4.1
... Those who survived the Middle Passage faced another terror when they reached American ports—the slave market. There they were put up for sale as laborers to plantation owners. The Life of the Slave Some enslaved Africans on plantations did housework, but most worked in the fields. Many enslaved work ...
... Those who survived the Middle Passage faced another terror when they reached American ports—the slave market. There they were put up for sale as laborers to plantation owners. The Life of the Slave Some enslaved Africans on plantations did housework, but most worked in the fields. Many enslaved work ...
If - NYS Historic Newspapers
... — „ ...v..,^^v „*„ ^n**tne 28th"of**M3y, 1754, ended with the fall of Quebec the 13tb of September, 1759. ttconttaiwdr on the ocean for three years longer, and then, In 17t>3, its issues were settled by the treaty of peace of Paris. In that treaty France surrendered to England all her possessions in ...
... — „ ...v..,^^v „*„ ^n**tne 28th"of**M3y, 1754, ended with the fall of Quebec the 13tb of September, 1759. ttconttaiwdr on the ocean for three years longer, and then, In 17t>3, its issues were settled by the treaty of peace of Paris. In that treaty France surrendered to England all her possessions in ...
The American Revolution SETTING THE STAGE Philosophes such
... prosperity, a new sense of identity was growing in the colonists’ minds. By the mid-1700s, colonists had been living in America for nearly 150 years. Each of the 13 colonies had its own government, and people were used to a great degree of independence. Colonists saw themselves less as British and m ...
... prosperity, a new sense of identity was growing in the colonists’ minds. By the mid-1700s, colonists had been living in America for nearly 150 years. Each of the 13 colonies had its own government, and people were used to a great degree of independence. Colonists saw themselves less as British and m ...
DIFFERENTIATING INSTRUCTION: TIERED ACTIVITIES
... Representative Government The colony’s government and its very existence were threatened by a Native American uprising in 1622. The local Native American tribe, the Powhatan, were alarmed by the expanding tobacco plantations and the growing English population. On March 22, the Powhatan launched an a ...
... Representative Government The colony’s government and its very existence were threatened by a Native American uprising in 1622. The local Native American tribe, the Powhatan, were alarmed by the expanding tobacco plantations and the growing English population. On March 22, the Powhatan launched an a ...
PPT-European Colonization - Social Circle City Schools
... British Colonies in North America ■ Motivations: Many different reasons – Economic: Escape poverty or gain wealth from cash crop farming –Religious: For religious freedom & to escape religious persecution – Political: Fear during the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution ■ As a result, the Britis ...
... British Colonies in North America ■ Motivations: Many different reasons – Economic: Escape poverty or gain wealth from cash crop farming –Religious: For religious freedom & to escape religious persecution – Political: Fear during the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution ■ As a result, the Britis ...
Potential Immigrant
... British Colonies in North America ■ Motivations: Many different reasons – Economic: Escape poverty or gain wealth from cash crop farming –Religious: For religious freedom & to escape religious persecution – Political: Fear during the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution ■ As a result, the Britis ...
... British Colonies in North America ■ Motivations: Many different reasons – Economic: Escape poverty or gain wealth from cash crop farming –Religious: For religious freedom & to escape religious persecution – Political: Fear during the English Civil War & Glorious Revolution ■ As a result, the Britis ...
Contact-black-and-white
... • Jacques Cartier explored St Lawrence in 1530s. Samuel de Champlain est a permanent settlement at Quebec in 1608. Travel/trade across upper Great Lakes, Robert La Salle will sail down the Mississippi in 1682, New Orleans founded 1718 to block Spanish growth in Gulf of Mexico • Also used trade patte ...
... • Jacques Cartier explored St Lawrence in 1530s. Samuel de Champlain est a permanent settlement at Quebec in 1608. Travel/trade across upper Great Lakes, Robert La Salle will sail down the Mississippi in 1682, New Orleans founded 1718 to block Spanish growth in Gulf of Mexico • Also used trade patte ...
European Colonies in America
... • Several colonies formed the United Colonies of New England, or the New England Confederation in 1643. • Salutary neglect, which was the British officials’ tendency to rule the colonies leniently, benefited the colonies. • Local governments (town meetings, counties, parishes and local governors) ru ...
