Enlightenment and the Great Awakening

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Enlightenment and the Great Awakening. The Enlightenment Overall Using reason and logic to explain the world and advance society Started with European.
Advertisements

Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War Warm-Up Question: In what ways was the relationship.
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War?
The “Veneer” of Being English: 18 th Century British North America The Thirteen Colonies: British or American?
Chapter 6 American Pageant, 13 th. ed The Duel for North America.
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 2.1: Clicker Questions.
French & Indian War – “The Great War for Empire”
First Great Awakening & America’s Enlightenment
This is a war between the French and the British/colonists with the Native Americans choosing sides, however many side with the French. The French and.
E NSLAVED A FRICANS IN THE C OLONIES. A D IVERSE N ATION AND E CONOMY The experiences of the Africans varied by region South Carolina and Georgia Harvested.
9/9 Bellringer North America 1754
Provincial America & the Struggle for a Continent Chapter 4.
09/10 Bellringer North America 1763
CHAPTER 4 Experience of Empire Eighteenth-Century America.
CHAPTER 4 The Expansion of Colonial British America Those who give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor.
Colonial Growth- Long term causes to the American Revolution What events developed over time and lead the colonists to advance in self government and ultimately.
Sec. 4: Life in the English Colonies. Colonial Government English colonies all had their own gov’t  English colonies all had their own gov’t  English.
Saints and Sinners in British North America Colonial Societies and Economies,
Multiple fights between England (mainly colonists) and France/Spain/Indian allies: King William’s War ( ), Queen Anne’s War ( ) and King.
Presented by: Why do you think that a religious movement might make the colonists think more independently? Why do you think that a scientific movement.
The French and Indian War ( )
USI POWERPOINT MR. LIPMAN CHAPTER THREE-AMERICANS.
 The Enlightenment emphasizes reason and science as the path to knowledge  Based on Natural laws of the universe developed by scientists; such as gravity.
Beginnings of an American Identity Early American Culture Roots of American Democracy French & Indian War.
GROWTH OF AN AMERICAN IDENTITY The Great Awakening Colonial Government The Seven Years War.
ON THE WAY TO THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “Under the law of nature, all men are born free…..” - Thomas Jefferson.
Rhetorical language in Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.
Chapter 4 Frontiers of Empire Eighteenth Century America 1680 – 1763 read pg. 97.
The Expansion of Colonial British America, 1720–1763 Chapter 4.
By 1750, Britain & France had become serious rivals because:
CHAPTER 4 The Expansion of Colonial British America, Web.
Enlightenment and the Great Awakening. The Enlightenment Overall Using reason and logic to explain the world and advance society Started with European.
Seven Years’ War.  English colonies in North America all had their own governments.  The English monarch had ultimate authority over the colonies. 
Chapter 4 Growth and Crisis in NE
The French & Indian War ( )
Saints and Sinners in British North America
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 2.1: Clicker Questions.
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 2.1: Clicker Questions.
The Age of Revolutions.
Colonist & American Indian Conflicts
Unit I: Revolution Means Change!
Road to Revolution.
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War?
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 2.1: Clicker Questions.
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
Warm-Up Presented by: Samantha Corona
An Emerging Colonial ‘Unity’
The Great Awakening.
BellRinger 8/25 North America 1754
Growth and Controlling the Colonies Chap 2-3
USI POWERPOINT MR. LIPMAN
French and Indian War Standard 8.17, 8.19.
The French and Indian War
4. Frontiers of Empire 18th Century America,
Class Activity North America 1754
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War?
North America 1754 Use the map provided to color the extent of the Spanish, French, & British colonial control in North America by A map key is required.
Class Activity North America 1754
ON THE WAY TO THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION “Under the law of nature, all men are born free…..” - Thomas Jefferson.
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
North America Before the French & Indian War ( )
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
BellRinger 8/25 North America 1754
Great Awakening and Enlightenment
The Enlightenment and The Great Awakening
Essential Question: How did imperial competition between Britain & France lead to the French & Indian War Warm-Up Question: In what ways was the relationship.
Colonist & American Indian Conflicts
Presentation transcript:

Enlightenment and the Great Awakening

The Enlightenment Overall Using reason and logic to explain the world and advance society Started with European elite (upper class and nobility) in the mid-17th Century Isaac Newton, John Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu Encyclopédie (1751) and the “Republic of Letters”

The American Enlightenment The European Enlightenment expanded into the colonies Colonial wealth, colleges, books, immigration Compulsory education in New England Harvard, William & Mary, Yale Practicality Mostly confined to the elites!

