2 The Middle Colonies: Farms and Cities
... The excellent harbors along the coasts of the Middle Colonies were ideal sites for cities. New York City grew up at the mouth of the Hudson River, and Philadelphia was founded on the Delaware River. The merchants who lived in these growing port cities exported cash crops, especially grain, and impor ...
... The excellent harbors along the coasts of the Middle Colonies were ideal sites for cities. New York City grew up at the mouth of the Hudson River, and Philadelphia was founded on the Delaware River. The merchants who lived in these growing port cities exported cash crops, especially grain, and impor ...
CHAPTER THREE PUTTING DOWN ROOTS: OPPORTUNITY AND
... D) Many more immigrants came to New England than to the other colonies. E) Colonists from the southern colonies moved to New England in large numbers. Topic: Sources of Stability: New England Colonies of the Seventeenth Century 29. What role did women have in the New England colonies? A) They genera ...
... D) Many more immigrants came to New England than to the other colonies. E) Colonists from the southern colonies moved to New England in large numbers. Topic: Sources of Stability: New England Colonies of the Seventeenth Century 29. What role did women have in the New England colonies? A) They genera ...
Religion in the New England Colonies
... The Colonies exported ships : which means they were made in the Colonies. Imports and a shortage of master craftsmen. The colonists imported items from Britain when the same items were manufactured in the colonies because : the skilled craftspeople could not make enough products fast enough. Credit ...
... The Colonies exported ships : which means they were made in the Colonies. Imports and a shortage of master craftsmen. The colonists imported items from Britain when the same items were manufactured in the colonies because : the skilled craftspeople could not make enough products fast enough. Credit ...
1) Compare and Contrast the social, political, and economic
... Europeans began to import Africans as slaves as most of the Native population died off. Encomienda - gave nativists to colonists in order to Christianize them, basically slavery. Spain was the most powerful country on earth, a great navy and a lot of colonies in South America. Other Other European c ...
... Europeans began to import Africans as slaves as most of the Native population died off. Encomienda - gave nativists to colonists in order to Christianize them, basically slavery. Spain was the most powerful country on earth, a great navy and a lot of colonies in South America. Other Other European c ...
apwh-unit-mesoamerica-and-european-era-of
... weaving, copper and bronze metallurgy, and gold and silver working. The Inca did not introduce new technologies but made more efficient use of existing technology to increase the profits gained by the trade among the ecological zones of the Andean region. 6. Inca domination resulted in increased wea ...
... weaving, copper and bronze metallurgy, and gold and silver working. The Inca did not introduce new technologies but made more efficient use of existing technology to increase the profits gained by the trade among the ecological zones of the Andean region. 6. Inca domination resulted in increased wea ...
UNIT 2 Reading Summaries
... and fall of empires, such as Ghana or Dahomey. West Africa had also been heavily influenced by the coming of Islam. The arrival of Europeans was just the latest of many foreign influences that helped shape African culture. The Portuguese came first, pioneering the sea lanes from Europe to sub-Sahara ...
... and fall of empires, such as Ghana or Dahomey. West Africa had also been heavily influenced by the coming of Islam. The arrival of Europeans was just the latest of many foreign influences that helped shape African culture. The Portuguese came first, pioneering the sea lanes from Europe to sub-Sahara ...
Exploration Colonization IFD presentation
... Iron to Africa. Africa would pay in gold and send slaves to the West Indies. ...
... Iron to Africa. Africa would pay in gold and send slaves to the West Indies. ...
The French and Indian War
... war. In a colossal blunder, the colonists decided to make a preemptive strike against the neutral Narragansetts. In December of 1675, a force of one thousand soldiers from Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, and Connecticut Colony marched into Narragansett territory in southern Rhode Island a ...
... war. In a colossal blunder, the colonists decided to make a preemptive strike against the neutral Narragansetts. In December of 1675, a force of one thousand soldiers from Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, and Connecticut Colony marched into Narragansett territory in southern Rhode Island a ...
