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English Colonization of the Chesapeake. How did the English encourage settlement?. Joint Stock Companies Investors, not crown controlled Reduced British economic burden - depression Offered settlers rights of Englishmen Wealth. Jamestown Colony (1607).
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How did the English encourage settlement? • Joint Stock Companies • Investors, not crown controlled • Reduced British economic burden - depression • Offered settlers rights of Englishmen • Wealth
Jamestown Colony (1607) • Virginia Company of London - 104 gentlemen adventurers & poor servants • April 1607, land along James River
First Colonists - Problems • Malarial swamp • There to find riches – gold • No gold – economy in shambles • Did not plant food – hoped to trade with Indians
John Smith • 38 of the 104 remained nine months later - disease or starvation • John Smith, the colonial leader, begins to make changes • Colonists largely unmotivated • Smith leaves Jamestown in 1609 • When the new governor arrived he found the colonists, “their daily and usual works, bowling in the streets.”
How was Jamestown Saved? • Tobacco – John Rolfe – 1616 • Right climate • Demand in Europe • How to replace the people? • Headright System • Indentured Servants
Population of the Land • Plantations • Spread out along rivers • Towns did not develop • Plantations self-sufficient
Business Booms • Tobacco production increased • from 200,000 lbs/yr in 1624 • to 3 million in 1638 • to 10 million in 1660 • Tobacco became the economic engine for the Virginia colony • This plantation economy developed throughout the Chesapeake and eventually into the deep south and remained the core industry of the south through the Civil War.
Labor Source of the Chesapeake • Landowners needed someone to perform manual labor of planting, tending and harvesting crops • Indentured servants – 1610s – late 1600s • African slaves – late 1600s – 1865 • First slaves - 1619 • 1650 – 300 slaves • 1700 – 13,000 slaves
Relationship with Native Americans • At first, the English were completely dependent • Trading relationship - Indians coveted British weapons and metal tools • Expansion caused tensions • Tobacco required land • Led to conflicts between Virginians and Native tribes • 1632 - peace treaty was signed
Jamestown Religion & Education • Not a priority in the culture of Virginia • Lack of towns and widespread population • Religion: Most folks were Anglicans • Education • Wealthy hired tutors or sent to Europe • Poor worked as apprentices
Jamestown Government • Colonial legislature - House of Burgesses (est. 1619) • First legislative body in North America • Controlled by aristocracy • Vote - white, male, landowner
Maryland - 1632 • Proprietary Colony • Lord George Calvert – debt from Crown • Haven for Catholics • Acts of Toleration
Maryland Economy • Plantation economy very much like Jamestown • Produced tobacco • Practiced slavery
Southern Colonies • Single cash crop – plantation economies • Carolinas – Proprietary colony • Rice and indigo