Chapter 3 Colonizing a Continent in the Seventeenth Century The American People, 6 th ed.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Southern Colonies Coming to America With the growth of plantations, there was an increasing need for workers in the newly settled colonies. English.
Advertisements

The Thirteen English Colonies
% of population were aged and came as indentured servants Little women population High Death Rate 40% of the immigrants died in less.
Founding the English Mainland Colonies,
The English Colonies
Native Americans What is the most likely scientific explanation for how Native Americans ultimately “colonized” the Americas? The Bering Land Bridge.
13 Colonies Notes The New England Colonies
Chapter 2 The Planting of English America
Chapter 1 Section 3 Early British Colonies
Coach Medford Building American History Champions.
Colonies Review.
The English Colonies Chapter 2 Section 3. Atlantic Coast The Spanish colonized the south and west The French colonized the North The Atlantic Coast was.
THE SOUTHERN COLONIES Chapter 3 Section 1. The Southern Colonies Founding a New Colony  Company of English merchants went to the king to get a.
Bellringer Answers 1. Puritans came for religious freedom, but did not give religious freedom to others (were intolerant/hypocritical). 2. Dissenters were.
Colonies. Division of Colonies Southern Middle New England.
Southern Colonies Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia.
Chapter 3-4 Southern Colonies. 3-4 Coming to America Tobacco prices fall – Small farms hurt – Large farms and Plantations able to make profit Plantations.
Chapter 2 and 3 Review and Answers
EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT OF NORTH AMERICA
By the 1600s (17 th Century) many Southern Planters relied on labor from enslaved Africans Royal African Company: had a monopoly (only company) on the.
Chesapeake Colonies and the Southern Colonies Virginia and Maryland Carolinas and Georgia.
IV.Southern Colonies A.Coming to America 1. Establishing Maryland a. Sir George Calvert, Lord Baltimore 1. wanted to establish a safe place for his fellow.
Ch2: The English Colonies p. 32 textbook. Start Strong… See the Start Strong on the White Board… Take out your Colonies G.R.A.P.E.S. Chart Homework: Complete.
SSUSH1 The student will describe European settlement in North America during the 17th century. a. Explain Virginia’s development; include the Virginia.
The Middle and Southern Colonies Chapter 2 Section 4.
Themes  The colonizers’ backgrounds, ideologies, goals, and modes of settlement produced distinctly different societies in North America in the 17 th.
England in the Chesapeake. In 1607 they settled Jamestown.
EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT OF NORTH AMERICA A Guiding Question 1 Why did people settle in the British North American colonies? Did people come for primarily.
3-3 Notes: Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies.
©2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved. ©2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights reserved.McGraw-Hill Chapter 2: The First.
Chapter 3 Section 3 Notes The Southern Colonies. I.Lord Baltimore Founds Maryland – second Southern colony, Maryland, settled on Chesapeake Bay.
England’s Southern Colonies. Describe how Jamestown was settled, why the colony struggled, and how it survived. Explain the relationship of Indians and.
Chapter 2, Section 2 The English Colonies. Main Idea The English established thirteen colonies along the East Coast of North America.
Chapter 3 Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Next US History: Beginnings to 1914 The Southern Colonies The Big Idea Despite a.
Portugal, France, & the Netherlands. Portugal Navigation & Influence of Prince Henry the Navigator 1420s -1430s = Established sugar plantations on Madeira,
EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT OF NORTH AMERICA. WHAT IS HISTORY?? Prologue, After the Fact Point of View (ATF 1)
Colonization.
COMPARING THE COLONIES Chapter 7. English Colonial Expansion Great Britain was an unstable place in the 16 th century ( ). Great Britain included.
CH 1 SEC 2 EUROPEAN COLONIES IN AMERICA I. EUROPEAN EXPLORERS IN THE AMERICAS After the treaty of Tordesillas divided the New World between Spain and.
3.3 The Southern Colonies. Royal Colonies and Proprietary Colonies A Royal Colony is one that is owned by the king and he picks (appoints) the governor.
History on slavery Indentured Servants Indentured servants became the first means to meet this need for labor. In return for free passage to Virginia,
Colonization and Settlement Spanish, French, and English Settlements in North America.
Standard – SSUSH 1 Describe European settlement in North America during the 17 th Century. a)Explain Virginia’s development; include the Virginia Company,
HOW SLAVERY CAME TO THE U.S.
The Emergence of Colonial Society,
The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 3.
Unit Two Lecture Life in the Colonies
1606: James I granted a charter creating 2 branches of the Virginia Company of London:
Southern and Middle Colonies
1500s Exploration Colonization Seventeenth Century Colonial America
Colonizing America SSUSH1: The student will describe European settlement in North America during the 17th century. a. Explain Virginia’s development:
VOCABULARY DAY# 7 PGS INDENTURED SERVANTS BACON’S REBELLION
Chapter 2: The English Colonies
Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
Lesson 3 “Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies”
Chapter 3 Colonizing a Continent in the Seventeenth Century
1606: James I granted a charter creating 2 branches of the Virginia Company of London:
The Southern Colonies.
Chapter 3: The English Establish 13 Colonies
The Colonists Goals: Why did the settlers leave their homeland to come to the new world? What influenced their experience when they arrived? What were.
Chapter 3.3 “Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies”
HOW SLAVERY CAME TO THE U.S.
HOW SLAVERY CAME TO THE U.S.
Study Guide Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 Section 1 THE SOUTHERN COLONIES.
Colonial North America in the 17th Century
English, French, Dutch and Spanish Settlements in America
Chapter 2 Section 3: The Southern Colonies
English Exploration The 13 colonies.
HOW SLAVERY CAME TO THE U.S.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 3 Colonizing a Continent in the Seventeenth Century The American People, 6 th ed.

