming it for Spain. Giovanni Verrazano: Mariner who explored the East coast of ...
... discovered the North American continent on October 12,1492. Though he was originally seeking a westward route to India, his fleet of ships consisting of the Nina, Pinta and Santa Maria reached the island of Hispaniola, claiming it for Spain. Giovanni Verrazano: Mariner who explored the East coast of ...
File
... Contrast Puritan Colonies with others: Because most colonies were created with financial or political gains in mind, puritan colonies had a special distinction from them. The puritans came to American seeking religious freedom and had a strong work ethic enabling them to achieve a success not seen i ...
... Contrast Puritan Colonies with others: Because most colonies were created with financial or political gains in mind, puritan colonies had a special distinction from them. The puritans came to American seeking religious freedom and had a strong work ethic enabling them to achieve a success not seen i ...
The Road to Independence
... Cities such as Cahokia depended on a combination of hunting, foraging, trading, and agriculture for their food and supplies. Influenced by the thriving societies to the south, they evolved into complex hierarchical societies that took slaves and practiced human sacrifice. In what is now the southwes ...
... Cities such as Cahokia depended on a combination of hunting, foraging, trading, and agriculture for their food and supplies. Influenced by the thriving societies to the south, they evolved into complex hierarchical societies that took slaves and practiced human sacrifice. In what is now the southwes ...
ENGLISH_COLONIZATION_Notes
... occurred. c. A company received all lands 50 miles north and south of the first settlement and 100 miles inland. B. Settlement of Jamestown (20 Dec 1606 - 23 May 1609) 1. London Company sent 3 ships with 105 settlers to Chesapeake Bay who settled around Jamestown (Apr 1607) while simultaneously, the ...
... occurred. c. A company received all lands 50 miles north and south of the first settlement and 100 miles inland. B. Settlement of Jamestown (20 Dec 1606 - 23 May 1609) 1. London Company sent 3 ships with 105 settlers to Chesapeake Bay who settled around Jamestown (Apr 1607) while simultaneously, the ...
Chapter 2: Colonizing America, 1519-1733
... region of North America, Hernando de Soto took a large expedition into the region north of Florida. De Soto’s expedition explored parts of what are today North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas. As they crisscrossed the region, the Spanish killed many Native Americans and raided thei ...
... region of North America, Hernando de Soto took a large expedition into the region north of Florida. De Soto’s expedition explored parts of what are today North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas. As they crisscrossed the region, the Spanish killed many Native Americans and raided thei ...
3 - The English Colonies in North America
... the colony of Pennsylvania. Like the early settlers of New England, the Quakers were looking for freedom to practice their religion. Others seeking religious freedom soon followed. Settlements of French, Dutch, Germans, Swedes, Danes, Finns, Scots, Irish, and English spread throughout the Middle Col ...
... the colony of Pennsylvania. Like the early settlers of New England, the Quakers were looking for freedom to practice their religion. Others seeking religious freedom soon followed. Settlements of French, Dutch, Germans, Swedes, Danes, Finns, Scots, Irish, and English spread throughout the Middle Col ...
Chapter 1 New World Beginnings I. The Shaping of North America
... civilization in Peru, took their gold and silver, and enslaved the Incas in 1532. Ponce de Le—n - Spanish explorer who sailed to the New World in 1513 and in 1521. He explored Florida, thinking it was an island, while looking for gold and the perhaps the fabled "fountain of youth." He failed in his ...
... civilization in Peru, took their gold and silver, and enslaved the Incas in 1532. Ponce de Le—n - Spanish explorer who sailed to the New World in 1513 and in 1521. He explored Florida, thinking it was an island, while looking for gold and the perhaps the fabled "fountain of youth." He failed in his ...
Exploration Colonization IFD presentation
... Roger Williams felt that people should not be forced to attend church. He left Massachusetts and founded the colony of Rhode Island which would guarantee religious freedom for all and the separation of church and state. Anne Hutchinson who had led Bible studies against the orders of the Church leade ...
