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Chapter 3. Thirteen Colonies: England’s North American Empire 1620–1732. The New England Colonies. 1608 Pilgrims or Separatists moved to Leiden, Holland William Bradford leader Pilgrims dislike Dutch values Were English at heart Became part of Plymouth Company
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Chapter 3 Thirteen Colonies: England’s North American Empire 1620–1732
The New England Colonies • 1608 Pilgrims or Separatists moved to Leiden, Holland • William Bradford leader • Pilgrims dislike Dutch values • Were English at heart • Became part of Plymouth Company • Promised freedom from persecution • The Mayflower and the Speedwell • 1620 Establish Plymouth Plantation on site of deserted native village • Half died in first winter • Squanto • Learned native fishing and cultivation methods
Self Government • Mayflower Compact • Civil Body Politik • Most males could vote but on Separatists • William Bradford governor for 30 years • Colony survived from fishing and fur trade • Mostly subsistence farming • Settlers bought out Plymouth Company • Absorbed into Massachusetts in 1691
Massachusetts • Started by Puritans in 1630 • Well organized and funded • Great Migration • Includes cross-section of English society • Equal numbers of men and women • Want to create godly commonwealth = New England • Abhorred Church of England • Massachusetts Bay Company charter gives them right to self-government
Puritan beliefs • Calvinists; humans inherently sinful • God’s “Elect” or Saints: chosen for salvation • “Elect” form covenant with God • “Elect” must enforce God’s law in community • Out of dissatisfaction with Church of England • On an errand in the wilderness • Believed England was flaunting God’s laws and would be punished • Puritans to set an example of how to keep God’s covenant • John Winthrop • Strong sense of community • Strict code of moral and social behavior • Intolerant of individualism • Disciplined members
Blue Laws • Statutes of Massachusetts • Regulated Sunday activity (Blue Laws) • Used corporal punishment • Dunking, stocks • Mandatory church attendance • Capital punishment rarely used • Blasphemy, witchcraft, treason, rape, murder, etc
Assumptions • Monarchy was sacred and democracy was abhorrent • Strict discipline for children • Social and economic distinctions part of God’s will • Carefully planned communities • Home sites were assigned • Church and school in each community • Most literate society in world • Harvard established 1636
Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire • Roger Williams • Came to disagree with Puritan ministers • No one can know if others are “Elect” • Separation of church and state • Remove religious qualifications for voting • This threatened Puritan control of Massachusetts • Questions Puritan legal right to land • Indians owned by right of occupation
Rhode Island: “The Sewer of New England” • Puritan authorities banish Williams • Fled, lived with Narragansett Tribe • Founded Providence and attracted followers • Returned to England in 1644 • Won charter for new colony • Williams founded Rhode Island • Home for dissenters; “sewer of New England”
Anne Hutchinson • Criticized for speaking out as a woman • Antinomian heresy • Believed Holy Spirit inspired some to speak out • Antinomianism = believed some people specially blessed and thus above the laws • Banished to Rhode Island in 1638 with some of her followers
New Hampshire, Maine and Connecticut • New Hampshire and Maine originally given to two men who could sell land for profit but never really grew • New Hampshire made royal colony in 1680 • John Wheelwright • Maine District became part of Massachusetts in 1677 • John Usher purchased and gave to Massachusetts • Thomas Hooker starts Connecticut • Hartford founded in 1636 • Expansion leads to war with Pequot in 1637 • Multi-colony army, with natives help, decimated Pequots • New Haven founded during war
Propriety Colonies • Corporate colony • Charters as constitutions • King sovereign, but self-governing commonwealths • Leaders elected by male members of Congregationalist church • Examples: Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island • Royal • Governed by King, thorough governor • Elected Assemblies • Example : Virginia • Proprietary • Power placed in hands high placed persons • Lord proprietors appointed governor • Example: New Hampshire and Maryland
Maryland – Making Money • Maryland started by George Calvert, Lord Baltimore • Hoped it would be a refuge for Catholics • Hoped to make money through feudal means • Gave out land through head-right system • Paid proprietor a quitrent • Not exactly a tax but left from feudal times • Colonial quitrents small • For proprietor colony payments added up
New Netherlands becomes New York • New Netherland founded by Dutch in 1646 • Dutch West India Company • Peter Stuyvesant • Colony had diverse population • Four British warships called for surrender of New Amsterdam in 1664 • Generous terms • New Netherland became New York without a shot fired
A Successful Transition • New York was Duke of York’s proprietary colony until 1685 when became King James II then royal • Most Dutch stayed and more arrived • 1689 James dethroned • Jacob Leisler tries to seize New York • But were arrested • William and Mary restored tolerance
The Carolina Grant • Charles II granted to 8 gentlemen and nobles • Charleston first major settlement • Most early settlers from Barbados • Brought slavery and sugar • Early economy was diverse • Demand for slaves grew • Brought the main crop = rice • Northern Carolina • Small farmers, mostly tobacco • Democratic spirit • Southern Carolina • Dependent on plantation system • Staple crops • Rice • Aristocratic and urban • Did not live on rice plantations because of disease
New Jersey and the Quakers • Duke of York gave southern Dutch lands in 1665 to John Berkeley and George Carteret • Society of Friends (Quakers) • Believed in pacifism • Challenged civil authority • Guided by “inner light” so no earthly authority • Believed in equality • Allowed women to preach • Grew rapidly in North America
Pennsylvania: “The Holy Experiment” • William Penn • Colony chartered out of royal debt • Named after his father “Penn’s woods” • Pennsylvania • Paid Indians for land • Haven for Quakers • Many German immigrants • Philadelphia: well planned, largest city in America • Delaware • Created out of three lower counties in 1701
Georgia: A philanthropic experiment • James Oglethorpe • Becomes buffer between South Carolina and Florida • Governed by council in England originally • Tried to help debtors • Banned slavery and alcohol • Experiment failed as others rush in • Becomes royal colony in 1752
Discussion Questions • What caused the Pilgrims to come to North America? Was their colony successful? • What role did religion play in the development of Massachusetts Bay and Rhode Island? • Who was Anne Hutchinson? What was her crime and what does it say about colonial gender roles? • What was the “Society of Friends”? What role did it play in the development of the Pennsylvania? • Compare and contrast company, royal and proprietorship colonies.