Compile of list of 5 reasons on your own. Now compare that list with a partner’s list. Which of those reasons would apply to Europeans in the 1500s and 1600s? Causes of Exploration Activity 1. Each group read pages 15-16, 20 – 21, & 26 – 29 (cp textbook) or pages 60 – 61 (general textbook) 2. Describe the topic your group was assigned. Include these three items; a. What was the ________? b. How did it affect European life? c. Why did it encourage people to explore? YOU HAVE 20 MINUTES!!! Causes of Exploration Feudalism The Crusades Weak Monarchs Ends Isolation Want a Better Life Gain More Freedom New Things Gain new lands European Exploration Train Sailors & Explorers New Inventions Get Colonies & Resources New Trade Routes New Learning Gain Wealth & Power The Renaissance Competition 3 – reasons why Europeans explored 2—things you thought were interesting 1—question you still have about the lesson I. Life in Europe A. Feudalism 1. Weak Monarchs a. Divided land into Manors controlled by nobles b. People living in the manor worked for the noble i. Lives revolved around the manor ii. Poor living conditions and education B. Crusades: 12th to 14th centuries 1. Muslims invaded the Holy Lands a. European kings asked to take them back 2. Exposed the Europeans to new things a. Spices: ginger, tea, and pepper b. Technology: Gun powder, and telescopes 3. Europeans increased trade to get these items a. Items cost too much from traders b. Create their own routes i. Lower price, Increase profit Crusader Routes In ONE minute, find someone and GIVE ONE, GET ONE… C. Renaissance: 14th to 17th centuries 1. Revival in learning and invention 2. New technology: a. Magnetic Compass b. Astrolabe c. Printing Press d. Caraval 3. Prince Henry the Navigator a. Trained sailors and explorers to find trade routes 4. Christopher Columbus a. First Spanish Colony in 1493 in Haiti II. First English Attempts – off coast of present-day North Carolina A. Roanoke Island – 1585 1. Sponsored by Sir Walter Raleigh 2. 100 men give up after one year B. Roanoke Island – 1587 “The Lost Colony” 1. Raleigh sends 117 men, women, and children 2. 3 years later they have disappeared 3. Clue – “CROATOAN” carved on a doorpost With a partner, read the evidence gathered on Roanoke and determine which theory is most plausible? III. Jamestown, Virginia – 1607 A. Investors form a joint-stock company & sponsor settlement 1. Guaranteed colonists the same rights they had in England. B. First PERMANENT English settlement in the New World 1. Site – swampy peninsula (good defense, not health) 2. Settlers-100 male adventurers & soldiers – not farmers 3. Goal was to find GOLD, not obtain supplies for winter Jamestown Fort & Settlement Map Jamestown Fort & Settlement (CG) Jamestown Housing Jamestown Settlement Jamestown Chapel, 1611 C. Captain John Smith takes over 1. Obtains supplies from Indians 2. Forces men to work – “no work, no eat” There was no talk…but dig gold, wash gold, refine gold, load gold… 3. Pocahontas Legend Pocahontas “saves” Captain John Smith A 1616 engraving D. Conditions are very difficult 1. Half the settlers die during the first year 2. “Starving Times” – almost 90% of the settlers died during the winter of 1609-1610 1607: 104 colonists By spring, 1608: 38 survived 1609: 300 more immigrants By spring, 1610: 60 survived 1610 – 1624: 10,000 immigrants 1624 population: 1,200 Adult life expectancy: 40 years Death of children before age 5: 80% 3. Conflict with Native Americans a. General mistrust because of different cultures & languages. b. English raided Indian food supplies c. Take more land as they expanded Powhatan Uprising of 1622 E. Tobacco 1. John Rolfe developed a money-making crop 2. Economy based on tobacco sold to England Virginia’s gold and silver. -- John Rolfe, 1612 Early Colonial Tobacco 1618 — Virginia produces 20,000 pounds of tobacco. 1622 — Despite losing nearly one-third of its colonists in an Indian attack, Virginia produces 60,000 pounds of tobacco. 1627 — Virginia produces 500,000 pounds of tobacco. 1629 — Virginia produces 1,500,000 pounds of tobacco. F. Growth of Virginia 1. House of Burgesses – first elected assembly in the New World a. Control over finances, militia, make laws 2. Indentured Servants a. Receive passage to New World in return for labor b. Work for 5-7 years for the person who paid c. Promised “freedom dues” [land and £] d. Virginians got 50 acres for each passage they paid. 3. Slavery – Twenty Africans brought to Jamestown in 1619 a. Their status was not clear slaves or indentured servants. English Tobacco Label IV. Colonizing New England A. Massachusetts – Plymouth Colony 1. Pilgrims – 1620 a. Separatists who broke away from the Church of England & were being persecuted b. Poor people with little power c. Sail from England on the Mayflower i. 102 people including Captain Myles Standish. 