3 English Roots in America

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■ Essential Question:
–How did different values lead to
different American subcultures in
the Chesapeake, Southern,
New England, & Middle colonies?
■ Warm-Up Question:
–Based upon the documents
provided, what are some key
differences between the Virginia
& New England colonies?
Four Colonial Subcultures
■The different values of the
migrants dictated the “personality”
of the newly created colonies; led
to distinct (not unified) colonies
–The Chesapeake
–New England
–Middle Colonies
–The Lower South
European
Settlements in
North America
by 1660
Chesapeake Colonies:
Virginia & Maryland
Chesapeake
Colonies
The Chesapeake: Dreams of Wealth
■After Walter Raleigh's failed
Roanoke settlement, there was
little interest in colonizing
America; but Richard Hakluyt
(& others) kept promoting colonies:
–Possibilities for wealth
–Rivaling Spain, Holland, France
–Nationalism, anti-Catholicism,
& anti-Spanish zeal
Entrepreneurs in Virginia
■The major obstacle to colonizing
in America was funding; Queen
Elizabeth would not spend tax
revenue:
–Joint-stock companies provided
financing for colonies
–In 1606, King James gave the
London Company the 1st charter
to establish colonies in America
The London
Company,
1606
The London Co was later renamed the
Virginia Company; English stockholders in
Virginia Company expected instant profits
“The Virginia Colony”
Reading & Discussion
■Based upon the reading
–What were the expectations of
the early Jamestown colonists?
–What were conditions like
during the early years of the
Jamestown colony?
Entrepreneurs in Virginia
■ Jamestown was settled in 1607
along the Chesapeake
Bay:
Chesapeake
colonists did not
work for the
–the
location
was
unhealthy
common
good &
many
starved tobut
death
easy to defend from Spanish
ships (but not from inland Indians)
–Settlers had no experience in
founding a settlement
–Colonists expected to become
immediately wealthy & failed to
plant crops or prepare for longterm habitation in America
Jamestown Fort, 1609
Jamestown Colony
Spinning Out of Control
Captain
John Smith
■In 1608, John Smith
imposed
order in Jamestown & traded for
food with natives
■But, Jamestown faced difficulties:
The most powerful Native
–Poor
leadership
harsh winters
Americans
east of &
Mississippi
River
led to starving time (1609-1610)
–In 1622 & 1644, Jamestown was
attacked by Powhattan Indians
Confederacy
The 1622Powhatan
Powhatan uprising
killed 347
Saved by a “Stinking Weed”
■John Rolfe introduced a tobacco
hybrid that gave Jamestown a
cash crop economy
Early Colonial Tobacco
1618 — Virginia produced 20,000
pounds of tobacco
1622 — Despite losing nearly 1/3
of its colonists in an Indian attack,
60,000 pounds produced
1627 — Virginia produced
500,000 pounds of tobacco
1629 — Virginia produced
1,500,000 pounds of tobacco
Saved by a “Stinking Weed”
■In 1618, headrights were used to
encourage cultivation of tobacco
& the settlement of Jamestown:
– A 50-acre lot was granted to
each colonist who paid for his
own transportation, or for each
servant brought into the colony
– Led to huge tobacco plantations
& thousands of new settlers who
hoped to make their fortunes
English Migration, 1610-1660
Virginia’s
growth
was due
largely to
headrights
Why was 1619 a pivotal
year for the Chesapeake
settlement?
Virginia House of Burgesses
■In 1619, Virginia colonists created
a legislative assembly to create
local taxes & oversee finances
■The Virginia
House of
Burgesses
became the 1st
legislative
assembly in
America
How Many Slaves?