CHAPTER 2
... Colonies occasionally sold products to other countries…English gov’t still controlled all economic activities England’s Imperial Delay England’s series of obstacles that delayed the development of a consistent and continuous colonial policy: 1. Unenforced regulations (1621, all Virginia tobacc ...
... Colonies occasionally sold products to other countries…English gov’t still controlled all economic activities England’s Imperial Delay England’s series of obstacles that delayed the development of a consistent and continuous colonial policy: 1. Unenforced regulations (1621, all Virginia tobacc ...
Very Broad based Outline
... 3. The kings increased their wealth and power by means of territorial conquest. As the Aztec Empire increased in size, commoners lost their ability to influence political decisions and inequalities in wealth grew more severe. 4. The Aztecs increased agricultural production in the capital area by un ...
... 3. The kings increased their wealth and power by means of territorial conquest. As the Aztec Empire increased in size, commoners lost their ability to influence political decisions and inequalities in wealth grew more severe. 4. The Aztecs increased agricultural production in the capital area by un ...
Comparing Regional Cultures
... for their own use. None of these commodities could profitably be shipped to England, where a similar climate permitted production of the same crops. New Englanders did ship some products from their shores. They exported lumber from their forests and fish—especially cod—from the sea. They salted and ...
... for their own use. None of these commodities could profitably be shipped to England, where a similar climate permitted production of the same crops. New Englanders did ship some products from their shores. They exported lumber from their forests and fish—especially cod—from the sea. They salted and ...
The Road to Independence
... The early 1600s saw the beginning of a great tide of emigration from Europe to North America. Spanning more than three centuries, this movement grew from a trickle of a few hundred English colonists to a flood of millions of newcomers. Impelled by powerful and diverse motivations, they built a new c ...
... The early 1600s saw the beginning of a great tide of emigration from Europe to North America. Spanning more than three centuries, this movement grew from a trickle of a few hundred English colonists to a flood of millions of newcomers. Impelled by powerful and diverse motivations, they built a new c ...
Unit One: 1600-1763 - University City High School United States
... Christopher Columbus: Spanish explorer who, with the backing of Ferdinand V and Isabella I, 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 H ...
... Christopher Columbus: Spanish explorer who, with the backing of Ferdinand V and Isabella I, 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 H ...
File
... Puritan Migration: The term given to the migration of Puritans to America in the early 17th century. Following the restoration of James I to the throne Puritans in England became persecuted and with the accession of Charles I to the throne the situation became worse. The puritans fled England and ca ...
... Puritan Migration: The term given to the migration of Puritans to America in the early 17th century. Following the restoration of James I to the throne Puritans in England became persecuted and with the accession of Charles I to the throne the situation became worse. The puritans fled England and ca ...
An Empire and Its Colonies 1
... mercantilism. Mercantilism held that a country should try to get and keep as much bullion, or gold and silver, as possible. The more gold and silver a country had, argued mercantilists, the wealthier and more powerful it would be. For countries without the rich mines that Spain controlled in the Ame ...
... mercantilism. Mercantilism held that a country should try to get and keep as much bullion, or gold and silver, as possible. The more gold and silver a country had, argued mercantilists, the wealthier and more powerful it would be. For countries without the rich mines that Spain controlled in the Ame ...
The American Colonies
... British courts originally established to try cases involving smuggling or violations of the Navigation Acts which the British government sometimes used to try American criminals in the colonies. Trials in Admiralty Courts were heard by judges without a jury. 72. Triangular Trade The backbone of New ...
... British courts originally established to try cases involving smuggling or violations of the Navigation Acts which the British government sometimes used to try American criminals in the colonies. Trials in Admiralty Courts were heard by judges without a jury. 72. Triangular Trade The backbone of New ...
The Middle Colonies later became the states of New
... America from 1725 to 1840. Broad navigable rivers like the Susquehanna, the Delaware, and the Hudson attracted diverse business. Abundant forests attracted the lumbering and shipbuilding industries to the Middle Colonies. New York and Philadelphia became important ports. While the Middle Colonies ha ...