American Enlightened Thinkers and Concepts Benjamin Franklin Poor Richard's Almanack Lending Libraries Practical inventions Thomas Jefferson Classicist and Republicanism Thomas Paine Author & Inventor Common Sense Age of Reason Deism Liberalism & Republicanism

The Great Awakening An 18th Century Revivalist Evangelical Protestant Movement in the colonies (1720-1760) Focused on emotional conversion First shared event in the American colonies (nationalism?) Developed in part from the wide mix of Protestant religions in the colonies Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield

“Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” Jonathan Edwards (1741) “O sinner! Consider the fearful danger you are in: it is a great furnace of wrath, a wide and bottomless pit, full of the fire of wrath, that you are held over in the hand of that God, whose wrath is provoked and incensed as much against you, as against many of the damned in hell. You hang by a slender thread, with the flames of divine wrath flashing about it, and ready every moment to singe it, and burn it asunder; and you have . . . nothing to lay hold of to save yourself, nothing to keep off the flames of wrath, nothing of your own, nothing that you ever have done, nothing that you can do, to induce God to spare you one moment.” “. . . All you that never passed under a great change of heart, by the mighty power of the Spirit of God upon your souls; all you that were never born again . . . are in the hands of an angry God . . .”

Ben on George Whitefield “I happened soon after to attend one of his sermons, in the course of which I perceived he intended to finish with a collection, and I silently resolved he should get nothing from me. I had in my pocket a handful of copper money, three or four silver dollars and five . . . gold [coins]. As he proceeded I began to soften, and concluded to give the coppers. Another stroke of his oratory made me ashamed of that, and determined me to give the silver; and he finished so admirably, that I empty'd my pocket wholly into the collector's dish, gold and all.” Benjamin Franklin, 1742

Impact of the Great Awakening Effected all colonists in all colonies (1st shared experience) Friction between the “New Lights” and “Old Lights” New ministers, new colleges (Princeton, Brown, Rutgers, Columbia, etc.) Characteristic of an American culture Inherently democratic movement At odds with the Enlightenment?

18th Century Colonial Demographics Colonial Population 1720 – 472,000 1760 – 1.6 million Immigration Germans Scots-Irish Africans Georgia Imported 200,000 from 1720 – 1780 1760 – 40% of Southern colonies African culture Native Americans “Settlement Indians” Relocation west

American Colonies in European Wars

The British Empire The American Colonies were part of the British Empire and were expected to fight and defend its interests England became involved in several wars throughout the 18th Century in which the colonies played a part Colonial role in funding the wars?

Early Skirmishes War of Jenkins' Ear – 1739-1744 Georgia & Spanish Florida King George's War – 1744-1748 War of Austrian Succession England v. France New England Impressment in Navy

French and Indian War 1756-1763 Global war mainly between Britain and France 7 Years' War French/Indian allies against the English Colonies (w/ some Indian allies) Large scale fighting across the globe Ended in complete British victory

George Washington Begins his Career

A Little Rain

The French Arrive

Washington Retreats, War Begins Albany Plan – Ben Franklin. Unite the colonies in common defense. Intercolonial government. Did not pass. Frontier fighting William Pitt enlisted colonists Seized Montreal, Canada Treaty of Paris 1763. British victory France lost ALL territory in North America West of Mississippi River given to Spain Spain gives Florida to Britain Canada Good will and celebration... it doesn't last

The Aftereffects of the War Moving Forward... Colonists began to feel part of the British Empire after being pivotal to English affairs Still, no intercolonial trade. Goods were shipped to England Multicultural territory Colonial elected assemblies allowed more voting privileges than in England Meanwhile Britain wanted to “rein in” the colonies and needed to repay the huge debt accrued during the 18th Century wars