■ In 1619, the 1st African slaves
arrived in Jamestown
–In the 17th century, 1,000 slaves
arrived in the New World per year
–Through the 18th century,
5.5 million arrived in America
–By 1860, 11 million slaves were
brought to the New World
–Before 1831, more African slaves
came to America than Europeans
Population of the Chesapeake Colonies:
1607-1750
Time of Reckoning
■Despite the profits from tobacco,
Virginia was a deadly place to live
–Many died from disease
–Numerous Powhattan attacks
–Indentured servants were
treated badly & cheated out of
land when servitude ended
–Few females (6:1 ratio) made
families or reproduction difficult
Corruption and Reform
■In 1624, James I dissolved the
Virginia Company & made
Virginia a royal colony
–But colonists continued to meet
in the House of Burgesses
–VA was divided into 8 counties
each with a county court
■Very little changed; Jamestown
colonists still focused with
tobacco & continued to lack unity
Jamestown
Colonization
Pattern,
1620-1660
The
Maryland
Colony
Maryland: A Refuge for Catholics
■Initiated by Sir George Calvert
(Lord Baltimore) as a refuge for
English Catholics
–In 1632, Charles I
granted a charter
for Maryland
–To recruit laborers,
Lord Baltimore
required toleration
among Catholics &
Protestants
Maryland: A Refuge for Catholics
■Wealthy Catholics proved
unwilling to relocate to America
so Maryland became populated
largely by poor Protestant farmers
& indentured servants:
–Maryland had few large tobacco
plantations
–Farmers (mostly poor tobacco
planters) lived in scattered
riverfront settlements
New England Colonies
New England
Colonies, 1650
Reforming England in America
■Queen Elizabeth’s reconciliation
of Anglican & Catholic conflicts
appeased many, but created 2
factious groups of extremists:
–Catholics (many settled in
Maryland)
–Puritans who wanted Anglican
Church stripped of Catholic
rituals (made up of conservative
“Puritans” & radical “Pilgrims”)
The Pilgrims in Plymouth
■Pilgrims were separatists who
refused to worship in the Anglican
Church, fled to Holland to avoid
compromising religious beliefs
■Migrated to America in order to
maintain distinct identity & settled
in New England
■Formed the Mayflower Compact
to create a “civil body politick”
among settlers (became the 1st
American form of self-gov’t)
The “Mayflower Compact”
Reading & Discussion
■What are the Pilgrims agreeing
to do by signing the Mayflower
Compact?
■Is this a religious or a political
document? Explain
Reforming
England
in America
The origins
of Thanksgiving
■Pilgrims founded Plymouth in 1620
–Faced disease & hunger;
received help from local natives
like Squanto & Massasoit
–Plymouth was a society of small
farming villages bound together
by mutual consent but faced
serious recruitment issues
–In 1691, Plymouth was absorbed
into the larger, more successful
Massachusetts Bay colony
“The Great Migration”
■Puritans were more conservative
than Pilgrims & wished to remain
within the Church of England:
–Believed in predestination, fought
social sins, & despised Catholic
rituals in the Anglican Church
–In 1629, many Puritans felt King
Charles I was ruining England
■From 1630-1640, John Winthrop
led 16,000 Puritans to the
Massachusetts Bay colony
The Great Puritan Migration
“A City on a Hill”
■Winthrop emphasized a common
spiritual goal: to create a “city on a
hill” as beacon of righteousness
■New England experienced unique
demographic & social trends:
–Settlers usually came as families
–NE was a generally healthy
place to live
–Settlers sacrificed self-interest
for the good of the community
“A City on a Hill”
■As Mass Bay colony grew beyond
Boston, towns began to develop
their own unique personalities:
–Each town was independently
governed by local church
members (Congregationalism)
–Allowed voting by all adult male
church members (women &
blacks joined but could not vote)
–Officials were responsible to
God, not their constituents
Congregationalism:
Nucleated vs.
Dispersed Villages
“A City on a Hill”
■NE town gov’ts were autonomous
& most people participated due to
common religious values
■Massachusetts Bay was more
peaceful than other colonies:
–Passed a legal code called the
Lawes and Liberties in 1648 to
protect rights & order
–Created civil courts to maintain
order & mediate differences
Limits of Dissent: Roger Williams
■Puritans never supported religious
toleration, esp Roger Williams:
–Williams was a separatist who
questioned the validity of the
colony’s charter because the
land was not bought from natives
–Promoted “liberty of conscience”
where God (not leaders) would
punish people for their “wrong”
religious ideas
■Expelled to Rhode Island in 1636
Limits of Dissent: Anne Hutchinson
■Anne Hutchinson believed she
was directly inspired by God:
–Believed that “converted” people
are not subject to man’s laws,
only subject to God’s laws
(Antinomianism)
–Hutchinson challenged Mass
Bay’s religious leaders
■She was banished to Rhode Island
Mobility and Division
■After absorbing Plymouth, the
Massachusetts colony grew &
spawned 4 new colonies:
–New Hampshire
–Rhode Island
–Connecticut
–New Haven
Mobility and Division
■New Hampshire formed in 1677;
grew very slowly & was
dependent upon Mass Bay
■Connecticut formed in 1662 due to
fertile lands; resembled Mass Bay
–Fundamental Orders was model
of civil gov’t based on religious
principles (the 1st written
constitution in American history)
Mobility and Division
■New Haven set up in 1636
because Puritan leaders wanted
a colony with closer relationship
between church & state
■Rhode Island drew highly
independent colonists who
practiced religious toleration
(founded by religious dissenter
Roger Williams)
New
England
Colonies,
1650
Complete the following chart then identify the
most significant similarities & differences
between the Chesapeake & New England colonies
Chesapeake
Political
Economic
Social
New England
■Essential Question:
–How did differences in values
affect distinct American
subcultures in the Chesapeake,
New England, Southern, &
Middle colonies?
