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The Settlement of the Chesapeake.

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Presentation on theme: "The Settlement of the Chesapeake."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Settlement of the Chesapeake

2 Virginia

3 English Colonization James I issues a corporate charter to the Virginia Company a joint-stock company: Guaranteed to colonists the same rights as Englishmen Goal: Gold - profit for investors Why were the first colonies run by private joint-stock companies and not the crown?

4 England Plants the Jamestown “Seedling”
Late 1606  VA Co. sends out 3 ships 40 people died on the voyage Spring 1607  land at mouth of Chesapeake Bay. Attacked by Indians and move on. May 24, 1607  about 100 colonists (all men) land at Jamestown, along banks of James River

5 Geographic/environmental problems??
Chesapeake Bay Geographic/environmental problems??

6 Jamestown Fort & Settlement Map

7 The Jamestown Nightmare
What early problems did the Jamestown settlers face? Poor swampy location - dysentery & malaria Settlers wasted time looking for gold instead of hunting or farming. “Gentlemen” colonists would not work themselves. Conflict with the local Native American tribes.

8 Captain John Smith “There was no talk…but dig gold, wash gold, refine gold, load gold…” “If you don’t work, you don’t eat!”

9 High Mortality Rates The “Starving Time”: 1607: 104 colonists
By spring, 1608: 38 survived 1609: 300 more immigrants By spring, 1610: 60 survived 1610 – 1624: 10,000 immigrants 1624 population: 1,200 Adult life expectancy: 40 years Death of children before age 5: 80%

10 “Widowarchy” What were some of the social advantages that women had in the Chesapeake colonies in the early 17th Century?

11 Smith’s Portrayal of Native Americans

12 Pocahontas “saves” Captain John Smith
A 1616 engraving

13 Powhatan Confederacy

14 Culture Clash in the Chesapeake
 First Anglo-Powhatan War De La Warr had orders to make war on the Indians. Raided villages, burned houses, took supplies, burned cornfields.

15 Culture Clash in the Chesapeake
peace between Powhatans and the English. 1614 peace sealed by the marriage of Pocahontas to Englishman John Rolfe.

16 English Migration:

17 Jamestown Colonization Pattern: 1620-1660

18 River Settlement Pattern
Large plantations [>100 acres]. Widely spread apart [>5 miles]. Social/Economic PROBLEMS???

19 What finally made the colony prosperous??
John Rolfe What finally made the colony prosperous??

20 Virginia’s gold and silver. -- John Rolfe, 1612
Tobacco Plant Virginia’s gold and silver John Rolfe, 1612

21 Early Colonial Tobacco
1618 — Virginia produces 20,000 pounds of tobacco. 1622 — Despite losing nearly one-third of its colonists in an Indian attack, Virginia produces 60,000 pounds of tobacco. 1627 — Virginia produces 500,000 pounds of tobacco. 1629 — Virginia produces 1,500,000 pounds of tobacco. What is the impact of this massive expansion of this cash crop?

22 Tobacco Prices: With prices dropping in the 1620s, what would planters need to do to make Tobacco production more profitable?

23 Indentured Servitude Headright System

24 Indentured Servitude Headright System: Indenture Contract:
Each Virginian got 50 acres for each person whose passage they paid. Each immigrant got 50 acres for paying their own passage Indenture Contract: 4-7 years. Promised “freedom dues” (land, £) Forbidden to marry. : only 1 in 10 outlived their indentured contracts

25 Why was 1619 a pivotal year for the Chesapeake settlement?

26 Virginia House of Burgesses

27 English Tobacco Label First Africans arrived in Jamestown in 1619.
Their status was not clear  perhaps slaves, perhaps indentured servants. Slavery not that significant until the end of the 17c.

28 Virginia Becomes a Royal Colony
James I grew hostile to Virginia He hated tobacco. He distrusted the House of Burgesses which he called a “seminary of sedition.” 1624  he revoked the charter of the bankrupt Virginia Company. Thus, VA became a royal colony, under the king’s direct control

29 Culture Clash in the Chesapeake
Why was 1622 a turning point? Indians attacked the English, killing 347 including John Rolfe. Virginia Co. called for a “perpetual war” until Native Americans were eradicated.

30 Powhatan Uprising of 1622

31 Culture Clash in the Chesapeake
 Second Anglo-Powhatan War Last effort of natives to defeat English. Indians defeated again. Peace Treaty of 1646 Removed the Powhatans from their original land. Formally separated Indian and English settlement areas

32 Frustrated Freemen Late 1600s  large numbers of young, poor, discontented men in the Chesapeake area. Little access to land or women for marriage. 1670  The Virginia Assembly disenfranchised most landless men

33 Nathaniel Bacon’s Rebellion: 1676
Led 1,000 Virginians in a rebellion against Governor Berkeley Rebels resented his favoring the large planter elite & dictatorial rule. Berkeley monopolized the fur trade with the Indians in the area. Berkley refused to retaliate for Indian attacks on frontier settlements. Nathaniel Bacon Governor William Berkeley

34 Bacon’s Rebellion

35 Bacon’s Rebellion Rebels attacked Indians, whether they were friendly or not to whites. Governor Berkeley driven from Jamestown. They burned the capital. Rebels went on a rampage of plundering. Bacon suddenly died of fever. Berkeley brutally crushed the rebellion and hanged 20 rebels.

36 Results of Bacon’s Rebellion
1. It exposed class conflict between poorer inland frontiersmen and landless former servants against gentry on coastal plantations. 2. Early example of colonial resistance to Royal control 3. Upper class planters searched for laborers less likely to rebel  BLACK SLAVES

37 Maryland

38 The Settlement of Maryland
Charles I grants royal charter was to George Calvert, Lord Baltimore, in 1632. Cecil Calvert formed a proprietary colony in 1634. A healthier location than Jamestown. Tobacco would be the main crop. His plan was to govern as an absentee proprietor in a feudal relationship. Huge tracts of land granted to his Catholic relatives.

39 Colonization of Maryland

40 A Haven for Catholics Toleration Act of 1649 (or Act Concerning Religion) Supported by the Catholics in MD. Guaranteed toleration to all CHRISTIANS. But, it decreed death to those who denied the divinity of Jesus. Freedom of worship for all! Death to all Jews and Atheists! Huh?

41 A Haven for Catholics? Lack of Toleration
Late 1600s Protestant majority repeals Act of Toleration small civil war breaks out in the colony Catholics temporarily lose their right to vote in Maryland assembly Still had more tolerance of religious diversity among different Protestant sects than Virginia


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