Chapter 4 - Northside Middle School
... 5. Thoughts of Africa for salves instead of rebellious servants. This was a huge turning point toward slavery. D) Colonial Slavery 1. 10 million slaves to Americans in 3 centuries 400,000 ended up in North America. 2. The majority arrived after 1700 3. Africans to Jamestown in 1619 on a Dutch trad ...
... 5. Thoughts of Africa for salves instead of rebellious servants. This was a huge turning point toward slavery. D) Colonial Slavery 1. 10 million slaves to Americans in 3 centuries 400,000 ended up in North America. 2. The majority arrived after 1700 3. Africans to Jamestown in 1619 on a Dutch trad ...
Honors U
... that Pocahontas quickly learned the language and the culture of the English, and ended up marrying tobacco planter, John Rolfe, in 1614. The marriage is supposed to have resulted in eight years of peace between the Jamestown settlers and the Native Americans, which would have helped Jamestown to gro ...
... that Pocahontas quickly learned the language and the culture of the English, and ended up marrying tobacco planter, John Rolfe, in 1614. The marriage is supposed to have resulted in eight years of peace between the Jamestown settlers and the Native Americans, which would have helped Jamestown to gro ...
Unit 1 Notes
... A. Property owners were wealthy agrarian landowners that dominated the Southern economy i. Majority of farmers had small plots of land ii. Most New England owners lived modestly B. Colonial African Americans - forced migration from Africa i. Had few basic rights and some owned property ii. Once slav ...
... A. Property owners were wealthy agrarian landowners that dominated the Southern economy i. Majority of farmers had small plots of land ii. Most New England owners lived modestly B. Colonial African Americans - forced migration from Africa i. Had few basic rights and some owned property ii. Once slav ...
Chapter 3 Section 1- The Southern Colonies
... People didn’t live in towns that much but in scattered farms Some wealthy owners created large plantations where items such as tobacco were grown Under the Headright system, the London land company’s would give 50 acres of land to those who paid their own way, if they brought people with them ...
... People didn’t live in towns that much but in scattered farms Some wealthy owners created large plantations where items such as tobacco were grown Under the Headright system, the London land company’s would give 50 acres of land to those who paid their own way, if they brought people with them ...
apush---ch.---4
... Indentured Servants Indentured servants became the first means to meet this need for labor. In return for free passage to Virginia, a laborer worked for four to five years in the fields before being granted freedom. The Crown rewarded planters with 50 acres of land for every inhabitant they brought ...
... Indentured Servants Indentured servants became the first means to meet this need for labor. In return for free passage to Virginia, a laborer worked for four to five years in the fields before being granted freedom. The Crown rewarded planters with 50 acres of land for every inhabitant they brought ...
The 13 Colonies During the 1500s and 1600s, Spain, France, and
... growing season was longer than in any other region. Religion – Most people in the Southern Colonies were Anglican (Baptist or Presbyterian), though most of the original settlers from the Maryland colony were Catholic. Economy – The Southern economy was almost entirely based on farming. Rice, indigo, ...
... growing season was longer than in any other region. Religion – Most people in the Southern Colonies were Anglican (Baptist or Presbyterian), though most of the original settlers from the Maryland colony were Catholic. Economy – The Southern economy was almost entirely based on farming. Rice, indigo, ...
C-Notes US History
... ○ Relatively more liberal & open to non-members than the Puritans; open religious policy ○ Well advertised colony, wide-spread European migration (Germany, the Netherland, France, Sweden) ○ Philadelphia as the capital, designed and built by Penn. Quickly becomes the most populated city in the coloni ...
... ○ Relatively more liberal & open to non-members than the Puritans; open religious policy ○ Well advertised colony, wide-spread European migration (Germany, the Netherland, France, Sweden) ○ Philadelphia as the capital, designed and built by Penn. Quickly becomes the most populated city in the coloni ...
Chesapeake Colonies
... of land for each person whose passage they paid. This land would ostensibly go to the servants once their contracts had expired. ...
... of land for each person whose passage they paid. This land would ostensibly go to the servants once their contracts had expired. ...
CPUSH (Unit 1, #2)
... D. Limiting Dissent in New England 1. Puritans did not support dissent: a. Roger Williams was _____________________________ from Massachusetts when he demanded that Indians be paid for their land; He formed the _____________________________________ colony in 1636 b. Anne ___________________________ ...
... D. Limiting Dissent in New England 1. Puritans did not support dissent: a. Roger Williams was _____________________________ from Massachusetts when he demanded that Indians be paid for their land; He formed the _____________________________________ colony in 1636 b. Anne ___________________________ ...
Maryland*s Acts of Toleration
... What was the trend for Native Americans when it came to land conflict with the English Colonists? Native Americans lost land because • They were ravaged by disease • Did not have modern weapons • They were eventually outnumbered on the East Coast ...
