180 likes | 295 Views
Chapter 4 18 th century America. English Population growth. The English colonies had a remarkable annual population growth of 3 percent between 1700 and 1770 Voluntary new comers to the country moved to the backcountry where living conditions were demanding and violent.
E N D
English Population growth • The English colonies had a remarkable annual population growth of 3 percent between 1700 and 1770 • Voluntary new comers to the country moved to the backcountry where living conditions were demanding and violent. • The back country stretched 800 miles from western Pennsylvania to Georgia. • They attempted to follow British customs.
Diverse new comers • Scotts Irish: Arrived throughout the 18th century most who were looking to improve material lives than political freedom. • German’s Second largest group the came for religious tolerance, which would shift to material gains. They mostly settled in the middle colonies mostly Pennsylvania. • The English were suspicious of both groups. • Convicts where another large group of immigrants they were normally shipped from Britain and were indentured servants.
Spanish Borders • From the time the Spanish established settlements in North America until the early nineteenth century. They would struggle to hold onto their northern colonies as interest waned. • Originally it was gold and internationally rivalries brought Spanish settlers in. By the turn of the 18th century enthusiasm waned. • Spanish outposts grew slowly. Spanish colonists would enslave Native Americans and their settlements, but they would be unable to sustain growth.
The impact of European ideas on the New world • A more urban cosmopolitan setting began to grow in the Atlantic colonies. • Urban populations remained small in colonial America but they were starting to grow. • Most of these major cities were trading posts. • Because of this people in these port cities were able to get the latest in European ideas and styles.
American Enlightenment • 18th century is usually known as the age of reason. Radical ideas swept through salons and universities. • This intellectual revolution was known as the Enlightenment. • Eventually the writings of Newton, Locke, Voltaire, and Hume would reach the colonies.
John Locke • Widely known as the Father of Liberalism, was an English philosopher and physician regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers. • He is known for developing the idea of the Social Contract • The social contract is an intellectual device intended to explain the appropriate relationship between individuals and their governments. • The Social contract arguments assert that individuals unite into political societies by a process of mutual consent, agreeing to abide by common rules and accept corresponding duties to protect themselves and one another from violence and other kinds of harm.
American enlightenment Continued • Compared to Europe the American enlightenment was quite tame. • The interest was the search for useful knowledge that can improve life. • The result is an increase in scientific tinkerers.
Ben Franklin • Franklin is one individual immersed in the culture of the city. • He sees himself as a person of reason and science. • Franklin would satirize Boston’s political leaders in his paper the New England Courant • Franklin would move to Philadelphia and continue to tinker
Economic Transformation • Despite the growth of the population living standards kept pace and actually improved. • We see people buying goods on credit, which allows them to but cheap manufactured goods.(E.g. Dishes, and other household items) • We see trade increasing in the west indies but, we see that the most important trade partners to the colonies is England
American Debt • American debt increases quickly after 1690 as Americans import far more commodities. • The imports help to “Anglicize” American Culture • During this time we see increase in intercoastal trade between England and the middle colonies.(These items included rice and tobacco for meat and wheat produced in Britain)
The Great Awakening • The Great Awakening had a profound impact on colonial America and caused colonists to rethink their basic assumptions about church and state institutions.
Awakening Continued • The main complaint especially in New England was that religion had lost it’s vitality. • The people felt that their hearts were not touched in church like they had in Winthrop’s generation.
Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield • Both these preachers vividly depicted hell and captivated audiences. • It was part of an effort to restore religious vitality. • Itinerant preachers used Edwards and Whitefield's examples to bring the population closer together and give them awareness of the larger religious community. • The result is we see important centers of higher learning form. • There was also a shared optimism for the future of America or the colonies
Political Clashes • Political theorists in the colonies often revered the British form of government. • The English constitution’s proposed make up: • Divided political power among the monarch and his council of advisors, the two chamber parliament ,and various local governments. Each group provided a check on the ambitions of others.
The Reality of British Politics • A system vulnerable to corruption and idleness. • Some protesters such as the commonwealth men observed that many of England’s rulers were corrupt.
Government in America • Colonial leaders attempted in many ways to recreate British-style institutions. • Legislative assemblies which helped offset the ineptitude of royal governors appointed by the board of trade in England to oversee colonial affairs. • Colonial assemblies were often aggressive in asserting power as they fought to protect the rights of American colonists.