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America: The Beginnings. I. Bering Straight (Beringia) Land Bridge. 25,000 B.C. Hunter- Gatherers 4 mill. 20 mill. in Mex. Southwestern Cliff Dwellings. Long Houses. Teepees. European Exploration of the Americas .
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I. Bering Straight (Beringia)Land Bridge • 25,000 B.C. • Hunter- Gatherers • 4 mill. • 20 mill. in Mex.
MANY OF THOSE DESIRES FOR EXPLORATION HAD ALREADY EXISTED FOR CENTURIES, SO WHAT CHANGED? NEW TECHNOLOGY: • COMPASS • GLOBE • RUDDER • IMPROVED SHIP BUILDING TECHNIQUES AND DESIGN • QUADRANT (IMPROVED ABILITY TO DETERMINE LATITUDE BASED ON ALTITUDE OF STARS) • MAPS FROM FOREIGN COUNTRIES • MARCO POLO’S WRITINGS
III. Spanish Hernando Cortez Francisco Pizarro
Spanish • Hernando Cortez and Francisco Pizarro • Convert natives to Catholicism • Economic factors • 1519 Cortez invaded Mexico and met the Aztecs in Tenochitlan (Mexico City) • 2 yrs. later Aztecs defeated Spanish had better technology (ie: guns, horses, steel), and diseases (ie: smallpox)
Spanish (cont’d) 3. 1531-Pizarro defeats the Incas in the Andes mountains. ***1565, the first permanent European settlement in North America, St. Augustine, was founded in what is now Florida
Spanish (cont’d) • Gold was shipped back to Spain • Large Spanish Empire was created in N. & S. America • In N. America, missionaries and economic opportunists settled in Southwester U.S. and Florida • Effects of Spanish conquests • Decrease in native populations • Harsh rule; Native Americans were near-slaves on Spanish plantations • Horses altered Native American lifetravel, follow game
French Samuel de Champlain Fur Trade
IV. French • 1608, Samuel de Champlain founded Quebec • Few French came: climate, few incentives to leave France • 65% who came to Quebec, returned home! • Huguenots-French Protestants, who settled in the Americas. • French Intersts: • Catholic Converts; not as harsh as the Spanish • Farmingtrapping and fur trading
French (cont’d) • Jesuits-Missionary group with settlements in FL, NM, Paraguay, and French territory in N.Americaorganized with military precision and order • Jesuit Jaques Marquette & fur trader Louis Joliet reached the Mississippi River, WI, and AK • Robert La Salle explored the Mississippi River and name the territory Louisiana (after Louis XIV)
French (cont’d) • Effects of the French • Disease wiped out @30% of Native Americans they encountered • Bloody wars with the Native Americans over the fur trade • Had more Catholic convertsdidn’t require forced labor (ie: Spanish) • SUCCESSES: Fur trade industry, native converts FAILURS: large numbers of settlers never took root there
Dutch Henry Hudson? Perhaps he never sat for a portrait
V. Dutch • Commercial/economic interests • 1609, Henry Hudson discovered and named the Hudson River • Established trading centers in present-day NY, Manhattan, NJ, CT, PA • SUCCESSES: Successful fur traders FAILURES: Many bloody conflicts with the Native Americans, limited economic endeavors
Dutch (cont’d) • IN 1624 THE DUTCH PURCHASED WHAT TODAY IS THE ISLAND OF MANHATTAN IN NEW YORK FROM LOCAL INDIANS FOR THE EQUIVALENT OF $24. THE DUTCH NAMED THE AREA “NEW AMSTERDAM”. • THE DUTCH WEST INDIA COMPANY create COLONY OF NEW NETHERLAND WHEN 30 FAMILIES SETTLED ALONG THE DELAWARE AND HUDSON RIVERS AND GOVERNOR’S ISLAND. • THE DUTCH CONTROLLED THIS AREA UNTIL 1664 WHEN THE GOVERNOR SURRENDERED THE TERRITORY TO THE BRITISH
VI. English • Reasons they came: England after 1550 • High inflation • Decline in wages • Huge population growth overcrowding • Religion • Puritans followers of John Calvin, left England to the Americas to practice their religion free of English civil or religious authorities • Remained a part of the Church of England aka Anglican Church, wanted to make the Church of England, “purer”, hence Puritans
English Puritanism • Believed in predestination and in the authority of Scripture over papal authority.
English (cont’d) • Separatists aka Pilgrimswanted to “separate” from the Church of England entirely • First Permanent English settlement: Jamestown, VA, founded in 1607 by John Smith. • Successful because of the cultivation of TOBACCO
English • Tobacco needed workers • Indentured Servants-Had to work for a number of years (ie: 3, or 10) for free passage to the Americas • African slaves came in 1619 • House of Burgesses, 1619 1st representative government in any British Colony
Pilgrims • New England Colonization • 1620, Mayflower Compact the Pilgrim settlement would have a government answerable to the will of the governed (self-government) • 1691, joined the Massachusetts Bay Colony est. by the Puritans • MA/VA Colonies both had Rep. Gov. • VA had slaves; Mass. didn’t
Religious Dissent • Mass. Bay Colony purpose to SERVE GOD • Dissent NOT tolerate • Roger Williams believed Puritans were still too close to the Church of England • Preached “Total Separation of Church and State” • Settled in Providence, Rhode Island • Anne Hutchinson claimed to have received revelations from God • Founded Portsmouth near Narragansett Bay
Religious Dissent (cont’d) • John Davenport & Thomas Hooker establish CT., 1662.
Maryland and the Carolinas • Propriety Colonies—given to single individuals or groups of individuals; not a company • Maryland—settled 1632, John Calvert • Refuge for English Catholics • N. & S. Carolina used indentured servants and Native Americans at first; then turned to slavery when they needed large numbers and after indentured servants gained freedom
VII. Effects of English, French, and British Settlement • Disease killed many • Agricultural products changed the ecosystem • Population patterns changed: influx of slaves, loss of many Nat. Ams., increase in Europeans • Gradually introduced representative gov. and freedom of religion- which were concepts not popular in much of Europe