Native and Colonial America

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The 13 Colonies.
Advertisements

The Thirteen English Colonies
Native and Colonial America Unit I AP U.S. History.
Virginia The economy was based on the growth and export of tobacco
America: The Beginning UNIT 1. Why? Economics -materials and markets -land -GOLD!!!!!! -joint stock companies Renaissance -sailing technology Religious.
The English Establish 13 Colonies Mrs. Kercher.
Colonial Notes The Beginning Of It All.
Native and Colonial America Unit I AP U.S. History.
Click to Continue The 13 Original Colonies. Click on a colony to visit it!
US AP HISTORY Bell Work: 1. What is a Utopic society? 2.What were some of the English motivations for settling in the New World? 3.How did the distance.
Jamestown Pocahontas and John Rolfe Tobacco Plantation VIRGINIA/ JAMES- TOWN 1607 Capt. John Smith John Rolfe London (Virginia) Company- English gentlemen.
Chapter 1 The North American Colonies. Native American Peoples, Spain, and France Native American Peoples, Spain, and France 1. Native Americans Prior.
English Settlement Joint Stock Companies Religious Upheaval – Puritans, Catholics, Anglicans Virginia Colony – 1607 – Why it was not working John Smith,
The American Colonies. Jamestown, VA May 13, 1607: Arrival of 104 Male Settlers.
COLONIAL AMERICA Unit IB AP U.S. History. England ► Defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588 makes England a superior naval power ► Population increases ► Joint-stock.
Chapter 3 – Section 1 I.England in America A.English defeat the Spanish Armada B.1585 Sir Walter Raleigh sent 100 men to settle Roanoke Island 1.Difficult.
Colonies Review.
APUSH Unit 1 – Reading Keys. Exploration – Pages Motives / Impacts of European Exploration Motives / Impacts of European Exploration Columbus Columbus.
Unit 3 Part II The American Colonies. What is a colony? A group of people in one place who are ruled by a parent country elsewhere.
The American Colonies.
Native and Colonial America Unit I AP U.S. History.
Era Colony Founders Colonies People of Interest Groups/ Beliefs Documents
COLONIAL AMERICA Unit IB AP U.S. History. England ► Defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588 makes England a superior naval power ► Population increases ► Joint-stock.
13 Colonies Chapter 2, Section 2 and 3.
Chapters 1-3. Columbus and the Spanish 1492 Columbus finds America’s 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas 1519 Cortez lands in Mexico 1532 Pizarro conquers the.
The Thirteen Colonies 3 Regions of English Colonization New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies.
COLONIAL AMERICA Unit IB AP U.S. History Borrowed from J. Burkowski.
Native and Colonial America Unit I AP U.S. History.
American Colonies.
Our English Heritage – Colonial America – 13 Colonies
THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES
A STUDY OF THE 13 Colonies.
MR. LIPMAN’S APUSH REVIEW
Colonial America Unit 1C AP U.S. History.
Unit IB AP U.S. History Borrowed from J. Burkowski
England plants settlements in the New World
Number your paper 1-13 and write the colony name by the correct number
Period 2 – Lecture 2 AP U.S. History
COLONIAL AMERICA Unit IB AP U.S. History.
The 13 Colonies and the British Empires
Do Now Was the colony of Jamestown, Virginia an instant success or a work in progress? Explain.
The Formation of a Nation
The Good Old Days *Discovery & Settlement
Period 2 – 1607 to 1754 AP U.S. History
Colonial America Review
Founding the Thirteen Colonies
Early English Settlers
Colonial American Development
Native and Colonial America
Colonial American Development
Colonies in America.
Colonial American Development

Building The American Colonies
The Thirteen American Colonies
Thirteen Colonies.
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Colonial American Development
Colonization.
Colonial American Development
Chapter 3: Planting Colonies in North America
Colonial American Development
Created by Mrs. Williams
Virginia, New England, Middle Colonies, and Southern Colonies
Ch. 3 The English Colonies
English Exploration The 13 colonies.
UNIT 2: FACTORS THAT LED TO EXPANSION
Northeast Middle Southern Colonies Economy Family Life (New England)
Founding the 13 Colonies.
Types of colonies. Types of colonies The Colonies.
Presentation transcript:

Native and Colonial America Unit I AP U.S. History

Bering Sea Land Bridge Migration

Natives Nomads Agriculturally-based (maize/corn) Hopewells/Mississippian Moundbuilders Iroquois Iroquois Confederacy

Native Map of North America

Bellwork 8-18-2014 If you could colonize anywhere, where would you colonize and what would you want? (Houses, Gov… etc) Share with a partner!

