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Life in Colonial America. Why was New England more stable than the Chesapeake Region?. NE colonists tended to arrive in family units, large families Chesapeake colonists were young single males who arrived as indentured servants
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Why was New England more stable than the Chesapeake Region? • NE colonists tended to arrive in family units, large families • Chesapeake colonists were young single males who arrived as indentured servants • Chesapeake Region had a much higher death rate among colonists ( diseases- malaria, dysentery) • NE less disease and cleaner water • The ratio of males to females in Chesapeake was much more imbalanced, than NE making it difficult to find a wife and start a family • Population increased faster in NE allowing for the development of stable communities • Life span in NE about 70years, Chesapeake about 50years
New England Economy • Harsh climate and rocky soil made farming difficult • Short fast rivers and good harbors • Believed in owning and improving land • Land usually given to congregations and towns subdivided among family • Turned to shipbuilding, commerce, whaling and fishing to make a living
Middle Colonies Economy • Known as the “breadbasket” of the colonies • Climate and soil produced a grain surplus • Large slower rivers allowed for fur trade and transportation • Major cities Philadelphia and New York City • Merchants and artisans flourished
Southern Economy • Based on cash crops- tobacco, rice and cotton • Based on plantation system- wealthy landowners used slaves to harvest cash crops • Wealthy landowners controlled economy and politics • Small farmers- owned a 1 or 2 slaves, struggled to make living • Landless whites- worked as laborers for low wages • African slaves about 40% of population
John Peter Zenger • was jailed in NY 1735 because he criticized royal governor in his newspaper • Charged with seditious libel • His defense he printed the truth • Was acquitted • Basis for freedom of press
Education • New England • First public school system in the Americas • Based in religion • Literacy very important • Hornbook • New England Primer • Massachusetts law required towns of over 50 families to provide elementary school
Education: Middle and Southern Colonies • Middle Colonies • Generally private and religiously based • Southern Colonies • Private tutors • Broad education • Classics (Latin and Greek) and maybe French • History, Philosophy, and perhaps Science • Music
Education • Colleges
Phillis Wheatley • Slave girl who was taught to read • and write • 1st important African American • writer • Proof that blacks were not • intellectually inferior
Benjamin Franklin • Seen as the symbolic American and as • personification of the Enlightenment • Self educated- was a painter, scientist, • inventor, statesmen and writer • Invented lightning rod, bifocal glasses • highly efficient stove • Wrote Poor Richard’s Almanack • 1) writings of many thinkers of • the day • 2) emphasized thrift, industry • morality and common sense • 3) only the bible read more
THE ENLIGHTENMENT AND THE GREAT AWAKENING • 1700s: An intellectual movement known as the Enlightenment began in Europe and a religious movement known as the Great Awakening started in the Colonies • The Enlightenment emphasized reason, science, and observation and led to the discovery of natural laws • Copernicus, Galileo, Franklin and Newton were key figures
THE GREAT AWAKENING • The Great Awakening was a spiritual renewal that swept the American Colonies • 1st mass social movement in American History • Main issues- religious style, personal faith, church practice and public decorum • Deepest effect on young people • Movement stressed the importance of the individual
THE GREAT AWAKENING • Reasons it arouse • 1) movement toward secularism- certain practices should exist separate from religion • 2) influential preachers • 3) colonial instability, looking to god for help • 4) dissatisfied with traditional Puritan church services
Jonathan Edwards • Jonathan Edwards was a Puritan priest was credited with starting Great Awakening • Fire & Brimstone style of worship; large, emotionally charged crowds • Rejection of salvation by works, affirmed need for complete dependence on grace of god • (sinners in the hands of an Angry God)
The Great Awakening • Orator George Whitefield followed, touring colonies, led revivals, countless conversions, inspired imitators • Most influential figure of the movement • Founded the Methodist Church in Georgia and SC George Whitefield
Old Lights vs. New Lights • Old Lights- God existed and created the world - denied God communicated with man in any form - got to have if good, skeptical of emotionalism • New Lights- heaven by salvation by grace through Jesus Christ - challenged traditional authority - divided congregations - used emotion to inspire followers
Results of Great Awakening • Split denominations thus increasing religious competition in American • Brought religion to many who had lost touch with it • Undermined older clergy • Encouraged new wave of missionary work among slaves and Indians • Founding of New Light Colleges- Dartmouth, Brown, Rutgers, Princeton