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1 HIST 101 Lecture Guide Part I “The European Origins of the New World’s Settlement” The roots of America are in Europe. The 1400s (1492-Columbus) were the dawn of a new age in Europe. There had been little change for almost 1,000 years after the fall of the Roman Empire (roughly 476 A.D.), but values were changing from medieval to modern by the 1300s and 1400s. Europeans could not have discovered America in the Middle Ages, because they were peasants (serfs) tied to small farms on manors. Feudalism ordered the lives of the upper classes (the vassals and soldiers who protected the manor and its lord). Manorialism ordered the lives of the lower classes (serfs) bound by a contract to a sharecropping arrangement with the lord of the manor. Towns arose when lords created a few blocks by the waterfront on the manor. Towns ordered the lives of middle class artisans. Townsmen (bourgeoisie, burgers) traded manor goods and crops with merchants on other manors connected by local rivers. To encourage towns and trade, the lord of the manor freed people from their 99-year contract if they lived in a town for a year and a day, but they owed the lord revenue from the court fees and tariffs they levied on traders. The Catholic Church was the fourth institution that ordered life in medieval Europe. Bishops owned many manors, and priests taught the laity (serfs) that poverty was a virtue and thus discouraged any peasantrevolts against the system. The Church also taught that loaning money out at interest (capitalism) was a sin (usury). So, the individual free to believe or do as he or she pleased generally did not exist in medieval Europe. Why did the Medieval World Decline? There are various reasons. One involves technology. Technology (inventions) spurred change and widened human horizons—horseshoes, the printing press, the compass for navigation on the ocean at night, etc. The wheeled plow and the 3-field system increased crop production and created a food surplus that could be sold, and this and other commerce encouraged exploration beyond Europe’s borders. By 1400, there was also great curiosity about the geography of Africa and India—Prince Henry the Navigator, Vasco de Gama, Columbus, etc. The rise of the secular state by the 1400s (having Kings and a central royal treasury in England, France, and Spain) also encouraged exploration. These royal treasuries helped finance the expeditions of Sir Walter Raleigh, Jacques Cartier, Magellan and Balboa. The development of capitalism also encouraged growth outward, as bankers in Venice and elsewhere defied the Pope and charged interest, sought gold and silver, financed expeditions and royal navies to get these goods and loaned money to the king to promote their empires. The Renaissance (1300-1500) questioned the authority of the church and pushes the secular nation state. Niccolo Machiavelli’s book, The Prince, was a manual on how a secular ruler would take power from local bishops and make state (royal) law superior to canon law. The Renaissance questioned Christian values in every way. Michaelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci painted nudes and the former even dissected dead bodies to study muscles and tendons, etc. in direct violation of 2 church law. The Renaissance celebrated human beauty and knowledge. Galileo and Copernicus used scientific human research to question the Bible’s view about planetary motion and whether the Sun or Earth (as the Bible indicated)was the center of the universe. In the Renaissance, human research superseded Revelation. Finally, the Reformation liberated many Christians from papal restraints. In 1517, Martin Luther, a Catholic priest, broke with the Pope and created the first “Protestant” denomination, Lutheranism. He taught that salvation was by faith alone. There was no need for the mass or most (except baptism and communion) sacraments. Works were not vital to salvation. “The Founding of Jamestown, Plymouth and Boston, 1607-1630” In 1606, King James I (who authorized the King James version of the Bible) chartered the London Company (which could settle land south of a line in today’s New Jersey) and the Plymouth Company (which could settle land north of the line). London Company employee settlers established the first permanent colony in what later became the U.S. In 1620, the Pilgrims (Separating Puritans) and some others [called by the Puritans “Strangers”] who preferred to leave England for religious freedom in America) on the Mayflower settled the land near Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts several miles down the coast from today’s Boston. William Bradford was elected governor and the colonists cleared land