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Published byMarlene Pope Modified over 9 years ago
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English Colonies
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English Colonization 1 st Looking for gold- Jamestown- 2 nd Great Migration 3 rd Headright system 4 th Mercantilism 5 th Colonialism 6 th Indentured Servitude
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Indentured Servitude About 75% of English came as Indentured Servants Signed a contract to work for a ride to America. –4-7 year contract –Still pay for food, drink and clothing –Many died before term was finished –Both White and African held these contracts
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Indentured Servitude to Slavery The demand for servants greater than the supply People began to resist working in such harsh conditions The Price of slaves decreased Wealthy planters turned to slavery by end of 1600s
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New England Region –Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Connecticut –Economy: based on trade, manufacturing, fishing and small farms
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Middle Region –New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware –Very diverse populations Economy: –Large farms, staple crops, trade –Rich, fertile land inland –Focused on trade on the coasts
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Southern Region Georgia founded for those with debt or criminal records. Economy- Farming, exporting and trade –Many small farms –Plantations for cash crops –Export materials for ships –Traded with Native Americans –Slavery
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Religion in the Colonies –Pilgrims to Plymouth- 1620 –Puritans gained a Charter and wanted to build an ideal Christian community (covenant). –Life was based around the family and community Family run farms –No need for indentured servants Education important
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Religion in Colonies Puritans were Calvinists –All humans were going to hell –Few chosen people will get salvation –Proper behavior would keep bad things from happening to you. –The whole community had to be “good” so an interest in what your neighbor does is part of everyday life.
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Religion in the Colonies Catholics: Maryland in 1634 –Toleration Acts protected all Christians Quaker: “Society of Friends” –Started in New Jersey 1681 –William Penn got charter to move to P.A. –Believed in equality and were non violent
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Religion in the Colonies The Great Awakening 1730-1740 –People losing faith –Sermons that were more inspirational & emotional would bring people back to God. –Revivals traveled around colonies –Increased communication b/w colonies
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Gov’t in the Colonies Three Types of Colonies Charter Colonies- RI & CT Proprietor Colonies- MD, PA & DE Royal Colonies- MA, NH, VA, NC,SC,GA, NY, NJ
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Gov’t in the Colonies 1) Monarch: Owns Colonies 2) Privvy Council: Sets policy (In England) 3) Governor: Carries out policies of England & final say on laws –Proprietor-elects –Charter- Legislature chooses –Royal-King chooses
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Gov’t in the Colonies 4) Advisory Council: assists Governor 5) Colonial Assemblies: make laws, set policy, raise taxes –Elected –Bicameral –One house (upper) appointed by Governor –One house (lower) elected by colonists
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Gov’t in the Colonies 1 st Colonial Legislature –Jamestown-1619 –Bicameral Upper house: Council of State Lower House: House of Burgesses
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Gov’t in the Colonies 6) Local Assemblies People meet in different size groups & at different times based on region A- New England Region -Town Meetings - meet many times a year - talk about local issues: school, land
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Gov’t in the Colonies B- Southern Region - County Meetings - Meet once a year C- Middle Colonies - town & county meetings
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Gov’t in the Colonies Colonial Courts –Control local affairs –Could be influenced
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