Europe Renaissance (rebirth) Growth of Nation-States (England, France, Spain, Portugal) Protestant Reformation and Religious Wars Lutheranism Calvinism - predestination Church of England aka Anglican Church Catholic Counter-Reformation

European Colonization Columbus in 1492 spearheads European intervention into America Relations with natives Spain Encomienda system and asiento system England France

Smallpox

Columbian Exchange

Treaty of Tordesillas

European Colonies

England Defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588 makes England a superior naval power Population increases Joint-stock companies develop Religious conflicts divide the nation Weak monarchs, civil wars, and revolutions

English Colonies Charters Corporate Colony Proprietary Colony Granted a charter to stockholders Ex. Virginia Proprietary Colony Granted a charter to individual or group Ex. Maryland, Pennsylvania Royal Colony Under direct control of the monarch Ex. New Hampshire Eventually, 8 of the 13 colonies became royal colonies, including Virginia and Massachusetts

The First English Colonies First Attempt: Roanoke in 1585 First Permanent: Jamestown, Virginia in 1607 John Smith – “he that will not work shall not eat” John Rolfe - tobacco

Who is this?

Oh yeah…Pocahontas

Disney’s John Smith

Hollywood’s John Smith

This is John Smith.

Pilgrims Separatists to Holland then head for Virginia Mayflower takes Separatists and others to Jamestown but weather complicates matters Settlers decide to remain and establish Plymouth - 1620

Mayflower Compact

The Mayflower (II)

Look, a big rock.

Wampanoag Dwelling

Plymouth Colony

Pulpit/Religion

Bellwork 8-19-2014 What is difference between the three types of colonies? When did England become a super power in the Navy?

Thirteen Colonies

New England Massachusetts Bay Colony and Puritans (1630) John Winthrop and “city upon a hill” Providence, Rhode Island, and Roger Williams (1636) “Wall of separation” Portsmouth and Anne Hutchinson (1638) Antinomianism Hartford, New Haven, Connecticut, and Thomas Hooker (1636-1637) New Hampshire (1679)

New England Culture Massachusetts under strict Puritanical lifestyle Religious toleration and dissent lead to Rhode Island Halfway Covenant: attempt to increase members Salem Witch Trials (1692-1693) Cotton Mather Spectral evidence Education by mothers Towns with over 50 families required primary schools; 100, grammar schools

New England Politics Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639) First written constitution in America New England Confederation (1643-1684) Defense alliance among Plymouth, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Haven King Philip’s (Metacom) War (1675-1676) New England Confederation defeats Wampanoag alliance

Middle Colonies New Amsterdam transferred to Duke of York in 1664 to become New York Lands taken from New York to establish New Jersey by 1702 Develop wheat and corn farms and eventually into manufacturing and trade Delaware created by Pennsylvania (1702) Education by private or churches

Pennsylvania William Penn establishes Quaker-based colony in Pennsylvania (1681) Religious Society of Friends aka Quakers Holy Experiment Religious refuge Liberal political ideals Economic success Frame of Government and Charter of Liberties

Southern Colonies Maryland (1634) Virginia (1607) Carolinas (1663) North Carolina (1729) South Carolina (1729) Georgia (1732) Limited education due to agricultural base

Virginia House of Burgesses in 1619 Becomes royal colony in 1624 First legislative assembly in the colonies Becomes royal colony in 1624 Bacon’s Rebellion (1676) Inequities between large landowners and western farmers Nathanial Bacon vs. William Berkeley Headright System 50 acres to each paying immigrant or plantation owner who paid for immigrant