together, and for a short while, owned the land communally before dividing up into parcels for each settler or family household. So, democracy and capitalism began almost immediately in British North America. In 1630, John Winthrop and the Non-Separating Puritans (who preferred to stay in Anglican England, but unlike Oliver Cromwell and his Puritan followers, were afraid to stay and fight a civil war against King Charles I) arrived at Plymouth Rock with a flotilla of ships carrying 1,500 people (not all of whom were Puritans). William Bradford told them that there was not enough room for them at Plymouth. But, Bradford advised the leader, John Winthrop, that there was plenty of room at a bay several miles up the coast at what became Boston. Winthrop’s group settled Boston in 1630. This was a corporate colony owned by the Massachusetts Bay Company (owned by Winthrop and seven other stockholders). These eight men called themselves the Board of Directors, and the eight elected Winthrop as governor of Massachusetts Bay. But a year later, there was a near revolt as 100 other settlers (all born-again Puritan “Saints”) demanded the right to vote and hold office. So, by 1631, there was a measure of democracy in Boston as 102 saints ruled 1500 “others” or “Strangers” (e.g. Anglicans, Catholics, Lutherans, and even some Jews). So, democracy was limited. Also, there was an “established church” (no separation of church and state). The Puritan church (today called the Congregational Church) was the state church in New England, and everyone had to pay their part of a tax to support that church. In Virginia, the state church was (as it was in England) the Anglican (today’s Episcopal) Church. Over time, Boston became a major port, thanks to various triangle trades with Europe, the Caribbean, and Africa. Towns also developed west of Boston in the interior. Winthrop and the General Court created all new townships (with the town in the middle and farms fanning outward) with a size of five miles by five miles. As whole congregations of 3 Puritans landed from England to escape the growing tensions between Cromwell’s army and the King’s, the General Court gave these congregations 25 square-mile townships to settle upon. In general, new immigrants brought manufactured goods (jewelry, tools, etc.) from England and sold them to Boston merchants in exchange for food and other provisions to begin building their house and planting their fields. In the 1600s and early 1700s, farmers came to Boston from interior towns and sold their harvest to merchants (or face-to-face to townsmen in a public market), and with those profits they bought manufactured goods from the merchants who had purchased them from the immigrants. The Puritans were Calvinists who followed John Calvin’s teachings about Predestination. In Massachusetts Bay, politics and religion merged. Only the Puritan “Saints” could vote and hold office, and so as Winthrop’s generation began to die off, there was anxiety about why their children were not having the born-again conversion experience from the Holy Ghost. Ultimately, the General Court approved the Half Way Covenant, which allowed the children of “Saints” to be baptized, but could not take communion or vote until they had the conversion experience. It was an effort to maintain Puritan control of Massachusetts Bay, but by the 1670s their grip was loosening. Their grip was loosening because Anglican and other merchants were making fortunes in the prosperous trade with Europe, Africa and the Caribbean. New England farmers sold corn, wheat, and meat to Boston merchants who sold it to slave colonies in the Caribbean to feed their slaves. Boston merchants traded this food for molasses, which could be refined into rum. The merchants then traded the rum to African tribes who paid with slaves taken forcibly from interior tribes. The Boston merchants then sold the slaves to their planter customers in the Caribbean. Prosperous business ultimately threatened Puritan control. Secularization and materialism thus threatened the conservative religious rule of the Puritans who also frowned (like the Pope) on usury, the practice of loaning money at interest to others. But this was necessary for banks to flourish and assist merchants with loans to build more ships and hire more crews. Threats to Puritan control also came from within. Connecticut-The Reverend Thomas Hooker and more liberal Puritans (and others) got permission from Winthrop to settle south of Boston in the Connecticut River Valley near today’s Hartford. Connecticut became a royal colony in 1662. In 1638, they drew up the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, which made Connecticut more liberal than Massachusetts Bay in that