2. Government a. Based on the Mayflower Compact b. Agreement signed before the settlers left the boat c. Led to adult male settlers meeting in assemblies to make laws in town meetings. The Mayflower Compact November 11, 1620 3. Native Americans a. Helped the people – farming, fishing, hunting b. Squanto – Native American who spoke English! c. Thanksgiving – Fall of 1621 B. Massachusetts – Massachusetts Bay Colony 1. Puritans – 1630 a. Wanted to reform (or purify) the Church of England b. Well-educated & well-supplied c. Sailed from England with 17 ships and 1000 people d. Within 10 years, 20,000 more Puritans arrived e. Purpose – set up a model colony based on THEIR beliefs Sources of Puritan Migration First Seal of MA Bay Boston: Capital of Massachusetts Bay 2. Government a. No separation of church of state b. Only white, male, church members could vote c. No dissent was allowed d. First Governor: John Winthrop We shall be as a city on a hill.. 3. Native Americans a. Puritans try to convert Indians b. Indian lands are taken – usually by force King Philip’s War (1675-76) Metacom “King Philip” United Indians and attacked white settlements Failed to take back land Metacom beheaded and drawn and quartered. His son and wife sold into slavery. Never a serious threat again With the partner beside you, quiz each other on the vocabulary list. 1’s: quiz the 2’s on the first 7 vocab words. 2’s: quiz the 1’s on the second 7 vocab words. If your partner does not know the meaning of the word tell them what it is. C. Rhode Island (1636) – only New England colony to allow religious freedom 1. Roger Williams a. Disagreed with the Puritans & was kicked out of MA b. Set up a colony in which all religions were tolerated c. Believed in separation of church & state 2. Anne Hutchinson a. Disagreed with the Puritans & was kicked out of MA b. Welcomed in Rhode Island She and all but one member of her family were killed in an Indian attack in Westchester County, NY. D. Other New England Colonies 1. Connecticut (1636) – founded by Thomas Hooker & other Puritans who were looking for rich farmland 2. New Hampshire (1637) formed by John Wheelwright & other critics of the Puritans; fishing & trading were important New England Spreads Out Population of the New England Colonies New England Colonies, 1650 V. Settling the Middle Colonies A. New York (1664) 1. Originally owned by the Dutch (New Amsterdam) 2. Charles II granted the land to his brother, James the Duke of York King Charles II The Duke of York Duke of York’s Original Charter New York, 1664 B. New Jersey (1664) 1. Land given to Lord Berkeley & Sir George Carteret, supporters of Charles II Lord Berkeley Sir George Carteret C. Pennsylvania (1681) 1. William Penn (1644-1718) a. Member of a wealthy English family b. Joined the Society of Friends (Quakers) at age 23 i. Refused to pay taxes to the Church of England, met without paid clergy, and quaked during services c. Family unhappy, and jailed for his beliefs 2. Land in the New World a. William Penn’s father (Admiral Sir William Penn) loaned £16,000 to Charles II b. Land given to Penn as payment c. Penn receives charter for “Pensilvania” (Latin for “Penn’s Woods”) Royal Land Grant to Penn 3. The Colony a. A “Holy Experiment” b. Native Americans treated fairly (at first) i. Bought the land from Indians. c. All religions are tolerated Penn’s Treaty with the Native Americans Philadelphia D. Delaware (1682) 1. The three lower counties of PA broke off 2. Named after Lord De La Warr [harsh military governor of VA in 1610]. VI. Settling the Southern Colonies A. Maryland (1632) 1. A royal charter granted to George Calvert, Lord Baltimore 2. A haven for Catholics Colonization of Maryland St Mary’s City (1634) B. North and South Carolina (1663) 1. Settled by 8 proprietors who had helped Charles II regain the throne 2. North – subsistence farming & naval stores (turpentine, tar) 3. South – plantations of rice & indigo; shipping Rice & Indigo Exports from SC & GA: 1698-1775 Port of Charles Town, SC Also named for King Charles II of England. Became the busiest port in the South. C. Georgia (1732) 1. Founded by James Oglethorpe and named after King George II 2. Created as a Social Experiment a. The poor from England were brought to the colony Ethnic Groups