... What was the trend for Native Americans when it came to land conflict with the English Colonists? Native Americans lost land because • They were ravaged by disease • Did not have modern weapons • They were eventually outnumbered on the East Coast ...
Slavery
... Middle Colonies were based on small farms, slavery was far less important – Given that slaves were few and posed little threat to the white majority, laws were less harsh than in the South – Slaves did represent a sizable percentage of urban laborers, particularly in New York and Philadelphia ...
... Middle Colonies were based on small farms, slavery was far less important – Given that slaves were few and posed little threat to the white majority, laws were less harsh than in the South – Slaves did represent a sizable percentage of urban laborers, particularly in New York and Philadelphia ...
SG04 - Caledonia High School
... 6. fertility- The ability to mate and produce abundant young. “The captive black population of the Chesapeake area soon began to grow not only through new imports bur also through its own ...
... 6. fertility- The ability to mate and produce abundant young. “The captive black population of the Chesapeake area soon began to grow not only through new imports bur also through its own ...
the terrible transformation
... Whether this information traveled by letter or by word of mouth, it provided an incentive for fair treatment that did not exist for migrants brought from Africa. Once deported across the Atlantic, Africans had no prospect of returning to their homeland, and few European sailors possessed the will, o ...
... Whether this information traveled by letter or by word of mouth, it provided an incentive for fair treatment that did not exist for migrants brought from Africa. Once deported across the Atlantic, Africans had no prospect of returning to their homeland, and few European sailors possessed the will, o ...
Unit 2 - River Mill Academy
... Mayflower Compact – set up a direct democracy for the colony colony struggled but received food from Indians Thanksgiving, Squanto ...
... Mayflower Compact – set up a direct democracy for the colony colony struggled but received food from Indians Thanksgiving, Squanto ...
Map of DeSoto`s 1539-43 exploration through the Southeast Virginia
... colonies attracted religious dissenters, they tended to migrate in families. Such family connections were less prevalent in the South. The economy of growing cash crops would require a labor force that would be unknown north of Maryland. Slaves and indentured servants, although present in the North, ...
... colonies attracted religious dissenters, they tended to migrate in families. Such family connections were less prevalent in the South. The economy of growing cash crops would require a labor force that would be unknown north of Maryland. Slaves and indentured servants, although present in the North, ...
17th Century Life
... boats through the middle passage. Only about 400,000 ended up in North America most slaves went to Spanish, and Portuguese South America or the West Indies. The Royal African Company had a monopoly on slave trade. ...
... boats through the middle passage. Only about 400,000 ended up in North America most slaves went to Spanish, and Portuguese South America or the West Indies. The Royal African Company had a monopoly on slave trade. ...
The Southern Colonies - Mater Academy Lakes High School
... DAILY LIFE IN VIRGINIA At first people lived in scattered farms Tobacco farmers established plantations Sometimes used as money ...
... DAILY LIFE IN VIRGINIA At first people lived in scattered farms Tobacco farmers established plantations Sometimes used as money ...
American Life in the Seventeenth Century, 1607
... d. the persecution of the colonists by King Charles II. ___ 4. African slavery became the prevalent form of labor in the 1680s when a. planters were no longer able to rely on white indentured servants as a labor force. b. the first captives were brought from Africa to the New World. c. blacks could ...
... d. the persecution of the colonists by King Charles II. ___ 4. African slavery became the prevalent form of labor in the 1680s when a. planters were no longer able to rely on white indentured servants as a labor force. b. the first captives were brought from Africa to the New World. c. blacks could ...
Americas-History-Chapter-2 ppt
... • Proprietor colony – royal grant of land granted by the King • Maryland Acts of Toleration (1649) – granted religious freedom to CHRISTIANS only, particularly Catholics • Maryland relied heavily on tobacco, like the other Chesapeake colony, Virginia ...
... • Proprietor colony – royal grant of land granted by the King • Maryland Acts of Toleration (1649) – granted religious freedom to CHRISTIANS only, particularly Catholics • Maryland relied heavily on tobacco, like the other Chesapeake colony, Virginia ...
power point 4
... workers less likely to rebel and this led to large-scale use of African slaves ...
... workers less likely to rebel and this led to large-scale use of African slaves ...
Ch - Wsimg.com
... a. With about _____ million Africans transported to the New World, the slave trade must have been a huge business—and a business conducted without much if any visible popular objection. Look at the chart on p. 70 and note that only about _____ percent of the slaves sent on the dreaded “Middle ______ ...
... a. With about _____ million Africans transported to the New World, the slave trade must have been a huge business—and a business conducted without much if any visible popular objection. Look at the chart on p. 70 and note that only about _____ percent of the slaves sent on the dreaded “Middle ______ ...