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Colonial American society • You will view three slide shows in my absence. This is the first • This will give you just enough of an understanding of America’s colonial institutions to help you make sense of the course of US history • You will view these at home, and read an associated document in class the next day First, a little reality--America was not “discovered” by Europeans, nor was it empty. Major and minor Indian tribes filled the hemisphere, and some had societies just as advanced as the Europeans. As many were farming tribes, they had already altered the landscape profoundly--in fact, New England had already been converted into farmland through tree clearing before the Pilgrims even arrived. 2ndly, as these maps suggest, the English had the smallest area of control in the “New World.” Spain’s territory was the largest, followed by France. Even Portugal’s land holdings were larger. More interestingly, the Spanish and French colonials worked very closely with the Indians in their empires. They baptized them, and often intermarried with them. The English refused to do this. See if you can figure out why as we go along (and also--think of the consequences of this). We will take a closer look at “New Spain” next semester, and we will skip “New France” altogether. Instead, you are going to take a closer look at two regions in the British colonies-1. The Chesapeake colonies (which will also help explain the Lower South Colonies) 2. And the New England Colonies. The Chesapeake Colonies Jamestown is the oldest English settlement in what would become the US, but historians don’t talk about it very much. We prefer to remember the Pilgrims in Massachusetts, even though they came later and did less interesting stuff. This slide show will give you hints about Americans prefer not to remember Jamestown. Unsurprisingly, the Chesapeake colony was not founded on this basis. MelGibson/Capt John Smith was not rescued by Pocahontas, in the company of talking animals and poorly written musical numbers. It was more like this: “The systematic slaughter of the Powhatan Indians … reached its apogee in Virginia during the 1650s, yet it proceeded without interruption until the entire Chesapeake had been ethnically cleansed of its diverse indigenous peoples. Estimates vary on the number of Chesapeake Indians dispossessed and massacred for their rich tidewater lands, but whatever figure to which historians eventually agree is beside the point. All acknowledge it was conscious and deliberate genocide. By the end of the seventeenth century only charred remains were left of Chesapeake Indian society. Virginia colony administrators referred to the genocide as ‘land improvement.’” --from The Origin of Violence in Virginia: A Brief History By Jonathan Scott Boring informational slide The first thing is, the English colonies in the “New World” were not founded by the King’s army, or by armor-clad conquistadores, as in the Spanish colonies, or even by Mel Gibson. They were founded by private companies, called joint-stock companies, which were made up by a number of investors pooling their money together (like modern corporations). These joint-stock companies wanted to make profits of the raw materials found in America, while others hoped to find gold. Furthermore, some English officials hoped to push the increasing numbers of poor and unemployed people out of the cities and across the ocean. In other words, the early colonists were not seeking religious asylum as in Massachusetts. They were either company investors or workers hired by the company. And they were pretty incompetent at the beginning. May, 1607. 3 ships from the London Company land in Virginia, with orders to find gold and a sea-route to India (!) A record log tells us that within a month they were able to complete the building of a large triangular fort on the banks of a river the Indians knew as "Powhatan's River," or "Powhatan's Flu." The settlers named it the James, after their King. Interesting informational slide 1 “At first the climate seemed mild, the Indians friendly. As a military officer named John Smith wrote, "heaven and earth never agreed better to frame a place for man's habitations.” Then came blistering heat, swarms of insects spawned in the nearby wetlands, unfit water supplies, typhus, starvation, fierce winters, Indian attacks, shiploads of inappropriately-prepared "Colonists" (sent from a changing England that had no other place for them), and even a period of tyrannical martial law when missing church 3 times was a capital offense” From http://www.tobacco.org/History/Jamestown.html Interesting informational slide 2 “The troubles were exacerbated by the colonists themselves. Many of them we could call gentlemen-adventurers, "whose breeding," a contemporary said, "never knew what a day's labour meant." These were men, often lesser scions of nobility, with no future in overpopulated England, who were lured by the Virginia Company with promises of land and wealth--much as people were lured to California during the Gold Rush. But there was no gold in Virginia, and these "prospectors" didn't know how to farm, didn't know how to hunt, and--possibly feeling betrayed by the Virginia Company's promises, and lacking any land of their own--were not known for their spirit of cooperation either among themselves, nor with the local Indians of the Powhatan confederacy.” From http://www.tobacco.org/History/Jamestown.html John Smith This guy was a tough little s.o.b. who took over leadership in 1608, expelled the governor, ordered the gentlemen to work, formed an army to defend the fort from Indians, and tried to make peace with the neighboring tribes. Pocahontas did not fall in love him, though he claimed she did save his life when her father Powhatan wanted to kill him. He lied a lot…but is credited with saving the settlement. And then he was sent home in 1609, and things got worse… Interesting informational slide 3 “Then another river-freezing, icicled winter hit, and with it a period so bad it was later called the Starving Time. Arms and valuable work-tools were traded for a pittance in food. The fields lay fallow. Housing was used as firewood. The weak settlers were easy pickings for the contemptuous Indians. Trapped within their walls by the natives, the Jamestown residents ate