all (not just Puritan) male landowners over 21 years of age could vote and hold office. Puritans even stricter than those in Boston also got permission to head south, and they founded in New Haven. But two rebel Puritans, Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson, at first refused to leave Boston, although Winthrop eventually forced them out—and they settled what later became (in 1663) Rhode Island. Roger Williams believed that all land belonged to the Indians, not the King, and that the Puritans should buy all their land from the tribes. He also thought that all Christians should be allowed to attend their own churches, that non-Saints should be allowed to vote and hold office, and that there should be no state church. Anne Hutchinson believed in the Inner Light—that 4 if the Holy Spirit directed everyone’s conscience, then who needed Winthrop and the General Court. The Puritans engaged in race war with (and even scalped) the Pequod (or Pequot) Indians. In 1643, the Connecticut and Massachusetts colonies formed a defense alliance—the Confederation of New England-which was the first instance of inter-colonial cooperation in American history. In the 1675-78 King Philip’s War (in which 20 white towns were destroyed), this inter-colonial alliance (with the help of friendly Indians) defeated Philip’s forces. New England town voters annually elected a board of selectmen to run the town’s government. The General Court gave towns great autonomy, but required all towns with 50 householders to hire a teacher and all towns with 100 householders to build a Latin grammar school or else pay a fine. The Puritans stressed education and especially the ability to read the Bible. Nevertheless, there was much flaunting of the rules after 1675, as the Winthrop generation began to die off and the Anglican and Presbyterian merchants took control of the government. The Puritans’ last hurrah occurred during the Salem witchcraft trials in 1690-91 when 19 “witches” were hanged, an event that soon discredited the Puritans permanently. Note: The lecture outline for “The Reformation: Puritanism in Massachusetts Bay” lecture is embedded above in the discussion of New England. “Chesapeake and the South: Virginia, Maryland and the Carolinas” Massachusetts Bay was a planned society guided by a collective interest to worship God, but the Chesapeake colonies were established more for profit and individual self interest. Virginia has already been covered. But, in the lands north of Virginia, George Calvert (Lord Baltimore in the House of Lords) was a Catholic convert who wanted to establish a haven for British Catholics. The king owed Calvert money, so he paid him off in land in 1632. Calvert called the colony Maryland and took a very medieval approach to governing it. Calvert considered himself to be lord of the manor and gave out 50-acre headrights of land to his “vassals” for each settler they brought and collected quitrents. He made all the laws; there was no immediate representative assembly and the Catholic Church was the colony’s established church. Unfortunately for Calvert, mostly Protestant came to Maryland, and they wanted more freedom and a representative assembly. In 1635, they forced Calvert to create a representative assembly, and in 1648 he appointed a Protestant governor and allowed religious toleration. By the 1670s, he lost control. But, even today, a lot of the hops etc. for Calvert-brand whiskey are still grown in Maryland. To be sure, there were other tensions in the Chesapeake colonies, especially between the older settlements in the east and newer ones in the west. Take the case of Virginia. Bacon’s Rebellion occurred in 1676 when Nathaniel Bacon led a small army of western farmers against the House of Burgesses and briefly took over. Farmers in the western counties were angry at the East for taxing them heavily and giving them no services, roads, or help against the Indians. Carolina chartered in 1663 by eight proprietors from the king as repayment for a loan they had made to the crown. All eight owned big estates. They sold the rest of Carolina to farmers and rich capitalists and collected quitrents. 