... • Several colonies formed the United Colonies of New England, or the New England Confederation in 1643. • Salutary neglect, which was the British officials’ tendency to rule the colonies leniently, benefited the colonies. • Local governments (town meetings, counties, parishes and local governors) ru ...
Three Cultures Meet
... exchanged for the glass beads and hawks’ bells. They willingly traded everything they owned….They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features…They do not bear arms, and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance. ...
... exchanged for the glass beads and hawks’ bells. They willingly traded everything they owned….They were well-built, with good bodies and handsome features…They do not bear arms, and do not know them, for I showed them a sword, they took it by the edge and cut themselves out of ignorance. ...
PDF sample
... colonize in North America from the Potomac to the northern border of present-day Maine. They were called the Virginia Company of London and the Virginia Company of Plymouth, respectively. These were joint-stock companies, which raised their capital by the sale of shares of stock. Companies of this s ...
... colonize in North America from the Potomac to the northern border of present-day Maine. They were called the Virginia Company of London and the Virginia Company of Plymouth, respectively. These were joint-stock companies, which raised their capital by the sale of shares of stock. Companies of this s ...
Chapter 3 Colonial America 1587-1770
... daughter gave birth Virginia Dare was the first English child born in North America White explored the area and drew pictures of what he saw In a book illustrated by white, another colonist described the Native American towns the settlers encountered: “Their towns are small… a village may contain bu ...
... daughter gave birth Virginia Dare was the first English child born in North America White explored the area and drew pictures of what he saw In a book illustrated by white, another colonist described the Native American towns the settlers encountered: “Their towns are small… a village may contain bu ...
Voyages of Discovery
... The “age of discovery” resulted in the greatest human catastrophe the world has ever known. Cultural differences between European and Amerindians were immense; major conflict occurred in the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries. ...
... The “age of discovery” resulted in the greatest human catastrophe the world has ever known. Cultural differences between European and Amerindians were immense; major conflict occurred in the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries. ...
Jamestown and the first economic settlers
... people and America became appealing for a chance at a better life. ...
... people and America became appealing for a chance at a better life. ...
Unit 1 Notes
... ii. George Whitefield’s sermons got the spirit churning inside his followers iii. United the colonies for the first time iv. Created centers of learning – Princeton, Brown and Rutgers F. FYI… i. African American culture – religion was center of community ii. Half the farmers in the colonies did not ...
... ii. George Whitefield’s sermons got the spirit churning inside his followers iii. United the colonies for the first time iv. Created centers of learning – Princeton, Brown and Rutgers F. FYI… i. African American culture – religion was center of community ii. Half the farmers in the colonies did not ...
Presentation
... colonials created bitter feelings ■As a result, English leaders felt that a major reorganization of its American empire was necessary! ...
... colonials created bitter feelings ■As a result, English leaders felt that a major reorganization of its American empire was necessary! ...
From Discovery to Independence: An Outline of American History
... Economic Development) which stretched from what is today Maine as far south as North Carolina; and the Netherlands at the mouth of the Hudson River). It took until well into the eighteenth century for England to assert its domination over North America. France claimed a huge territory in the interio ...
... Economic Development) which stretched from what is today Maine as far south as North Carolina; and the Netherlands at the mouth of the Hudson River). It took until well into the eighteenth century for England to assert its domination over North America. France claimed a huge territory in the interio ...
The American Colonies: Introduction This chapter begins with a
... The seventeenth‐century Chesapeake was fundamentally a servant society, with about 80 percent of new arrivals working as indentured servants. As indentured servants, English workers contracted their labor for a period of four to seven years in return for passage to Virginia and the chance to acqu ...
... The seventeenth‐century Chesapeake was fundamentally a servant society, with about 80 percent of new arrivals working as indentured servants. As indentured servants, English workers contracted their labor for a period of four to seven years in return for passage to Virginia and the chance to acqu ...
The American Colonies
... • The Algonquian division of labor was simply by gender. Men’s work consisted of periods of intense exertion in which they traveled extensively from their encampment (especially in fall and winter) hunting, warring, building canoes, tools & weapons, alternating with periods of comparative ease (suc ...
... • The Algonquian division of labor was simply by gender. Men’s work consisted of periods of intense exertion in which they traveled extensively from their encampment (especially in fall and winter) hunting, warring, building canoes, tools & weapons, alternating with periods of comparative ease (suc ...
