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Learn about the founding of the English colonies in America including Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and North Carolina. Discover the influential figures, key events, and reasons behind each colony's establishment.
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Connecticut – founded by Governor John Haynes and Thomas Hooker, a prominent Puritan minister of the Massachusetts Bay Colony • Led 100 people to present-day Hartford in 1636. • Hooker delivered a sermon on the principles of government in 1638 • Influenced those who wrote Connecticut’s constitution, the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut Founding of Connecticut
Rhode Island founded in 1636 by religious dissident Roger Williams • Williams banished by Massachusetts Bay Colony for religious views • Granted land by Narragansett tribe. • Called the site "Providence Plantation" and declared it a place of religious freedom. • Critics at the time sometimes referred to it as "Rogue's Island" • Cotton Mather of the Massachusetts Bay Colony called it "the sewer of New England." • Soon joined by Anne Hutchinson, who was also banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony • Officially named the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Founding of Rhode Island
First settled by Europeans at Odiorne's Point in Rye (near Portsmouth) by a group of fishermen in 1623 • Settlers built a fort, manor house and other buildings, some for fish processing, on Flake Hill. • The colony of New Hampshire itself founded in 1629 on the division of a land grant Founding of New Hampshire
Originally a Dutch colony called New Amsterdam Founded by Peter Minuit in 1626 on Manhattan Island. After ten years of fighting over control, the Dutch surrendered the colony to the English in 1664 Renamed New York, after the Duke of York. Was always a significant trading center due to its lumber yard and state’s agriculture Founding of New York
1681 - Charles II of England grants Pennsylvania to William Penn to settle £16,000 (today worth about 2 and ½ millions dollars) debt the king owed to Penn's father. • Penn founds proprietary colony that provides a place of religious freedom for Quakers. • Penn named the colony Pennsylvania after his family, Penn, and the Latin word for "woods," sylvania. • 1682 - Penn comes to North America, and founds Philadelphia. • Pennsylvania attracts many other ethnic and religious groups, many fleeing persecution and the religious wars. Founding of Pennsylvania
Penn’s Plan for PhiladelphiaPenn’s Treaty with the Indians(famous painting by Edward Hicks)
Dutch set up trading posts in northern New Jersey. Swedensettles southwestern part • Holland takes control and begin to interfere with Britain’s trans-Atlantic trade • British, using John Cabot’s claims, grant land that is now New Jersey to Duke of York (later James II ) • Richard Nicolls takes over New Netherland s in 1664. British encounter little resistance, due to the unpopularity of the Dutch governor • Nicolls became deputy-governor of New Netherlands and guarantees colonists' property rights, laws of inheritance, and the enjoyment of religious freedom. • New Netherland s westof the Hudson River renamed New Jersey after the English Channel Island of Jersey Founding of New Jersey
Dutch, under Peter Minuit first settled area • In any case, Minuit recalled from New Netherlands, and offers his services to Sweden, then a major power in European politics. • Leads group under the flag of Sweden to the Delaware River in 1638 and establishes trading post near what is now Wilmington. • Dutch take over and, in turn, ousted by James II in 1664. • New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland claim Delaware land • Legal battle not settled until just before American Revolution Founding of Delaware
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, applied to Charles I for royal charter. • 1632 - After his death, king grants charter for "Maryland Colony" to his son, CeciliusCalvert in 1632. • Younger brother leads expedition & lands on St. Clements’s Island in 1634. Founds town of St. Mary’s • One of few Roman Catholic regions in North America. Also destination for English convicts • 1649 -The Maryland Toleration Act one of the first laws that explicitly defined tolerance of all Christian sects Founding of Maryland
First English attempt at colonization – Roanoke Island in 1584 – Lost Colony • Difficult to colonize: dangerous coastline, lack of ports, and few navigable inland rivers. Area refuge for lawbreakers, runaway servants and fur trappers. • 1689 - Carolina proprietors separate Carolina Province. Deputy-governor for north and east of Cape Fear. • In 1710, province officially divided into north and south • First North Carolina governor: Edward Hyde. • 1729 - North Carolina crown colony • 1738 - smallpox epidemic killed off half of Cherokee • Slavery prevalent • Swissand Germansettlers found New Bern and grows as German immigrants migrate south from Pennsylvania. Founding of North Carolina
In England, people in prison for not paying debts. James Oglethorpe wants to give these men a chance for a new life • Receives grant to create colony between what is now the Savannah and Altamaha rivers • Colony named in George II’s honor. Besides asylum for debtors, protects northern colonies from Spain and France • In 1733, 40 families found the Georgia colony. The Yamacraw Bluff allowed the people to defend the colony. • Every task in colony was done as a group. Oglethorpe wanted society where every head of household worked on his own land withoutslaves • The Georgia colony had rough start. Residents blamed problems on antislaverypolicy. Disgusted, Oglethorpe quits colony in 1743. • 1752 –Georgia becomes royal colony; Georgia soon becomes known for its plantations and slavery. Founding of Georgia
1663 – Charles II grants land to 8 proprietors – Colony of Carolina • Newly created province intended to serve as an English bulwarkagainst Spain • 1719 -1729 – King buys back land from proprietors. Becomes royal colony. • South Carolinians become major importers of slaves to raise rice, indigo & tobacco. As result Gullah culture & creole language common • Conflict between wealthy slave-owners and up-country Scotch-Irish settlers over taxes • Carolina splits into North & South Carolina in 1712 Founding of South Carolina