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Published byDoreen Patterson Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 2
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3 European powers planted 3 primitive outposts in 3 distant corners Spanish = Santa Fe 1610 French = Quebec 1608 English = Jamestown 1607
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Protestant Reformation – Mid 1500’s King Henry VIII Queen Elizabeth – 1558 Protestant Crushed the Irish 1570’s – 1580’s Confiscated Catholic Irish lands “Planted” with new Protestant landlord
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Spread Protestantism Seizing Spanish ships / settlements Sea Dogs Sir Francis Drake Deal with Elizabeth Knighted Drake Sir Walter Raleigh - 1585 North Carolina = Roanoke Island Vanished
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1588 Philip II of Spain Spanish Armada 130 ships English = swifter / maneuverable Defeated Spain End of Spanish dominance Caribbean slips from Spain’s grasp Overextended English naval dominance Signed peace treaty - 1604
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Tenant farming Wool industry Unemployment Overcrowded Surplus population Primogeniture Joint Stock Company Gave financial means
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Virginia Company = 1 st Charter King James I Gold Passage through America Not permanent
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May 24, 1607 3 ships 150 people Landed in Jamestown Virginia Chesapeake Bay Mosquito invested Disease, malnutrition, starvation 1608 John Smith “He who shall not work shall not eat”
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Pocahontas Powhatan 1609 400 colonists at Jamestown “Starving Time” = winter 60 survived 1610 Relief party came Governor = Lord De La Warr
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English raided Indian food supplies Lord De La Warr Declaration of War against Indians First Anglo-Powhatan War = 1614 1614 Pocahontas marries John Rolfe
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Land hungry colonists Disease 1622 Series of attack 347 settlers dead Virginia Company “Perpetual war without peace or truce” Pushed survivors farther west
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2 nd Anglo-Powhatan War – 1644 Native Americans defeated Peace treaty of 1646 Banished 3 D’s Disease Disorganization Disposability Native Americans served no purpose
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Horse Migration into the Great Plains Lakotas (Sioux) New way of life Disease Extinguished cultures Commerce Firearms Competition amongst tribes
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John Rolfe Father of tobacco Tobacco rush Hungered for land Economic savior Plantation system Needed fresh labor Dutch brought slaves Too costly Indentured servants
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Catholic haven Lord Baltimore Reap financial profits Refuge for fellow Catholics Tobacco Indentured servants Religious toleration Act of Toleration - 1649
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Spain weakened grip on West Indies England claimed several islands Jamaica – 1655 Sugar plantations Rich man’s crop Land clearing Sugar mills Wealthy investors Slaves
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1700 Slaves outnumbered white settlers 4 to 1 Barbados Slave Code – 1661 Denied fundamental rights Masters = complete control Punishments West Indies depended on North America for food supplies Small English farmers move North Carolina - 1670
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Colonization interrupted during mid 1600’s English Revolution Developed close ties with West Indies Stage for slave trade Used Savannah Indians = Manacled Indians Rice = principal export crop Charles Town Busiest seaport / Aristocrats Religious toleration
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Ragtag group, poverty stricken outcasts Squatters Riffraff Separated from South Carolina in 1712 Democratic Independent-minded Lease aristocratic
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Last of the 13 colonies Buffer Named after King George Received monetary subsidies Haven for wretched souls imprisoned for debt James Oglethorpe “The charity colony” Melting pot / Religious toleration Except Catholics
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