Key Terms and People Section Summary
... joint-stock companies businesses in which a group of people invests together Christopher Columbus a sailor from Genoa, Italy Ferdinand Magellan a Portuguese sea captain Northwest Passage a path through North America that would allow ships to sail from the Atlantic to the Pacific Columbian Exchange t ...
... joint-stock companies businesses in which a group of people invests together Christopher Columbus a sailor from Genoa, Italy Ferdinand Magellan a Portuguese sea captain Northwest Passage a path through North America that would allow ships to sail from the Atlantic to the Pacific Columbian Exchange t ...
Discovery - HistoryOfTheCosmos
... 1. Best Known Explorers, Countries they Sailed for, Areas Explored: Giovanni Verrazano: Mariner who explored the East coast of the United States and Nova Scotia under the commission of France in 1524. He was commissioned to claim new lands in the New World and find a route to China. He was the first ...
... 1. Best Known Explorers, Countries they Sailed for, Areas Explored: Giovanni Verrazano: Mariner who explored the East coast of the United States and Nova Scotia under the commission of France in 1524. He was commissioned to claim new lands in the New World and find a route to China. He was the first ...
The Colonies
... to drive the English out. From this point on, the colonists no longer deemed the Indians necessary for their survival; instead, they concluded that their settlement's existence depended on the destruction of all Indians in the vicinity. From Private Company to Royal Government The shocking mortality ...
... to drive the English out. From this point on, the colonists no longer deemed the Indians necessary for their survival; instead, they concluded that their settlement's existence depended on the destruction of all Indians in the vicinity. From Private Company to Royal Government The shocking mortality ...
106442-lec-3-18th-century-developments0
... Became cheaper than Dutch smuggled tea. Knocked out many merchant middlemen, who made their money shipping from England to the colonies. B7) 1773-Boston Tea Party--Lord North became convinced that he could no longer be easy on colonists and that they must be brought into line. ...
... Became cheaper than Dutch smuggled tea. Knocked out many merchant middlemen, who made their money shipping from England to the colonies. B7) 1773-Boston Tea Party--Lord North became convinced that he could no longer be easy on colonists and that they must be brought into line. ...
The Age of Exploration - DHS United States History
... membership created by New England in 1662. Many felt that the people of the English colonies were drifting away from their original religious purpose. First-generation settlers were beginning to die out. while their children and grandchildren often expressed less religious piety, and more desire f ...
... membership created by New England in 1662. Many felt that the people of the English colonies were drifting away from their original religious purpose. First-generation settlers were beginning to die out. while their children and grandchildren often expressed less religious piety, and more desire f ...
Colonial Economics
... • Andros and his government were arrested and sent to England. New York: • Rebellion broke out • Royal rule returned to New York, but it was granted an elected assembly. ...
... • Andros and his government were arrested and sent to England. New York: • Rebellion broke out • Royal rule returned to New York, but it was granted an elected assembly. ...
Document
... • Andros and his government were arrested and sent to England. New York: • Rebellion broke out • Royal rule returned to New York, but it was granted an elected assembly. ...
... • Andros and his government were arrested and sent to England. New York: • Rebellion broke out • Royal rule returned to New York, but it was granted an elected assembly. ...
Province of New York
The Province of New York (1664–1783) was an English and later British crown territory that originally included all of the present U.S. states of New York, New Jersey, Delaware and Vermont, along with inland portions of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine, as well as eastern Pennsylvania. The majority of this land was soon reassigned by the Crown, leaving territory that included the valleys of the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers, and Vermont. The territory of western New York was Iroquois land, also disputed between the English colonies and New France, and that of Vermont was disputed with the Province of New Hampshire.The province resulted from the Dutch Republic surrender of Provincie Nieuw-Nederland to the Kingdom of England in 1664. Immediately after, the province was renamed for James, Duke of York, brother of Charles II of England. The territory was one of the Middle Colonies, and ruled at first directly from England.The New York Provincial Congress of local representatives declared itself the government on May 22, 1775, first referred to the ""State of New York"" in 1776, and ratified the New York State Constitution in 1777. While the British regained New York City during the American Revolutionary War using it as its military and political base of operations in North America, and a British governor was technically in office, much of the remainder of the former colony was held by the Patriots. British claims on any part of New York ended with the Treaty of Paris of 1783.