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Published byChester Sutton Modified over 9 years ago
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Colonial Society on the Eve of the Revolution
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Population Growth 1700 - 300,000 colonists (20,000 Blacks) 1775 - 2,500,000 (500,000 Blacks)
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400,000 had come as immigrants 400,000 brought as slaves
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The rest of the growth was by natural increase. Population was doubling every 25 years.
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The Average age in 1775 was 16.
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1700 - English to American ratio was 20:1 1775 - English to American ratio was 3:1
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1775 - most settlers are still east of the Alleghenies
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A few pioneers had begun crossing into the Kentucky and Tennessee wilderness.
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Daniel Boone Escorting Settlers through the Cumberland Gap
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1775 - Largest colonies by population were Virginia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Maryland.
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Only 4 major cities - Philadelphia (34,000) New York, Boston and Charleston.
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America was 90% Rural.
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Ethnic Composition. 1775 - the population was still predominantly English. 6% German, 7% Scotch Lowlanders
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Scots - Irish transported from Scotland to Northern Ireland 1700’s many immigrated to America
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Most initially settled in Pennsylvania but found the best land taken by Quakers and Germans.
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The Scots-Irish moved out onto the frontier and down the east face of the Appalachians.
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They brought the art of whisky making and strong sense of rebellion. Paxton Boys and the Regulators.
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Ethnic Patterns New England was the least diverse Middle Colonies were the most diverse.
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The Southern colonies early on developed the black - white ethnic division. 90% of African-Americans were in the South.
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1775 - half of the population outside of New England was non-English.
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Social Structure Less stratified than European society. Few if any nobility. Few impoverished paupers.
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High level of social mobility - “rags to riches” Society became more stratified over time.
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A few merchants made great fortunes during the imperial wars of the late 17th and early 18th century.
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Rise of cities saw a coincident rise in the number of poor and destitute urban under- class.
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New England farms got smaller - many young men turned to manual labor or headed west.
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In the south, land was increasingly concentrated into large plantations. wealth was measured by the amount of land and slaves one owned.
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Social stratification increased - landless, indentured servants, ex- convicts and black slaves making up the bottom of the social order.
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Occupational Order Clergy were the most highly esteemed members of the community. Doctors were mostly unskilled and ignorant.
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Diseases were rampant and there was little that doctors at the time could do. Bleeding was still a common practice.
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Smallpox vaccination was being tested in the early 1700’s.
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Lawyers were considered the lowest sort. Their prestige increased over time.
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Farmers were the backbone of society and the Planter gentlemen were the ideal.
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Mercantilism Wealth was limited. One nation’s gain was another’s loss. Goal was to export more than you import.
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Favorable Balance of Trade. Bring in gold and silver to your country.
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Economic activity should be regulated by the government. Colonies should provide staple crops and raw materials to the mother country.
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Trade rivalries with the Dutch led the Navigation Acts of 1651, 1660, 1663 and 1673. Colonial trade had to be on British or American ships.
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Enumerated goods had to go only to an English or another American port. All imports had to go through Britain first.
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Smugglers got around the Acts which were not strongly enforced. The Acts helped New England ship builders.
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They hurt the tobacco farmers of the Chesapeake.
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Colonial Trade Patterns The “Triangular” trade system.
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Molasses from the Indies would become rum in New England which would be traded for slaves to make the Middle Passage to the New World.
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Transportation Few roads - waterways were important for transportation
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Churches Established churches New England= Congregationalist Virginia = Anglican Most were not members
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Great Awakening Jonathan Edwards denounced salvation through good works. George Whitefield - toured the colonies and preached at tent revivals.
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Old Lights vs. New Lights Conservatives disliked the emotionalism of Whitefield. New lights defended the revitalization.
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New Light Universities Dartmouth, Brown, Rutgers and Princeton founded to train evangelist preachers.
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