40 square 5 miles equaled one county There was no established church! Also, the proprietors gave out noble titles and created a Parliament. Nobles got 2-5 votes depending on how much land they owned. Carolina of the North was swampy and the inhabitants got the name “tarheels.” The colonists there were poor and often did not pay their quitrents. In contrast, Carolina of the South was fertile and grew cotton, rice, and tobacco; it also contained the prosperous port city of Charleston. Carolina of the North and Carolina of the South became separate colonies in 1729. The southern colonies in British North America had slaves and some indentured servants, and the Chesapeake and northern colonies had indentured servants who worked 4-5 years in return for their food, shelter and Atlantic passage. However, some ran away to the western interior. Until 1660, most slaves were treated like indentured servants and freed after 5-7 years. “New York and the Quaker Colonies: Jersey, Delaware and Pennsylvania” New York- In 1609, Henry Hudson claimed New Netherland (comprising much of today’s New York State) for the Dutch. The Dutch conducted much trade and shipbuilding at New Amsterdam (today the lower part of Manhattan). Fur came down the Hudson River to New Amsterdam for shipment elsewhere. Peter Minuit bought Manhattan Island from the Indians in 1625. The British took the city during the Second Anglo Dutch War in 1664. King Charles II then gave it to his brother James, the Duke of York and the future King James II (1685-88). James never came to America to see his colony. While there were no town meetings (as in New England), James did create a representative assembly. There was no established church either; each town supported every church within its borders with tax revenues. James also confirmed the Dutch patroonships, and gave others out to his friends. So, most of New York was composed of big estates with little land given to small farmers. As a result, the lower class farmers were mostly tenants on the land. Manhattan was very commercial. The merchant Knickerbockers and the De Lancey Family controlled the assembly for James and the royal governor until Jacob Leisler’s Rebellion in 1688 ousted them. When William and Mary took over England after the Glorious Revolution of 1688, they ousted Leisler. The Quaker Colonies of New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware were developed by William Penn. Quakerism emerged in Europe during the 1640s. Penn’s father had loaned money to the crown and was repaid in Pennsylvania land. His son William, who had converted earlier to Quakerism, received the land as an inheritance. He laid out Philadelphia as a planned city in 1681 before anyone arrived. Penn hoped to sell land and collect quitrents. He advertised for settlers in Europe, and many Germans came. He had no established religion and extended religious toleration to everyone. He even bought the land from the Indian after his father got it from the crown. As a result, there were no Indian wars in Pennsylvania during his lifetime. The Quakers ruled Pennsylvania until the Delaware Indian Wars of the 1740s when, as pacifists, they refused to fund the warfare and resigned en masse from the colonial assembly. The Quakers used the monthly meeting (no churches) to maintain business standards, pay taxes, investigate bankruptcies and apprentice orphans, etc. They believed in equality and, unlike the Puritans, did not engage in the slave trade. Pennsylvania shipped lumber, pork, corn, and iron to 6 Europe and had a more profitable trade than Boston. New Jersey and Delaware were also colonies owned by Penn, although he gave both freedom relatively early in their history. Georgia was the last of the thirteen colonies to be established. James Oglethorpe and a group of reformers convinced the King to create a penal colony in 1732 for debtors to act as a buffer zone between South Carolina and Spanish Florida. Few debtors came; mostly artisans and farmers arrived. A board of trustees ran Georgia for 21 years before it became a royal colony in 1753. All thirteen colonies became royal colonies before the American Revolution. Just to review the founding dates from the lecture (Note: you don’t have to remember all of the dates): New Hampshire (1679), Massachusetts Bay (1620 and 1630), Connecticut (1662), Rhode Island (1663), New York (1664); West Jersey (1674) and East Jersey (1680) became New Jersey in 1702, Pennsylvania (1681), Delaware (1682), Maryland (1632), Virginia (1607), Carolina (1663) NC and SC separated in 1729, and Georgia (1732). “The Emergence of America’s First Cities”-The five major colonial cities were New York (1625), Boston (1630), Newport, R.I. (1634), Charleston (1672), and Philadelphia (1681). All five cities had mixed land use and eventually a grid system of blocks and lots to easily compute from and square footage to promote the quick resale of land. These early cities lacked home rule, charged tolls to pay for roads and bridges, assessed fines, and filled building lots with garbage. They also had to provide police, fire, education, medical care and other services. See the lecture for details. “Origins of the American Revolution”—Mercantilism was the prevailing economic philosophy of the 16th-18th Centuries. It argued that colonies existed for the benefit of the mother country; colonies were a source of cheap labor, and raw materials and served as a captive market for surplus goods. Oliver Cromwell signed the first navigation act in the 1650s, but the big ones were: 1660-Only ships built in Britain or the colonies could enter colonial ports. 