The Middle Colonies:
New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania,
Delaware
The
Middle
Colonies,
1685
New York
■NY was established as “New
Netherlands” by the Dutch West
India Co. (the great economic
rival to England & Spain)
■Its small population was diverse;
included Finns, Swedes,
Germans, Africans, & Dutch
■In 1664, the English fleet
captured the colony with little
resistance
New York
■After begin taken by England,
New York (which included New
Jersey, Delaware, & Maine)
became the personal property of
James, the Duke of York
–Inhabitants had no political voice
beyond the local level
–James gained little profit from
the colony
Pennsylvania
■Pennsylvania founded by a radical
religious sect called Quakers
■Quakers believed in “Inner Light”:
– Rejected idea of original sin &
predestination
– Believed that each person could
communicate directly with God
– All are equal in eyes of God &
can be saved (conversion was
essential to faith)
Penn's "Holy Experiment"
■Quakers were persecuted in New
England for their beliefs; William
Penn founded Pennsylvania in
1681 as a “holy experiment”
– As a society run on Quaker
principles that promoted
religious toleration & protection
of the rights of property-less
–Appealed to English, Welsh,
Irish, German immigrants
Quick Discussion Question:
In what ways was Penn’s
“holy experiment” in Pennsylvania
similar to Winthrop’s “city on a hill?”
William
Penn
&
Native
Americans
Settling Pennsylvania
■Immigration to PA led to a very
ethnically, nationally, & religiously
diverse population
■Quarrels were common (unlike
homogeneous VA & Mass Bay
colonies), but PA prospered
■In 1701, Penn granted self-rule to
PA colonists & independence to
Delaware counties
Urban
Population
Growth:
1650-1775
The Lower South
Settling
the Lower
South
Carolina
■Although Carolina relied on slave
labor & agriculture (& therefore
looked like Chesapeake colonies)
it was very different due to:
–Diversity of settlers
–Environment very different from
the Chesapeake
–No “Solid South” yet
CarolinaProprietors
was established
a “political
utopia”
ofasthe
Carolinas
& experimented with early forms of democracy
■Carolina was granted a charter in
1663 to eight “proprietors” to
reward their loyalty:
–Proprietors were inspired by
John Locke & created a
government led by wealthy
lawmakers but with veto power
for average citizens
–But Carolina had difficulty
recruiting settlers in its first years
The Barbadian Connection
■English planters from the
Caribbean island of Barbados
were recruited to Charles Town:
–Barbadians brought a strict,
cruel slave code with them
–Demanded greater self-gov’t
within Carolina; led to 1729 strife
that led to division of colony into
North & South Carolinas
Charles Town, South Carolina,
the only southern port
Indigo & Rice: crops of
the Carolinas
The
Carolinas
and
Georgia
Founding
of Georgia
Georgia was
in many ways
a “social utopia”
because it offered
a fresh startinfor
manyby
of
■Georgia
was founded
1732
the lowest English citizens
James Oglethorpe as a strategic
buffer between the Carolinas &
Spanish Florida
■Oglethorpe offered Georgia as a
refuge for imprisoned debtors
from England
■By 1751, Georgia was a small
colony with a slave-owning
plantation society
A secretary
of one
of
The
Proprietary
Colonies
By
Lord Baltimore
as
8
proprietors
hoped
the
proprietors
was
a heaven
forEnglish
Catholics
Granted
to
William
Penn
(son
■
Most
were
created
to create
a politically
GivenJohn
as aLocke
gift to
the colonies
James,
English
naval
hero)
as a had
by
royal
charter,
but
democratic
colony
Dukeof
ofaYork
(the
brother
of some
land of
religious
King
Charles
II) freedom
charters
granted
land to individuals:
–Maryland (1634)
–Carolina (1663)
–New York (1664)
–New Jersey (1665)
–New Hampshire (1680)
–Pennsylvania (1681)
–Delaware (1704)
Conclusions
■All the colonies faced early an
struggle to survive
■Distinct regional differences
intensified & persisted throughout
the colonial period
■It was not until the American
Revolution that colonists began to
see themselves as a distinct
“American” people
Closure Question
■ Did any of these colonies live up
to the expectations of their
founders:
–Virginia?
–Massachusetts Bay?
–Carolina?
–Pennsylvania?
■ Which colony would you have
chosen to live in? Why?
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