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PIRATES POLITICAL INTELLECTUAL RELIGION ART/ARCHITECTURE TECHNOLOGY ECONOMIC SOCIAL ROANOKE First colony was named Virginia in honor of the virgin Queen Elizabeth. Sir Walter Raleigh attempted to start a colony on Roanoke Island, along the coast of presentday North Carolina, in 1585. It failed. A second attempt, made two years later, ended mysteriously. Became known as the "Lost Colony" First English attempt at a colony in the New World. JAMESTOWN (1607) FIRST PERMANENT ENGLISH SETTLEMENT IN THE NEW WORLD Physical Environment of Jamestown The colony nearly failed, due to – conflict with Native Americans – unrealistic expectations of settlers not used to doing hard work – poor location—near a swamp with disease-carrying mosquitoes – starvation – poor leadership What were they trying to find? London and Plymouth companies were expected to find gold. Jamestown Settlement To establish an American Colony, English businessmen first had to get a charter, or certificate of permission, from the king Joint Stock Company The charter allowed them to form a jointstock company—a company funded and run by a group of investors who share the company’s profits and losses. The company, the Virginia Company, sent 100 colonists to Virginia in 1607. They named their new village Jamestown, in honor of King James I. John Smith Elected leader in 1608. Put colonist to work. "If you don't work, you don't eat" Tobacco saved Jamestown The Promise of Land John Rolfe introduced Tobacco to the colony of Jamestown in 1612. Tobacco saved the Virginia colonists from failure. Large tobacco plantations sprang up around the Jamestown area. In order to produce large crops of tobacco, planters needed a way to persuade laborers to settle in America. The headright system granted each person who came to the colony 50 acres of land. This policy helped attract English settlers to America. Pocahontas and the Powhatan Pocahontas served as go between between the settlers and the indians. She converted to Christianity after 1613 and married John Rolfe. The help of local American Indians called Powhatan by the English prevented disaster. (gave settlers food and taught them how to grow corn. American Tobacco Imported By England Native American Resistence Native Americans React In 1622, Native Americans attacked Jamestown, intending to wipe out the English. The attempt failed, but 350 colonists (more than 25 percent of the population) and at least as many Native Americans were killed. Important: In 1624, James I becomes disgusted and turns Virginia into a Royal Colony = one under direct control of the King. Sends more troops and settlers to stop Indians. Indians vs. Colonists Colonists’ demand for land leads to warfare with Native Americans Colonists defeat Native Americans, force them off their land House of Burgesses First Representative legislative body in the colonies. Economic Differences Split Virginia Poor, former indentured servants demand legislative representation. 1676 uprising called Bacon’s Rebellion results. Bacon’s Rebellion 1. Settlers on the western frontier grew angry that the governor of Virginia refused to raise troops to defend them against Indian raids. 2. In 1676, Nathaniel Bacon raised a private army to fight the Native Americans and take their land. 3. Governor Berkeley declared Bacon a rebel and sent an army to stop him. 4. Bacon and his troops attacked and burned Jamestown, charging that the government had failed to protect the settlers, and that the settlers had too little a voice in government. Significance of Bacon’s Rebellion Bacon controlled almost all of Virginia until his death, after which Bacon’s Rebellion crumbled. Bacon’s rebellion was important because It was the first rebellion in the American colonies in which discontented frontiersmen took part. Indentured Servants Many English who wanted to sail to America could not afford the voyage. They became indentured servants, agreeing to work for a master for a period of time in exchange for the cost of the voyage, food, and shelter. Between 100,000 and 150,000 men and women came as servants to work in the fields of Virginia and Maryland during the 1600s. Many died young due to the hot climate and disease The Beginnings of Southern Slavery At the dawn of the American Revolution, 20 percent of the population in the thirteen colonies was of African descent. The legalized practice of enslaving blacks occurred in every colony, but the economic realities of the southern colonies perpetuated the institution first legalized in Massachusetts in 1641. Indentured servants to slavery Also, the indentured servants, especially once freed, began to pose a threat to the propertyowning elite. The colonial establishment had placed restrictions on available lands, creating unrest among newly freed indentured servants. In 1676, working class