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Colonies take Root

Colonies take Root. Chapter 3. The First English Settlements. England began to establish colonies in the New World in the late 1500’s Roanoke was set up in 1585, but was abandoned without a trace by 1590. It is unknown where the people went or what happened to them.

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Colonies take Root

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  1. Colonies take Root Chapter 3

  2. The First English Settlements • England began to establish colonies in the New World in the late 1500’s • Roanoke was set up in 1585, but was abandoned without a trace by 1590. • It is unknown where the people went or what happened to them

  3. The First English Settlements • In 1607, a group of wealthy people decided to establish a colony. • They formed the Virginia Company of London • They received a charter from King James I

  4. The First English Settlements • These colonists settled in Chesapeake Bay and named their colony Jamestown • Many colonists were lazy and did not want to do work, many died from diseases • By 1608, only 38 out of 100 colonists lived

  5. The First English Settlements • John Smith took control of the colony, he drew up new rules, the main one being “He who works not, eats not.” • After the colony had begun to revive itself, Smith returned to England • After this, the most of the people of Jamestown starved to death

  6. The First English Settlements • The Virginia Company did not give up, they offered free land to colonists • Colonists found tobacco, which grew in the New World and was popular in England • By the early 1620’s, Virginia tobacco farmers were selling all the tobacco they could grow

  7. The First English Settlements • Virginia began using a representative government called the House of Burgesses. • It could pass laws and set taxes, it shared power with the governor who could veto its acts • In 1619, the Dutch brought Africans to Virginia and sold as slaves

  8. The First English Settlements • Between 1607 and 1609, the British colonists left England to go to the Netherlands because they were prosecuted for their religion. • They were still punished in the Netherlands, so they decided to leave and became Pilgrims

  9. The First English Settlements • In September of 1620, 100 Pilgrims sailed for Virginia on a ship called the Mayflower. • They arrived in Massachusetts, and named their city Plymouth • They decided to set rules called the Mayflower Compact

  10. The First English Settlements • These Pilgrims arrived too late to plant crops, half the colonists died from hunger or disease • By spring of 1621, the Native Americans helped the Pilgrims plan food. • In the Fall of 1621, was the first Thanksgiving Celebration

  11. The New England Colonies • New England includes Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine. • Much of it is made of hills and low mountains, there are forest, thin rocky soil • Winters are long and snowy, summers are shorter and warm

  12. The New England Colonies • The Puritans also had hard times in England, King Charles I did not like them and persecuted them. • Eventually they left England to go to the New World • They had formed the Massachusetts Bay Company and were led by John Winthrop

  13. The New England Colonies • The Puritans established the Massachusetts Bay Colony, they created a General Court • The Puritans founded their colony as religious toleration

  14. The New England Colonies • More religious disagreements helped founding the other colonies in New England • Roger Williams who was a minister in Salem, Massachusetts, was forced to leave. • He moved south where he bought land from Native Americans and founded the town of Providence, in Rhode Island

  15. The New England Colonies A Boston woman, Anne Hutchinson was thrown out of Massachusetts and by 1642, ended up in what is now New York State

  16. The New England Colonies • Thomas Hooker, left Massachusetts with 100 followers in 1636, and settled in is how Hartford, Connecticut • In 1639, the colonist created the “Fundamental Orders of Connecticut” • This established an elected legislature and governor

  17. The New England Colonies • John Wheelright was forced to leave Massachusetts with followers and moved to Exeter, New Hampshire • Each Puritan town governed itself by having town meetings. • Only men who were heads of households were allowed at the meetings • The meetings set local taxes, elected people and allowed people to speak their minds

  18. The New England Colonies • New England families grew crops, made leather goods and other products, caught fish and began a shipbuilding industry

  19. The New England Colonies • In 1675, there was a conflict between Native Americans led by Metacom (King Phillip) and fought against the English colonists • In the 1670’s, there was a new generation born in the New World, towns began to grow and religion became less important

