240 likes | 530 Views
Settling the Northern Colonies. 1619 – 1700. Religion. 1517 – Protestant reformation 1536 – John Calvin --- Calvinism The elect Predestination Conversion Visible saints Puritans v. Separatists. Pilgrims & the Mayflower. 1620 – Pilgrims/Mayflower> Plymouth
E N D
Settling the Northern Colonies 1619 – 1700
Religion • 1517 – Protestant reformation • 1536 – John Calvin --- Calvinism • The elect • Predestination • Conversion • Visible saints • Puritans v. Separatists
Pilgrims & the Mayflower • 1620 – Pilgrims/Mayflower> Plymouth • Less than ½ were actually Puritans • Squatters – no charter, suppose to settle in Virginia • Mayflower Compact (1620) • town meetings • Simple agreement to form a crude government & submit to the will of majority
Plymouth • 1st Thanksgiving (1621) • Plentiful harvest/ Wampanoag Indians • William Bradford – Governor (reelected 30x) • Afraid that non-Puritans would corrupt his godly experiment • Never important politically or economically
Massachusetts Bay Colony John Winthrop – Governor for 19 years calling from God Purposed of government was to enforce God’s laws Model society for humankind General court Protestant ethic – work! “Day of Doom” Persecution of Quakers “We shall be as a city upon a hill.” Great Puritan Migration - 1630
Massachusetts Bay Colony (1630) • Franchise granted to all “freemen”- adult males who belonged to Puritan congregations • Town government – all male property holders/ majority rule • Believers & non-believers paid taxes to support church
Puritans • Separation of church and state – clergy could not hold political office • Could hire & fire ministers and set their salaries • Enjoyed earthly pleasures
Extreme separatist Condemned colony for taking Indian land without compensation (Mass. Bay Colony) 1st Baptist church in America Denied the authority of civil government to regulate religious behavior Banished Fled to Rhode Island (1636)- with help of Indians Roger Williams - 1635
Established by Roger Williams Freedom of religion No oaths or taxes to support a church Simple manhood suffrage Strongly individualistic/ stubbornly independent Many religious dissenters Rhode Island -- 1636
Anne Hutchinson - 1638 • Banished for heresy from Mass. Bay Colony • Belief – a holy life was no sure sign of salvation • Moved to Rhode Island • Antinomianism – belief that those whom God had marked for salvation need not obey secular laws
Connecticut Colony (1635) • Highly fertile land • Thomas Hooker -leader • Fundamental Orders (1639) (constitution) • 1638 – New Haven established – no charter • Merged with Connecticut under Charles II’s orders
New Hampshire (1679) • Granite rich area • Separated from Mass. Bay Colony under King’s orders • Massachusetts Bay colony exaggerated the charter to include New Hampshire • King split colonies into royal colonies
Puritans versus Indians • King Philip’s War (1675-1676) • King Philip (Metacom) launched attacks on English villages • Slowed westward march of English settlement in New England • Lasting defeat of New England’s Indians • Last serious Indian challenge to white settlement
New England Confederation (1643) • 4 colonies banded together “Puritan Club” • Mass Bay, Plymouth, Connecticut, & New Haven • Defense against the Indians, the French, & the Dutch • Settled intercolonial problems • First milestone on road to colonial unity
Monarch • 1660- Charles II restored to English throne • End of “Benign Neglect” • Took an active, aggressive hand in the management of the colonies flexing his muscles
Dominion of New England(1686) • Created by royal authority • Purpose: colonial defense & administration of the English Navigation Laws • stop trade with countries not ruled by English crown • Smuggling began
Sir Edmund Andros • Led Dominion of New England • authoritarian rule • Stopped town meetings • Heavy restrictions on courts, press, & school • Revoked all land titles • Tax without consent • Suppress smuggling & enforce Navigation Laws • Dominion collapsed with the Glorious Revolution (1688-1689) –William & Mary come to throne
New York • 1623-24 – New Netherlands established by the Dutch West India Company • Fur trade along Hudson River valley • New Amsterdam (NYC) protected from Indian attacks by a wall • Aristocratic/Patroonships – received estates if you settled 50 people • No enthusiasm for religious toleration, free speech, or democratic practices • Cosmopolitan population
New Amsterdam Surrenders • 1664- Dutch & English want New Amsterdam • Peter Stuyvesant forced to surrender to English • Land given to Duke of York by his brother King Charles II
Pennsylvania • 1681 – Established by William Penn as a refuge for the Quakers • Quaker beliefs • Take no oaths, simple town meetings, democratic, turn the other cheek, etc… • Penn: “First American advertising man.”
Pennsylvania • Representative Assembly elected by landowners • No tax supported church • Opposed war & slavery • Rich mix of ethnic groups • Great relationship with Native Americans
Changes in the Colonies • 1702 – East & West Jersey combined into New Jersey • 2 proprietors received land by Duke of York • 1703 – Delaware (Lord de la Warr) granted its own assembly • Remained under the control of Pennsylvania until American Revolution
Fertile soil – “Bread Colonies” Broad rivers – Encouraged movement Forests – lumbering & shipbuilding Deep harbors – commerce/seaports of NY & Philadelphia Intermediate landholdings (size) Most ethnically mixed Unusual degree of religious toleration & democratic control More economic democracy Characteristics of the Middle Colonies
All basically English Some self-government Some degree of religious toleration/ educational opportunity Unusual advantages for economic and social self-development All separated from home authority by 3,000 miles Similarities Among all the Colonies