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Eighteenth-Century America Chapter 1
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Overview: Colonial Society in 1700 Not a homogeneous society Ethnic and religious diversity Free and unfree No national identity No common culture French vs. English battle for control
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Labor in the Colonies Plantation economy depended upon manual labor. Indentured Servants (debt slavery) Worked 4 to 7 years. Accounted for half the white settlers in all colonies outside New England. Slavery (chattel slavery) (1619 – Jamestown) Increased staple crops for commercial markets. Mortality rate improved. Racist rationalization based on color differences or heathenism. Perpetual black slavery became the custom and the law of the land.
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The Middle Passage About 21 million people captured in West Africa between 1700 and 1850. Millions died during the Atlantic crossing and as many as 7 million remained slaves in Africa. Slaves were captured by other Africans within the interior, brought to the coast, sold to Europeans. Packed together in slave ships and subjected to a 4 to 6 week passage. So brutal that 1 in 7 died en route. Once in America they were thrown indiscriminately together and treated like work animals.
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The Atlantic Slave Trade (Middle Passage)
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Slavery in British North America Great Ethnic Diversity in Slave Population. Before 1750: Slave importation. 17 th century – Brazil & Caribbean 18 th century – Directly from Africa After 1750: Native-born population. Distinctively African-American culture 20% of colonial population. (40% in south) British North America bought less than 5 percent of the total slave imports to the Western Hemisphere (1500-1800). 400,000 out of 9.5 million; however, had a better chance for survival.
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The Slave Family and Community The differences among blacks lessened as slave importation tapered off and the black population grew through natural increase. Black families remained vulnerable. Slave marriages had no legal status and family members were often separated by deaths or debts of masters.
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Slave Societies in the Eighteenth-Century South Tense and embattled regions. Salve resistance More frequent More successful
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Slave Societies in the Eighteenth-Century South Slavery and Colonial Society in French Louisiana Natchez Revolt (1729) Africans challenged French control / importation of slave stopped Greater freedom for blacks in Louisiana Freedom granted to those who served in French militia. Became the core of Louisiana’s free black community. Slave Resistance in 18th-Century British N. America The Stono Rebellion (1739) (South Carolina) The largest slave revolt of the colonial period. Nearly 100 slaves killed several whites before being caught and killed by the white militia.
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The Enlightenment A scientific revolution that swept through Europe during the 17 th century. Assumptions The world is an orderly place. (Natural Law) Humans can understand order. Influence in America Diets – God made world and then left alone Skepticism – Questioned everything Laws of nature John Locke and tabula rosa (people can be corrupted) Reason and virtue
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The Great Awakening Causes: Challenges to religion (Enlightenment), competing denominations, westward expansion Changes in society and tradition Revivals (1730s) – A wave of evangelism that swept through the colonies. Jonathan Edwards George Whitefield – Emphasized “new birth”
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Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) Congregationalist minister from Massachusetts. Feared religion had become too intellectual and had lost its animating force. “The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one holds a spider or some other loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you and is dreadfully provoked.” “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”
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The Great Awakening Influence on Colonists Old Light (structure) Intended the Great Awakening to bolster church discipline and order. (Edwards & Whitefield) New Light (emotion) Radical evangelists that attacked the established clergy and appealed to the lower classes. Short term results New religious groups and the split of more Calvinistic churches: Baptists, Methodists, etc. New England Puritanism fragmented
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The Great Awakening Long term results American style evangelism and revivalism Denominational colleges Undermining of state-sponsored churches; toleration of dissent Individual judgment: Fewer willing to defer to the ruling social and political elite. Emphasized popular resistance to established authority.
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The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening Both emphasized the power and right of individual choice and popular resistance to established authority. Both aroused hopes that America could become the promised land. Fewer and fewer people were willing to defer to the ruling social and political elite.
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Society Population Growth Doubled every 25 years Cities Small and isolated from one another. Education Rapid expansion.
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The Settlement of the Backcountry Isolation of the backcountry Frontier women Social Conflict on the Frontier The Paxton Boys (1763) Regulation movements (1760s) Ethnic conflicts Germans, Scots-Irish, etc. Boundary Disputes and Tenant Wars Green Mountain boys (1760s)
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Eighteenth-Century Seaports Increasingly sharp class stratification The commercial classes Free and bound workers Women in cities Urban diversions and hazards Plays, taverns, private social clubs, fraternal societies. Problems of traffic, fire, and crime Social Conflict in Seaports Religious tension Class resentment
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Politics Royal colonies British crown responsible for defense. British crown regulated external trade. Elected lower houses Home rule Self-government in the colonies became first a habit, then a “right.”
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Economy: Mercantilism (self-sufficient) World’s gold and silver supply fixed. Nations could gain wealth only at the expense of another country – by seizing its gold and silver and dominating its trade. Colonies were part of an empire. Source of raw materials. Market for finished goods.
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Atlantic Trade Growing economy Unfavorabl e balance of trade Shortage of hard money Ton of debt
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Navigation Acts (1651, 1660, 1663) Terms: All imported goods to be shipped in English vessels. Enumerated articles could only be shipped to England or other English colonies. All goods imported by the colonies come through England. The Imperial System before 1760 The benefits of benign neglect
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