men burned down Jamestown, making indentured servitude look even less attractive to Virginia leaders. Also, servants moved on, forcing a need for costly replacements; slaves, especially ones you could identify by skin color, could not move on and become free competitors. Slavery in America We sometimes imagine that such oppressive laws were put quickly into full force by greedy landowners. But that's not the way slavery was established in colonial America. It happened gradually -- one person at a time, one law at a time, even one colony at a time. Story In England, in 1534, King Henry VIII broke with the Catholic Church to found a Protestant church. The English who complained that this new church continued too many Catholic practices were called Puritans, because they wanted a “purer” kind of church. Some Puritans started separate churches of their own and were called Separatists. Both Puritans and Separatists were persecuted (attacked) because of their beliefs. Massachusetts Bay Colony The Puritans wanted to reform, or purify, the Protestant Church. The Puritans convinced about 1,000 Native Americans to adopt Puritan religious beliefs and live in “praying towns.” The Puritan plan was to have well-ordered families in well-ordered towns in a well-ordered colony. (Intolerant). Many Puritans believed their colony, and indeed America, was a “city upon a hill”—an example to people throughout the world. The Pilgrims One group of Separatists, those who came to be called the Pilgrims, sailed to New England on the Mayflower. They sought the freedom to worship as they wanted. Ship sailed off course during trip. The Mayflower Compact = The Pilgrims made an agreement, that they would obey all of their government’s laws. This belief in self-government would later become one of the founding principles of the United States. In 1620, pilgrims founded the Plymouth Colony = The second permanent English Colony in North America Banishment, Roger Williams and Rhode Island Roger Williams founds Providence (Rhode Island) Roger Williams, a Separatist minister, was banished from Massachusetts in 1635, after quarreling with Puritan authorities. Williams argued two main points: – He believed that the English king did not have the authority to give away land in North America that rightly belonged to Native Americans. (unless land was purchased) – He also believed that the government should not interfere with or punish settlers over matters of religion. Rhode Island = His new settlement, called Providence, guaranteed religious tolerance of all settlers. He negotiated land with local Narragansett tribe. Connecticut and New Hampshire In 1638, a new group of Separatists from England founded New Haven, in presentday Connecticut. In 1662, New Haven and the Connecticut Colony were combined into a single royal colony. In 1638, John Wheelwright founded a colony at Exeter, in present-day New Hampshire. Anne Hutchison She said people needed neither the church or its ministers to interpret the Bible. (She challenges the status quo.) Her home in Boston became a center for those who wanted to think for themselves, and critics of the government gathered there. She was called to trial and the courts declared her “unfit for our society.” She was banished from Massachusetts in 1637. Half-way Covenant The Half-Way Covenant was a form of partial church 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 for material wealth. In response, the Half-Way Covenant provided a partial church membership for the children and grandchildren of church members Loss of Mass. Charter The colonial charter that the original Pilgrims had brought with them was revoked in 1684. By 1692, the year the witch situation began in Salem, Village, the charter had not been restored. With the loss of the charter the colonists ceased to have any legal right to their lands. The Great Migration (1630s) In the Great Migration, thousands of English settlers moved to New England. Though many of them were Puritans who migrated so they could worship as they pleased, they did not believe in religious tolerance—the idea that people of different religions should live in peace together. Salem Witch Trials In 1692, after the Salem witch trials, twenty men and women in Salem, Massachusetts, were executed because they were believed to be practicing witchcraft. Restoration Colonies The colonies formed after the Restoration of Charles II in England. New York Dutch set up New Amsterdam as center of fur-trading colony (1625) Dutch take over New Sweden on the Delaware River (1655) British duke of York takes colony, renames it New York (1664) Pennsylvania The Quakers Settle Pennsylvania William Penn, a Quaker, founds Pennsylvania (“Penn’s Woods”) Quakers, the Society of Friends, are pacifist Protestants who worship without formal ministers (Part of HOLY EXPERIMENT) - believe in equality, cooperation, religious