The Colonial Regions
Pilgrims King Charles I (1625) The Anglican Church Governor John Winthrop “A city upon a hill”
Enforced Conformity “State” Church Reading the Bible Harvard College
Dissenters Roger Williams Anne Hutchinson Restrictions on Women Thomas Hooker
Male Dominance Voting Rights Puritan Villages Watchful Women
A proper Puritan family Divorce Women’s rights Large families
Rocky soil/short growing seasons Subsistence farming Lumber/shipbuilding Fishing/whaling Rum distilling Port cities/shallow rivers
Salem (1691) Accusations Escalations Executions Challenges to the Puritan way of life
Chesapeake Society Church and state in Virginia Bicameral Legislature The Anglican Church Little emphasis on religion
Cecilius Calvert (Lord Baltimore) Catholics Puritans vs. Catholics The Act of Religious Toleration
Growing tobacco Population Deep Rivers Lack of towns
First slaves (1619) Slave laws Slave population Reasons for the increase in slavery
Heading for the Caribbean Sugar Caribbean slave population
King Charles II Tobacco Use of slaves Rice Split in the Carolinas
New Netherland New Sweden English Conquests New York New Jersey
Charles II William Penn Religious Tolerance Growing Grains Immigration Delaware
Louis XIV Fur Traders Ohio Valley Mississippi Basin Treatment of Natives