I.The Chesapeake Tobacco Coast

Jamestown, Sot Weed, and Indentured Servants  The Jamestown colony was a joint-stock venture of the King of England and the Virginia Company of England.  Tobacco (sot weed) was found to grow remarkably well in the Chesapeake soil.  Tobacco required an exhaustive supply of labor. English and Irish laborers were recruited by the company to become indentured servants, trading several years of labor in return for passage to America.

Expansion and Indian War  Population growth put the Jamestown colony on a collision course with the Chesapeake tribe of Indians.  After a costly Indian assault, the Crown annulled the charter of the bankrupt Virginia Company and established a royal colony.

Proprietary Maryland  Maryland, another colony on the Chesapeake, was established as a safe haven for Catholics.  Designed and promoted by George Calvert, an English noble  Colony was overwhelmed by protestants eager to jump at the chance for free land.

Bacon’s Rebellion Engulfs Virginia  Land hunger and dissatisfaction with declining tobacco prices caused planter Nathaniel Bacon and an assortment of slaves and indentured servants to rebel against established colonial policy granting local tribes exclusive rights over land outside white settlements.

The Southern Transition to Slave Labor  English administrators first regarded Native Americans as the obvious source of labor.  Disease and the determination of the tribes made them difficult to subjugate.  Africans began to take over the bulk of Southern labor in the later half of the seventeenth century.

The System of Bondage  Early African slaves were brought over as bond servants who worked a term of labor and then were set free.  Chesapeake planters gradually began to tighten descriptions of slavery, eventually curtailing all rights of Africans and establishing “Black Codes” of behavior.  Eventually, slavery became a hereditary state.

II.Massachusetts and Its Offspring

Puritanism in England  Adherents to the Puritan movement were religious reformers as well as harsh critics of their contemporary Englishmen.  They stressed hard work as a primary method of serving God.  A succession of English monarchs clashed with the Puritans, and many felt ready to expatriate to the New World.

King Phillip’s War in New England  Young Native Americans of the Wampanoag and Narragansett tribes continued to feel disenfranchised with the increase of European settlers.  Their leader Metacomet (called King Phillip by the British) unleashed a series of hit-and-run offensives against the settlers in Thousands were killed on each side.

Slavery in New England  New England’s involvement with the slave trade was primarily in the area of distilling rum.  The region as a whole did not rely on slavery as a labor solution to the extent that the South would.

III.From the St. Lawrence to the Hudson

France’s America  In 1604 and 1608, France established outposts in present-day Nova Scotia and Quebec.  Bitter skirmishes with the Iroquois set the tone for future colonial wars with an ongoing alliance of the English and Iroquois against the French.

England Challenges the Dutch  The Dutch settled significant regions of the mid-Atlantic coast of North America with a main settlement at New Netherland.  By 1650, England was prepared to challenge Dutch supremacy on the sea.  A series of wars saw the Dutch permanently dislodged from the American mainland.

IV.Proprietary Carolina: A Restoration Reward

The Indian Debacle  Carolina was the most elaborately planned colony of the English, but the least successful in achieving harmony of the races.  Capturing Indians for the slave trade became the colony’s main revenue source, causing a series of racial wars.

Early Carolina Society  In Carolina, an ethnically diverse and religiously discordant people clashed continuously.  Reliance on African slave labor to manage the backbreaking cultivation of rice became a mainstay for the colony.  In 1701, North and South Carolina split into respective colonies.

V.The Quakers’ Peaceable Kingdom

The Limits of Perfectionism  Despite commercial success and harmony with native tribes, the early colony of Pennsylvania stumbled due to poor leadership.  Pennsylvania was created by William Penn as a social experiment in utopianism for the Quaker community.

VI.New Spain’s Northern Frontier

Decline of Florida’s Missions  The Franciscan missions established along the Florida coast were pummeled by disease, the English, and a lack of interest by potential Spanish settlers.  When England and Spain went to war, the Carolinas attacked Florida.