  20. The Middle Colonies • These colonies are made up of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware • The climate was warmer then New England with a longer growing season • There was good soil for crops like wheat, fruits and vegetables

  21. The Middle Colonies • New York began as the Dutch Colony of New Netherland, with successful farming along the Hudson river • The Dutch also traded with the English colonists • In 1664, England’s King Charles II gave all Dutch lands in the New World to his brother James, all he had to do was conquer the land • James sent warships to take over and the Dutch Surrendered. • New Netherland was renamed New York after the Duke of York

  22. The Middle Colonies • In 1665, New Jersey split off fro New York to form a new colony • New Jersey began as a proprietary colony and in 1702, became a royal colony

  23. The Middle Colonies • The Quakers believed that all people had a direct link to God, men were equal to women and they did not believe in slavery. • In England in the 1660’s, the Quakers refused to pay their taxes to the Church of England and were persecuted. • William Penn, a wealthy Englishman used his connection to get a charter for a new colony. • This colony ended up being Pennsylvania

  24. The Middle Colonies • Delaware was settled by people from Sweden, then taken over by the Dutch, then the English • In 1704, Delaware became a separate colony

  25. The Middle Colonies • The top cash crop was wheat in the Middle Colonies • Manufacturing began in the 1700’s, they produced iron, flour and paper • There were now shoemakers, carpenters, masons, weavers and barrel makers

  26. The Middle Colonies • The western section of Pennsylvania was called the backcountry • People who settled there were Scotch-Irish and German

  27. The Southern Colonies • These are south of the Mason-Dixon line, which is the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania • http://www.exploretheline.com/markers.html

  28. The Southern Colonies • These colonies include Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia • These colonies share a coastal area and a swampy area • The weather in these colonies is warm and humid, there is a long growing season that is good for tobacco and rice • Both of these crops require many workers which eventually led to slavery

  29. The Southern Colonies • The population of Virginia grew slowly, by 1670, there were 40,000 • The colonists created conflicts with the Native Americans by taking more land to plant tobacco

  30. The Southern Colonies • In the 1660’s, wealthy Virginia tobacco planters bought all the good farming land, which left no land for the poorer colonists • Most of these colonists had to work on the wealthier farms

  31. The Southern Colonies • Poor colonists moved inland to find good farmland and fighting broke out with Native Americans • Nathaniel Bacon became the leader of the frontier settlers • He organized 1,000 westerners and began to attack and kill Native Americans, when he was called a rebel by the governor, he reacted by attacking Jamestown and burning it to the ground

  32. The Southern Colonies • In 1632, King Charles I granted a charter for a new colony to George Calvert. • He settled Maryland, a safe place for Catholics • He set up a representative assembly similar to the House of Burgess • The Toleration Act of 1649 welcomed all Christians to the colony

  33. The Southern Colonies • In 1663, King Charles II granted a charter to establish Carolina • Northern Carolina developed slowly, they lived on small farms working with tobacco and lumber • Southern Carolina grew quickly, sugar grew well, they brought slaves from Barbados and began to grow rice • Carolina was split into two colonies

  34. The Southern Colonies • Georgia was founded for two reasons, first the English feared the Spanish would expand north from Florida • The second was a group of wealthy Englishmen led by James Oglethorpe wanted a colony that would be protection for English debtors • Slavery was banned in Georgia

  35. The Southern Colonies • People who lived along the coast lived on plantations where cotton, sugar and rice were grown • Virginia and Maryland settled tobacco • The backcountry had people who usually lived on isolated farms • Many had one room shacks • Girls and women worked on the farms with them men

  36. Spanish Colonies on the Borderlands • Spanish explorers reached Florida in early 1500’s. • In 1693, the Spanish said they would protect any enslaved Africans who escaped to Florida • By 1763, there were three Spanish settlements in Florida

  37. Spanish Colonies on the Borderlands • The territory north of Mexico was called borderlands, the Spanish wanted to protect Mexico from other European powers • The Borderlands included Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Nevada and California

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