* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The history of the United States 1492-1877
Slavery in the colonial United States wikipedia , lookup
Thirteen Colonies wikipedia , lookup
Jamestown, Virginia wikipedia , lookup
Roanoke Colony wikipedia , lookup
Colonial American military history wikipedia , lookup
Province of Maryland wikipedia , lookup
Plymouth Colony wikipedia , lookup
Province of New York wikipedia , lookup
New Netherland wikipedia , lookup
Colonial period of South Carolina wikipedia , lookup
Dominion of New England wikipedia , lookup
Colonial South and the Chesapeake wikipedia , lookup
History of Jamestown, Virginia (1607–99) wikipedia , lookup
Colony of Virginia wikipedia , lookup
Massachusetts Bay Colony wikipedia , lookup
Jamestown supply missions wikipedia , lookup
Starving Time wikipedia , lookup
Province of Massachusetts Bay wikipedia , lookup
English overseas possessions in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms wikipedia , lookup
Catholic Church in the Thirteen Colonies wikipedia , lookup
Lecture 2 The development of British North America Methods of colonization Joint stock companies or individuals Permission from Crown Proprietary colony Maryland Earl of Baltimore Pennsylvania, William Penn Charter colony: Plymouth, Massachusetts Renewal of Colonization 1607 May 6 Jamestown Established by the London Company Leading figure: Captain John Smith adventurer, amateur geographer, historian, populizer of America The History of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles Pocahontas episode, return to England after a gunpowder explosion The development of Jamestown Hard time for colonists until planting tobacco, first tobacco yield 1616 1619: Virginia House of Burgesses first legislative body Arrival of Africans as indentured workers on a Dutch man o’war 1622: March 22 Jamestown Massacre, 1624: Royal charter revoked Plymouth Established by Separatists in 1620 Leader: William Bradford Mayflower Compact A mission for the glory of God, for the advancement of Christian faith, and the honor of king and country 1621: Wampanoag Indians help settlers, the first Thanksgiving Main historical source: Of Plymouth Plantation 1691: Becomes part of Massachusetts Massachussetts 1630 Massachusetts Congregationalists John Winthrop’s sermon A Model of Christian Charity “we shall be a city upon a hill” Puritan mission concept The development of Massachussetts Leading body: the General Court Semi-theocracy Challenges: Roger Williams a Separatist Anne Hutchinson: against Puritan patriarchy, Rejects covenant of works: good conduct would give salvation, banished from colony New York 1664 New Netherlands Dutch East India company hired Henry Hudson searching for the passage to the Orient 1609: He discovered Delaware Bay, and the river named after him 1614: Dutch establish fur trading posts on Manhattan Island The development of New York 1626: Governor Peter Minuit purchases Manhattan from the Indians New Amsterdam will become capital of New Netherlands James, Duke of York drives out Dutch in 1664 The influence of the Dutch Bredeweghe Broadway, Wall Street (original wall to protect against Indians) Family names: Roosevelt, Van Buren, Rensselaer Traditions, customs: Santa Claus, Rip van Winkle, Vocabulary: boss, crib, stoop Pennsylvania 1681 William Penn,Quaker, follower of George Fox Religious tolerance, equality of sexes, rejection of war and violence, rejection of rank Society of Friends Settlement of Non-conformists, Mennonites, Amish, Baptists, Moravians Georgia 1732 Settling prisoners, buffer colony 1733: Savannah founded by Oglethorpe Germans, but also Scottish Highlanders, Portuguese Jews, Welsh provide a cosmopolitan character 1753: Charter expired, colony reverted to the crown British North America New England: Southern N.E. Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts Northern N.E. Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire Mid-Atlantic colonies New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania Delaware South: Virginia, Carolinas (South Carolina, North Carolina,) Georgia, Reasons for successful colonization Colonies as business ventures Allowing the settlement of Non-conformists Contiguous settlement Not hostile terrain New England Commerce, later industry Limited agriculture Participation in triangular trade New England to Slave Coast rum, exchange for slaves Middle Passage to Bahamas, exchange for molasses Molasses to N.E. rum is made again Culture and society in New England Elements of Puritan perspective: Chosenness predestination Puritan work ethic Mission concept Manichean world view Good v. Evil Moderation The South Plantation economy Land intensive large lands are needed Economy of scale only large scale production is profitable Tidewater plantations located close to rivers flowing into the Atlantic Ocean Staple crops Tobacco, cotton, rice