... America from 1725 to 1840. Broad navigable rivers like the Susquehanna, the Delaware, and the Hudson attracted diverse business. Abundant forests attracted the lumbering and shipbuilding industries to the Middle Colonies. New York and Philadelphia became important ports. While the Middle Colonies ha ...
The Colonies Come of Age
... To lower the debt, King George III chose George Grenville to serve as Prime Minister in 1763 He noticed smuggling of goods in colonies He is responsible for suggesting the Sugar Act to Parliament ...
... To lower the debt, King George III chose George Grenville to serve as Prime Minister in 1763 He noticed smuggling of goods in colonies He is responsible for suggesting the Sugar Act to Parliament ...
US HISTORY
... Oglethorpe (last British colony in America) Set up as a place where debtors could get a fresh start British officials also wanted it as a first line of defense b/w Spanish Florida and the rest of the colonies Oglethorpe built forts and the town of Savannah to defend against the Spanish ...
... Oglethorpe (last British colony in America) Set up as a place where debtors could get a fresh start British officials also wanted it as a first line of defense b/w Spanish Florida and the rest of the colonies Oglethorpe built forts and the town of Savannah to defend against the Spanish ...
The Early English Colonies
... In the end, Jamestown was saved—not by gold or silver—but because it had the perfect climate for growing tobacco. John Rolfe, an Englishman who married the Powhatan leader’s daughter, Pocahontas, introduced to the colony West Indian tobacco, a salable strain with many advantages over local varieties ...
... In the end, Jamestown was saved—not by gold or silver—but because it had the perfect climate for growing tobacco. John Rolfe, an Englishman who married the Powhatan leader’s daughter, Pocahontas, introduced to the colony West Indian tobacco, a salable strain with many advantages over local varieties ...
From Discovery to Independence: An Outline of American History
... North America made survival very difficult for Europeans unaccustomed* to North American conditions. And third, the North American Indians were not to be conquered by the sweep of a hand as those in the South. When Spanish colonial supremacy* came to an end in the early seventeenth century, the colo ...
... North America made survival very difficult for Europeans unaccustomed* to North American conditions. And third, the North American Indians were not to be conquered by the sweep of a hand as those in the South. When Spanish colonial supremacy* came to an end in the early seventeenth century, the colo ...
The Colonies
... King Charles II to colonize the region south of Virginia. The proprietors planned to siphon settlers from Barbados and other colonies and encourage them to develop an export crop. They established a permanent English beachhead in the southern part of the colony at Charles Towne (later Charleston) in ...
... King Charles II to colonize the region south of Virginia. The proprietors planned to siphon settlers from Barbados and other colonies and encourage them to develop an export crop. They established a permanent English beachhead in the southern part of the colony at Charles Towne (later Charleston) in ...
Potential Immigrant
... colonists could create local laws & taxes in their colonial assemblies –Royal governors were sent by the king, but they had little power ...
... colonists could create local laws & taxes in their colonial assemblies –Royal governors were sent by the king, but they had little power ...
PPT-European Colonization - Social Circle City Schools
... colonists could create local laws & taxes in their colonial assemblies –Royal governors were sent by the king, but they had little power ...
... colonists could create local laws & taxes in their colonial assemblies –Royal governors were sent by the king, but they had little power ...
The Atlantic World and Absolute Monarchs in Europe
... Settlements of people living in a new territory, linked with a parent country by trade and direct government control. During the 1500s and 1600s Spain, Portugal, England, France, and the Netherlands all established colonies in the New World (North and South America). Enriched by conquests in the Ame ...
... Settlements of people living in a new territory, linked with a parent country by trade and direct government control. During the 1500s and 1600s Spain, Portugal, England, France, and the Netherlands all established colonies in the New World (North and South America). Enriched by conquests in the Ame ...