Maryland Lord Baltimore establishes colony for Catholics Act of Toleration (1649) Toleration of all Christian sects Death to those who denied Jesus Religious civil war brought control to Protestants

Carolinas North Carolina South Carolina Tobacco plantations Well-established autonomy South Carolina Rice plantations Became heavily dependent on slavery

Georgia James Oglethorpe establishes in 1732 Social experiment Defensive buffer to Spanish Florida Debtors colony

Colonial Religion Diverse among colonies regarding strict adherence and religious toleration Domination by Protestants; little influence of Anglican Church; other sects and denominations viewed as bizarre The Great Awakening (1730s-1740s) Over time, economics became prominent over religious conviction Jonathan Edwards and “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” George Whitefield Development of evangelism and individual faith

Colonial Religion

Colonial Politics Limited Self-Government Voting Elected legislative assemblies Governors Voting Limited to adult male educated and/or property owners

Colonial Culture/Society Rural Urban

Colonial Society American Social Structure Opportunity Gender Roles Wealthy landowners Merchants Small farmers Craftspeople Opportunity Less dependent on heredity Gender Roles Men Patriarchal society, landowners, workers Women Submissive to men but respected, domestic responsibilities, limited to no political rights

Colonial American Culture Becoming American Pragmatism Dominance of English culture Folkways Differed by coast/frontier, New England/Middle/Southern colonies

Colonial Culture - The Arts Architecture Early colonies centered around a church Urban structures typical of English structures Frontier log cabins Painting Portrait painters and landscapes Literature Religious sermons, political essays, non-fiction books Poor Richard’s Almanac - Benjamin Franklin

Typical Colony Layout

Colonial Culture - Education and Information Learning Prominent in New England colonies Education limited to wealthy males; females learned domestic chores Newspapers Limited content on weekly basis John Peter Zenger case (1735)

Immigration 250,000 in 1701 to 2.5 million in 1775 Europeans and Africans along with a high birth rate Reasons: religion; economics; political turmoil English, Germans (Pennsylvania Dutch), Scottish, Irish, Dutch, Swedish  OLD IMMIGRANTS Africans forced to America; suffered discrimination and slave labor

Slavery Indentured servitude Labor shortages lead to importing slaves Cheap labor Dependable work force Stono Rebellion/Cato Rebellion – 1739 in South Carolina New York “Conspiracy” - 1741 Slave laws

Slave Demographics

Mercantilism and Triangle Trade Colonies for the Mother Country Acts of Navigation Trade on English ships Imports pass English ports Exports to England Triangular Trade Middle Passage

Dominion of New England (1686-1689) Established by King James II to consolidate colonies Administrative union of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey Governor Edmund Andros Dissolution

Colonial Economics Land was “gold” No established monetary system (gold and silver) Transportation Rivers and coasts Horse and carriage led to taverns and postal services New England Limited land led to shipbuilding, fishing, trading Middle Colonies Wheat and corn fields; manufacturing and trade Southern Colonies Tobacco, rice, indigo plantations based on forced labor

PUROPOSE DATE FOUNDER MAJOR EXPORT () - Becomes an English colony VIRGINIA commercial 1607 Virginia Company John Smith Tobacco PLYMOUTH/ MASSACHUSETTS Religious refuge/ 1620/ 1628 William Bradford/ Massachusetts Bay Company John Winthrop Grain, timber NEW YORK 1613 (1664) Peter Stuveysant (Duke of York) Furs, grain NEW HAMPSHIRE 1623 John Mason Timber, naval stores RHODE ISLAND Religious refuge 1636 Roger Williams Grain CONNECTICUT expansion 1635 Thomas Hooker PENNSYLVANIA 1681 William Penn - Quakers DELAWARE 1638 (1681) Peter Minuit/ William Penn MARYLAND 1634 Lord Baltimore - Catholics NORTH CAROLINA 1663 Anthony Cooper Tobacco, timber, naval stores SOUTH CAROLINA Rice, indigo, naval stores GEORGIA Buffer, experiment 1733 James Oglethorpe Rice, timber, naval stores () - Becomes an English colony