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This article explores the establishment of European colonies in America by England, with a focus on the religious influences and conflicts that shaped this period. It covers key figures like Sir Francis Drake and the London Company, as well as the challenges faced by the Jamestown settlement. The article also delves into the culture clash with Native Americans and the introduction of tobacco as a cash crop. Lastly, it touches on the emergence of the House of Burgesses and Bacon's Rebellion.
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America’s Beginnings Part I Europeans Establish Colonies
England & It’s Religious Stirring • Elizabeth I – pushes Protestantism • Sir Francis Drake • Spain hates him – nicknamed “The Dragon” • Pirate (attacks Spanish ships) – 2nd to go around the world • Lots of money from looting (couldn’t get him) • Drake leader who defeats the Spanish Armada 1588 – • Naval dominance over North Atlantic – PIVOTAL • Depression in England – “Surplus population” to Americas - - economic unsettled times in England
The London Company • King James I (successor to Elizabeth) – was Scottish – not popular – hated Puritans • Charter in 1606 (joint stock company) • Goal – make money • First settlers – came for profit
Reasons for Colonization: 1 Individual settlers wanted . . . • land for farming • religious freedom or escape from other persecution • financialrelief
Jamestown 2 • established in 1607 • named for King James I of England • the first permanentEnglish settlement • marked the beginning of the colony of Virginia
Jamestown problems • Mosquito infested – disease • Bad land for farming • Looking for gold - - - - no gold • What’s the cash crop??? Tobacco (later)
Captain John Smith 1608 • Jamestown – communal lifestyle • Smith’s main rule - - - - “He who doesn’t work, doesn’t eat.” • Jamestown about to fail – a vessel with women arrive (men aren’t too fussy) • Pocahontas saves John Smith (or does she?
Jamestown – The Starving Time1609 - 1610 • After the first year only 38 of the original 144 had survived • Food was in such short supply that graves were robbed and corpses eaten. One colonist murdered his wife and feasted on her flesh. • In an effort to restore discipline to the community, two men who were caught stealing food from the common storehouse were tied to posts and left to starve.
III. Culture Clash • Lord De La Warr arrives • British soldier • “Irish Tactics” raiding Indian villages – burning them and taking crops – cruel but effective • Anglo-Powhattan War • 1st 1610-14 – English won • 2nd 1622 – English won • Indians are “pushed” out
IV. A Crop Saves Jamestown • Tobacco – cash crop – to England & sold • Exhausted the soil (and the laborers) • John Rolfe • Introduced tobacco • Married Pocahontas • Took her to England (she died) • Powhattan – let’s mourn together – a “set up”
IV. A Crop Saves Jamestown • Indentured Servants • The Head Right system – servant’s way is paid in exchange for room and board they work 3-5 years – People who paid the way were given 50 acres of land • (who really benefits???) • By 1700 Chesapeake planters brought over 100,000 indentured servants to the region
House of Burgesses • Set up in 1619 (same year the first slaves arrived/Dutch) • First representative body in the “future” U.S. • 22 wealthy land owners gathered and discussed issues important to them • (1st families of Virginia – Fitzhugh/Lee/ Washington) Charter is revoked 1624 – Jamestown is bankrupt James I appoints Governor William Berkley
Governor William Berkley • Social Unrest • Ex-indentured servants are up in arms • Indians are attacking (Berkley isn’t protecting) Chesapeake colonies Virginia & Maryland Slow growth – lack of families (mostly single men)
V. Bacon’s Rebellion • Berkley has been governor for 30 years • Many freed men were frustrated – wanted land (and wives) • 29 year old Nathaniel Bacon – 1676 – organizes frontiersmen – demands protection from Indians • The rebels attack Indians – then Jamestown, burning it and forcing Berkley out
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYsTpYfAeZU • Note – the date for Bacon’s Rebellion is 1676
V. Bacon’s Rebellion • Chaos – “a rabble of the basest sort of people” plunder and pilfer . . . • Bacon catches a deadly disease (dysentery) – Berkely crushes the rebellion (executes over 20 rebels) • Planters look for less rebellious labor . . .
Quick - - - - • Can you name the original 13 colonies?
The 13 colonies can be divided into 3 regions based on differences in: • Geography& resources • Climate • Economy • Social or religious structure
New England Colonies Massachusetts Connecticut Rhode Island New Hampshire continued
New England Colonies • Colder climate • Rockier soil, but farming is still possible • Abundant forests and access to water continued
New England Primarily Puritan John Calvin (French Theologian) English/Puritans French/Huguenots Iconoclasm; Simplicity (no statues/images)
New England - Puritans Strong work ethic Long sermons – jeremaid from Jeremiah – “fire and brimstone” Read from the Bible Predestination (God already knows) - Visible Saints – Separatists – persecuted – to Holland then to new world - Pilgrims
New England - Pilgrims From Holland – head to Virginia (religious persecution) 1620 – Plymouth colony (Massachusetts) founded (on the Mayflower) Mayflower Compact – majority rules – 41 male separatists sign out of the 102 passengers 1620-1621 – terrible winter – Wompanoag Indians – 1st Thanksgiving 1621 William Bradford – Governor – elected 30 times – well loved
New England – Massachusetts Bay 1630 1,000 – by 1640 20,000 “Great Migration” John Winthrop – Governor 19 years “A city on a hill” – God would approve Fishing & shipbuilding All freemen could vote Congregationalist church – supported by taxes (Quakers are expelled from Mass. Bay)
Roger Williams • Wantedreligious tolerancefor all Christians – not just Puritans • FoundedRhode Island Anne Hutchinson Banished – Antinomian Controversy (against the law)
Connecticut • Founded 5 years after Mass. Bay • 1st Constitution • Sunday prohibition laws – Blue laws
Middle Colonies 7 • New York • New Jersey • Pennsylvania • Delaware continued
Middle Colonies • Diversity of people • Diversity of economic activity
William Penn founded Pennsylvania as a refuge for Quakers
Southern Colonies • Maryland • Virginia • the Carolinas • Georgia continued
Southern Colonies • fertile farmland • warm • flat • rainy • access to water
James Oglethorpe Started the colony of Georgia as a refuge for debtors who had been imprisoned in England
Columbian Exchange • Transatlantic trade through which Europeans exchanged food, goods, technologies and culture with the people of the Americas • Europeans profited economically • Native Americans suffered disease and destruction of their culture
Triangular Trade Colonial trade system in the 1700’s between • American Colonies • Africa • Europe continued
Triangular Trade • Merchants sent cloth from England to the Caribbean. continued
Triangular Trade • Merchants in the Caribbean shipped sugar to New England where it was turned into rum. continued
Triangular Trade • The rum was shipped to Africa and traded for slaves. continued
Triangular Trade • The slaves were shipped to the Americas and sold.
Video: Triangular Slave Trade https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1BYZRn4Lgc 2:24
Middle Passage • Voyage of slaves brought from Africa to the Americas • Took between 1 and 3 months • Suffered miserable, inhuman conditions