their way through their livestock, their pets, mice, rats--and each other. Many turned to cannibalism, sneaking out at night--braving Indian ambush--to dig up the graves of both English and Indian dead. One contemporary wrote of a man who secretly killed his wife and ate her, until only the head was left. The author wrote --in a tasteless joke that has spanned centuries--"Now, whether she was better roasted, boiled or carbonadoed (grilled), I know not, but of such a dish as powdered (salted) wife I never heard of.” On May 24, 1610, approaching Jamestown, they came upon only 60 gaunt survivors of the "Starving Time"--nearly 90% of the colony had died during the winter.” From http://www.tobacco.org/History/Jamestown.html English Migration: 1610-1660 Jamestown survived, however, obviously, and must have eventually prospered, since this chart of English migration indicates Virginia received more people than New England. The West Indies dwarfs both put together though. The reason was the sugar plantation. But we won’t talk about that since they aren’t part of the US, and so don’t matter. So why did Virginia become popular? The Englishman who did marry Pocahontas, John Rolfe, learned that his wife knew quite a bit about growing a narcotic plant called tobacco, which was then becoming popular in England due to its odd effects on the smoker— which included talkativeness, a heightened state of awareness, and an altered state of consciousness. The king thought tobacco was a “vile weed.”* But he “could not ignore the enormous import duties Rolfes' Virginia tobacco brought to the royal treasury--Londoners and others around the world liked its taste and began demanding it. Since all sales had to be made through London, the English treasury grew with every transaction. Rolfes' trip was a success. “Tobacco became the rage, tobacco and nothing else. We have reports of it being grown in the very streets of Jamestown. Laws had to be passed forcing farmers to devote a percentage of their efforts to growing food. By 1619 Jamestown had exported 10 tons of tobacco to Europe and was a boomtown. The export business was going so well the colonists were able to afford two imports which would greatly contribute to their productivity and quality of life: 20 Blacks from Africa and 90 women from England. The Africans were paid for in food; each woman cost 120 pounds of tobacco. By 1639 Jamestown had exported 750 tons of tobacco. Tobacco was the American colonies' chief export. The Jamestown colonists had not found gold, nor a route to the South Seas, nor the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island. But they had found tobacco. Tobacco had brought the settlement from wretched failure to giddying success. Tobacco had created the need for labor at any price (even institutionalized slavery), and--since it wore out the soil every 4-7 years--the mad rush for land all through the waterways of the Chesapeake Bay--or, as the entire area soon became known, "Tobacco Coast.” http://www.tobacco.org/History/Jamestown.html Thus, the British colonies in America were founded on a cash-crop economy based on an addictive drug, and which was produced by forced labor! By this scene in 1619, Jamestown had developed into a proper city. Compare this picture to the miserable little fort from earlier. * One of the reasons the king thought Tobacco should be illegal is that stoned people might start fires, but another reason was that people used to smoke in special meeting houses and occasionally talk about politics and political books, especially books that suggested that perhaps the king had too much power. They also drank coffee in these meeting houses. Thus coffee and tobacco were considered dangerous substances—but the effects on your health was a secondary concern! Jamestown Colonization Pattern: 1620-1660 The tobacco economy had consequences for Virginia’s physical lay-out. Tobacco requires land to grow it, so farmers tended to purchase large lots of it. It also exhausts the soil quickly, so farmers constantly had to look for new lots to buy. These large lots became known as “plantations.” And these plantations soon spread inward from the coasts as coastal soils depleted. This painting of a plantation is from 1805, but suggests the physical layout of Chesapeake society, as well as its class hierarchy. The wealthy landowner lived in a “big house” or manor and tried to look as rich as possible—like a lord in England. A series of small farmers rented or bought land from him, serving the big house with its food. The landowner had his own merchants to settle his accounts, collect his tobacco and send it on to England. In return, the landowner received the latest wares from London. In other words, all life revolved around the landowner, who sat at the top of a pyramid of power and wealth. The further down the pyramid you went, the less money and power you had. And the less “freedom.” Though the king appointed a royal governor to oversee the colonies, and guarantee the king’s cut of tobacco sales, the biggest landowners were given some authority to govern themselves. This was a legacy of the joint-stock company that settled Jamestown, whose board of directors met weekly to organize the colony. This body was called the House of Burgesses, and was modeled loosely on British Parliament. This was the first representative government in the Colonies, but only the richest men took part. Well, if you had landowners, you had to have people working the land. Do you remember all those poor people clogging up the cities back in England? Their future would be as “indentured servants.” Indenture Contract: Lasted for 5-7 years. Servants were promised “freedom dues” [land, $] They were Forbidden to marry. Between 1610-1614: only 1 in 10 outlived their indentured contracts! Headright System: Virginia landowners “purchased” servants and received 50 acres of land for each person whose passage they paid. This land would ostensibly go to the servants once their contracts had expired. Typically, indentured servants either sold themselves into servitude, or were assigned to be one by the courts. Servants could be bought and sold, could not marry without the permission of their owner, were subject to physical punishment, and saw their obligation to labor enforced by the courts. To ensure uninterrupted work by the female servants, the law