toleration HOLY EXPERIMENT The "Holy Experiment" was an attempt by the Quakers to establish a community for themselves in Pennsylvania. They hoped it would show to the world how well they could function on their own without any persecution or dissension. Benjamin Franklin Symbol of social mobility and individualism Founded Poor Richards Almanack which contained advicee on a wide variety of topics Southern Colonies • Southern Colonies: Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia. • Virginia was the first; the others began as proprietary colonies. The Carolinas In 1663, King Charles II granted ownership of Carolina to a group of English noblemen, who split the territory into North and South Carolina in 1712. In 1719, South Carolina became a royal colony. North Carolina became a royal colony in 1729. Both colonies thrived on tobacco profits. Maryland Englishman George Calvert wanted to start a colony that would be a safe haven for Roman Catholics who were being persecuted in England. Calvert’s son, Lord Baltimore, established the colony in the Chesapeake Bay area. Baltimore ordered the adoption of the Maryland Toleration Act to ensure that Catholics were protected, as his father had wanted… however, non-Christians were not protected. Planters in Maryland used African slaves to farm tobacco. Georgia (Last of the Original 13) Georgia, established in 1732, was managed by trustees. (A trustee is someone entrusted to look after a business.) The trustees, led by James Oglethorpe, wanted Georgia to be a haven for English debtors. In return, the trustees, promised that Georgia would help protect the Southern Colonies from Spanish raiders based in Florida. Catholics were not allowed to settle in Georgia. Settlers had to follow strict rules—no liquor, or slaves. Economics A. Mercantilism 1. Favorable balance of trade (sell more goods than buy) 2. Trade must pass through home country (provide raw materials for mother country) 3. Create a self-sufficient economy (not depend on other countries) 4. Acquire as much gold and silver as possible. B. Navigation Acts 1. Colonies could export certain products only to England. Enumerated Goods or listed goods. 2. No country could trade with colonies unless goods shipped in colonial or English ships 3. Eventually forced Massachusetts to become a royal colony in 1684. Conflict with Indians The Pequot War (1637) The Pequot people of Connecticut were attacked by English settlers At Pequot fort on Mystic River, 395 out of 400 indians were killed King Philips War Tensions between natives and colonists grow for 40 years In 1675 chief Metacom leads several tribes in King Philip’s War. Attack Puritan 52 colonial villiages, destroying 16. 1/10 of colonist military age in New England killed. (higher percentage of population killed than American Revolution or American Civil War. Native Americans surrender due to casualties, disease, and famine To commemorate victory, Puritans exhibited Metacoms head at Plymouth for 20 years. Important: With his defeat, Native American power in southeastern New England was gone forever. Middle Passage The Middle Passage Middle passage—middle leg of transatlantic trade, transports slaves 20% or more of Africans on ship die from disease, abuse, suicide Slavery in the South Work from sunup to sundown. Slaves work full-time from age 12 until death All night, all night forever. Live in one-room dirt shacks. Disease infested. Resistance and Revolt Resistance and Revolt Slaves resist subservient position, try to escape 1739 Stono Rebellion—planter families killed, militia defeats slaves Colonists tighten slave laws, but slave rebellions continue Comparisons Great Awakening and Enlightenment emphasize opposing aspects of human experience – emotionalism and reason. Both caused people to question traditional authority. Both stressed importance of individual Enlightenment by emphasizing human reason Great Awakening by de-emphasizing the role of church authority. Colony European Settlement Virginia 1607 Maryland 1632 Reason for Settlement Search for gold, English outpost against Spain, Economics Leaders John Smith: John Rolfe; Thomas Dale Establish a Catholic settlement Cecilius Calvert escape religious persecution (Lord Baltimore) Charter 1 Joint-stock 1607-1624; royal 1625-1776 Economic Activities Tobacco Proprietary 1632-1691; royal Tobacco 1691-1716; proprietary 17161776 5 Carolina 1655 North Carolina 1670 South Carolina Georgia Land Wealth, refuge for small farmers; strengthen English possessions in the Americas 6 1732 Settlement for debtors; buffer Carolinas from Spanish Florida William Berkeley; Anthony AshleyCooper; John Locke Proprietary 1663-1712 Proprietary 1712-1729; royal 1729-1776 Proprietary 1712-1719; royal 1719-1776 Ship supplies, rice, indigo, tobacco James Oglethorpe Proprietary 1732-1752; royal 1752-1776 Rice, indigo,ship supplies