... Roger Williams felt that people should not be forced to attend church. He left Massachusetts and founded the colony of Rhode Island which would guarantee religious freedom for all and the separation of church and state. Anne Hutchinson who had led Bible studies against the orders of the Church leade ...
Chapter 3 Section 2 p.64-71
... Connecticut. This was the first written constitution in America. It described the organization of representative government in detail. Good land drew colonists to Connecticut, but Rhode Island was settled by a minister named Roger Williams and other colonists who were forced out of Massachusetts. Wi ...
... Connecticut. This was the first written constitution in America. It described the organization of representative government in detail. Good land drew colonists to Connecticut, but Rhode Island was settled by a minister named Roger Williams and other colonists who were forced out of Massachusetts. Wi ...
In the mid-1700s, a German schoolteacher named Gottlieb
... When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching different ideas, the Puritans put him on trial. Williams believed that all people should be able to worship in any way they chose. “Forced worship,” he declared, “stinks in God’s nostrils.” The Puritans ordered Williams sent back to England. ...
... When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching different ideas, the Puritans put him on trial. Williams believed that all people should be able to worship in any way they chose. “Forced worship,” he declared, “stinks in God’s nostrils.” The Puritans ordered Williams sent back to England. ...
File - Mrs. Hulsey`s Class
... distinctive? • What were the main sources of discord in early New England? • How did the English Civil War affect the colonies in America? ...
... distinctive? • What were the main sources of discord in early New England? • How did the English Civil War affect the colonies in America? ...
Summary
... When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching different ideas, the Puritans put him on trial. Williams believed that all people should be able to worship in any way they chose. “Forced worship,” he declared, “stinks in God’s nostrils.” The Puritans ordered Williams sent back to England. ...
... When a young minister named Roger Williams began preaching different ideas, the Puritans put him on trial. Williams believed that all people should be able to worship in any way they chose. “Forced worship,” he declared, “stinks in God’s nostrils.” The Puritans ordered Williams sent back to England. ...
AMERICAN BEGINNINGS
... group of London merchants who hoped to further the Puritan cause and turn profit through trade with the Indians. • 1629-1641: Some 21,000 Puritans emigrated to MA. – this is known as the Great Migration. • This flow of population represented less than one-third of English emigration in the 1630s. • ...
... group of London merchants who hoped to further the Puritan cause and turn profit through trade with the Indians. • 1629-1641: Some 21,000 Puritans emigrated to MA. – this is known as the Great Migration. • This flow of population represented less than one-third of English emigration in the 1630s. • ...
Unit Summary 1 - Thomas County Schools
... over control of the land in North America located between the Mississippi River and Appalachian Mountains. Great Britain defeated the French and gained control over this territory. The British colonists expanded their boundaries westward knowing that the French were no longer a threat, however, the ...
... over control of the land in North America located between the Mississippi River and Appalachian Mountains. Great Britain defeated the French and gained control over this territory. The British colonists expanded their boundaries westward knowing that the French were no longer a threat, however, the ...
The Thirteen Colonies
... In the 1600s and 1700s, a new religious group, the Puritans, was developing a large following in England. They called themselves Puritans because they wanted to purify the Church of England, which they ...
... In the 1600s and 1700s, a new religious group, the Puritans, was developing a large following in England. They called themselves Puritans because they wanted to purify the Church of England, which they ...
http://www.historyisfun.org/PDFbooks/Yorktown-Teachers%20Resource%20Packet%205-8-03.pdf
... attention to its American outposts. The settlers naturally became accustomed to being selfsufficient and to solving their own problems. Communication was so slow that they could not always wait for the English government to give them advice or to fill their immediate needs. When England’s war with F ...
... attention to its American outposts. The settlers naturally became accustomed to being selfsufficient and to solving their own problems. Communication was so slow that they could not always wait for the English government to give them advice or to fill their immediate needs. When England’s war with F ...
History of Jamestown, Virginia (1607–99)
Jamestown was the first settlement of the Virginia Colony, founded in 1607, and served as capital of Virginia until 1699, when the seat of government was moved to Williamsburg. This article covers the history of the fort and town at Jamestown proper, as well as colony-wide trends resulting from and affecting the town during the time period in which it was capital.