lengthened the term of their indenture if they became pregnant. Both male and female laborers could be subject to violence, occasionally even resulting in death. The large number of servants who ran away or committed suicide suggests that the conditions of life during the period of bondage may not have been so different from slavery. Female indentured servants in particular might be raped and/or sexually abused by their masters. Servants worked as agricultural labor in the South, but also as craftsmen in the North. It has been estimated that contracted laborers comprised almost 80% of the total British and continental emigration to America prior to the Revolution. Rules for Indentured Servants “Whereas there are runaways in the colony who very often absent themselves from their masters service, And sometimes in two or three month’s cannot be found, whereby their said masters are at great charge in finding them, And many times even to the loss of their year’s labor before they be had, Be it therefore enacted and confirmed that all runaways that shall absent themselves from their said masters service shall be liable to make satisfaction by service at the end of their times by indenture double the time of service so neglected, And in some cases more. And if such runaways shall be found to transgress the second time or oftener that then they shall be branded in the cheek with the letter R. and pass under the statute of incorrigible rogues.” March 1642 This contract shows that indentures were treated as African slaves would be later, and in many cases, were cheated out of their rewards, since landowners held all political and legal power in the colonies, and servants could not testify on their own behalf. How many landowners lied in order to extend those contracts? We will never know… English Tobacco Label First Africans arrived in Jamestown in 1619. Their status was not clear -- perhaps slaves, perhaps indentured servants. Nor did they exist in great numbers at this point Initially, African slaves and white indentured servants worked side by side, subject to the same laws. Some African slaves gained their freedom and bought the contracts of white indentured servants! At some point, that changed, and plantations slowly changed to look like this. 17c Population in the Chesapeake 90000 80000 70000 60000 50000 White 40000 30000 Black 20000 10000 0 1607 1630 1650 1670 1690 The 1690s seems to be an important decade…why the sudden increase in African slaves? A few other things changed as well… After 1660, laws began to appear in Virginia that declared anyone born to slave would also be a slave. Further, the law made a sharp distinction between white indentured servants and black African slaves. In other words, no whites could be born into servitude. Only Blacks. Slavery was legally a race-based phenomenon. Another law appeared banning interracial marriage, specifically between white women and black men. White women who did so could be enslaved also. “Slaves charged with crimes in Virginia were tried in special non-jury courts created in 1692. The purpose of the courts was not to guarantee due process but to set an example speedily. The courts could resort to hideous punishments to reassert white authority. Offending slaves were hung, burned at the stake, dismembered, castrated and branded in addition to the usual whippings.” (from Susan DeFord in The Washington Post) Why did this happen? Why were Africans made permanent slaves and forbidden to associate with whites? Some historians think this was a natural response to the increasing wealth from tobacco, and to the existence of similar laws in the West Indies. In other words, slave owners in the Chesapeake colonies were just responding rationally to the existence of a very profitable model. Other historians think the Chesapeake landowners were afraid of their slaves and were using these laws to control them. But these laws appeared before there were significant numbers of slaves to control in Virginia and Maryland. So which came first--the slaves, or the laws to control to them? One particular historian has another theory, which begins with something known as Bacon’s Rebellion in 1676, and which documents you will read during class. Nathaniel Bacon’s Rebellion: 1676 Bacon was a “backcountry gentleman” who led 1,000 Virginians in a rebellion against Governor Berkeley in Jamestown. Nathaniel Bacon Governor William Berkeley Rebels resented Berkeley’s close relations with Indians for one main reason. Increasing numbers of farmers wanted to attack the local Indian and take their lands so they could create tobacco plantations, but Berkeley refused to let them. Why? Berkeley controlled the lucrative fur trade with the Indians in the area. But he was also reluctant to go to war with the powerful Powhatan Confederacy. As a result, when Indians and whites clashed on the frontier, Berkeley refused to retaliate for Indian attacks on frontier settlements. Bacon’s Rebellion: 1676 Bacon saw a chance to increase his landholdings, and perhaps even to take over the colony from Berkeley after the governor had declared Bacon a traitor for having killed members of a friendly Indian tribe. Bacon’s Rebellion Nathaniel Bacon prepared to lead the largest insurrection against a colonial government until the American Revolution. Many of the 1,000 men marching alongside Bacon were not only white farmers and indentured servants, but were black slaves and former black servants. All were promised freedom if they marched with Bacon. The rebel army attacked Indians, stole trade goods, and when they were denounced by Governor Berkeley, they turned and burned Jamestown to the ground. The governor fled for his life. Then, at the height of his victory, Bacon died of dysentery. But the memory of this rebellion lingered. Historian Edmund Morgan argues that “Large numbers of young, armed, single white men found themselves working for wages and without much prospect of becoming landowners. They became a source of peril in the society and created fears among the landowners of a rebellious underclass. Black slavery reduced the need to import white servants, opened opportunities for whites who remained to buy their own slaves and rise up in class, and enabled Virginia to build its free political institutions upon slavery.” This became the Chesapeake’s future working class--African slaves