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Chapter 3. The Colonial Regions. New England. Pilgrims King Charles I (1625) The Anglican Church Governor John Winthrop “A city upon a hill”. Puritan Orthodoxy. Enforced Conformity “State” Church Reading the Bible Harvard College. Banishment. Dissenters Roger Williams
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Chapter 3 The Colonial Regions
New England • Pilgrims • King Charles I (1625) • The Anglican Church • Governor John Winthrop • “A city upon a hill”
Puritan Orthodoxy • Enforced Conformity • “State” Church • Reading the Bible • Harvard College
Banishment • Dissenters • Roger Williams • Anne Hutchinson • Restrictions on Women • Thomas Hooker
The Puritan Church • Male Dominance • Voting Rights • Puritan Villages • Watchful Women
New England Families • A proper Puritan family • Divorce • Women’s rights • Large families
New England • Rocky soil/short growing seasons • Subsistence farming • Lumber/shipbuilding • Fishing/whaling • Rum distilling • Port cities/shallow rivers
Witchcraft in Salem • Salem (1691) • Accusations • Escalations • Executions • Challenges to the Puritan way of life
The Southern Colonies • Chesapeake Society • Church and state in Virginia • Bicameral Legislature • The Anglican Church • Little emphasis on religion
Maryland • Cecilius Calvert (Lord Baltimore) • Catholics • Puritans vs. Catholics • The Act of Religious Toleration
Tobacco • Growing tobacco • Population • Deep Rivers • Lack of towns
Slavery • First slaves (1619) • Slave laws • Slave population • Reasons for the increase in slavery
The Caribbean • Heading for the Caribbean • Sugar • Caribbean slave population
The Carolinas • King Charles II • Tobacco • Use of slaves • Rice • Split in the Carolinas
The Middle Colonies • New Netherland • New Sweden • English Conquests • New York • New Jersey
Quaker Pennsylvania • Charles II • William Penn • Religious Tolerance • Growing Grains • Immigration • Delaware
France • Louis XIV • Fur Traders • Ohio Valley • Mississippi Basin • Treatment of Natives