3/4ths of the crew must be born in the British Empire. Enumerated goods (like the southern colonies staple crops)-think of CHRIST----Cotton, Hemp, Rice, Indigo, Sugar and Tobacco could only be exported from the colonies to another port within the Empire. For other items like French wine, the captain would have to stop in London and pay a tax to the king before proceeding on to an American port. Colonial merchants selling products to France or Spain would pay the navigation tax to a British customs agent on the dock before the ship departed for France or Spain. The tax raised the price of all American imports and exports and cut profit margins. 1673- A new law increased the number of customs agents, especially in American ports. 1696- The last navigation act transferred all smuggling cases to British Vice Admiralty courts rather than colonial courts where a sympathetic jury of peers might find the smuggling merchant not guilty. King James II established the Dominion of New England in 1685 when he combined New York and all of the New England colonies into one colony with royal 7 Governor Edmund Andros. Andros angered colonists by levying new taxes not passed by colonial assemblies, enforcing the Navigation Acts, and challenging town land grants. Colonists ousted him in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 when in England Anglicans and Puritans deposed King James and their counterparts in America deposed Andros. Coode’s Rebellion (1689) in Maryland also ended Lord Baltimore’s rule. Labor-Factory work began in the early 1700s with the putting-out system in which, for example, merchants would give fabric to 10 or so housewives who would knit 1-15 sweaters. The merchant paid them (the wives worked at home not yet in a factory) when they came by to collect the sweaters. But once James Watt perfected the steam engine by the early 1770s, factory buildings were erected where all stages of the production process (with salaried workers and farmers’ unmarried daughters [the so-called Lowell girls] and later immigrants) were conducted. There were royal efforts to restrict inter-colonial trade, especially after it greatly expanded in the 1690s. The Woolens Act (1699) provided that wool goods made in one colony could not be sold in another. The Hat Act of 1732 authorized the same restriction for hats and the Iron Act (1750) did it for iron goods like tools. These acts, like the Navigation Acts and the Proclamation of 1763, helped to smother American expansion and were thus resented by the colonists. “Origins of the American Revolution”--The First Great Awakening occurred in the 1730s and 1740s and coincided with the rise of a new Protestant denomination, Methodism. John and Charles Wesley and George Whitfield and Jonathan Edwards preached emotional (rather than the more traditional intellectual sermons). Residents in western frontier areas (where literacy rates were low) tended to like these sermons. These Christians who enjoyed the fire and brimstone sermons were known as the New Lights. Those who preferred the traditional intellectual sermons were called the Old Lights. The point is that religious groups became divided in the 1750s, and were thus less influential and less able to discourage the American Revolution by 1776. People read more after 1700, thanks to newspapers, almanacs, universities, and better postal service. These factors teamed with the decline of established religion, abuses and corruption by customs agents, and enforcement of the Navigation Acts to help spawn the American Revolution. The defeat of New France was also a factor promoting the American Revolution. The Catholic and Indian threat to the west had made it impossible for the Americans to attack the Redcoats. But in 1763 Britain won the so-called French and Indian War. Canada (including Quebec) now became part of the British Empire. With the French military threat now gone, the Americans had a free hand to fight the Redcoats. Immediate Causes of the Revolution-To pay for the French and Indian War, George III began enforcing the Navigation Acts in 1763. The Proclamation of 1763 ended the threat of war with the Iroquois and other tribes by prohibiting the Americans from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains. The Sugar Act, Stamp Act and other events leading up to the signing of the Declaration of Independence are all covered in the lecture notes. Break for 1st exam 8