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Pre-Columbian America

Pre-Columbian America. Cahokia, at its height. I. Earliest “American immigrants”. Asians crossed the Bering Strait in several migrations beginning about 14,000 years ago e ventually, groups spread all the way to the tip of South America

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Pre-Columbian America

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  1. Pre-Columbian America Cahokia, at its height

  2. I. Earliest “American immigrants” • Asians crossed the Bering Strait in several migrations beginning about 14,000 years ago • eventually, groups spread all the way to the tip of South America • by Christopher Columbus' arrival, several significant cultures had developed in the region south of the current United States 1) Incas in Peru: by 1438 AD, they controlled most of the Andean region. Conquered by Francisco Pizarro 2) Mayans in the Yucatan: by 300 AD, the city of Tikal featured 20,000 residents & elaborate temples 3) Olmecs in Mexico: by 500 AD, over 100,000 residents on the current site of Mexico City 4) Aztecs in Mexico: conquered by Hernan Cortes in 1520 AD

  3. Civilizations in the Americas

  4. Incan Civilization

  5. Mayan Civilization

  6. Aztec Civilization

  7. II. North American cultures • most Native Americans developed a stone age culture (little metalwork, no written language, no use of the wheel) • Hohokam culture (200 - 1450 AD) in southwest United States 1) extensive use of irrigation canals for crops 2) adobe buildings as tall as four stories built, probably for religious purposes 3) gradual decline & dispersal into small groups C. Hopewell culture (100 - 400 AD) in the Northeast & Midwest 1) agricultural rather than hunter-gatherers 2) large mounds for religious purposes or burials, mostly along the Ohio River D. Mississippi River cultures (900 -1500 AD) 1) mound-builders (largest city, Cahokia, had as many as 40,000 residents & was the largest city north of Mexico) 2) highly-developed trade system with Native Americans throughout North America 3) maize cultivation 4) after contact with Europeans, civilization declined & many tribes turned to nomadism

  8. III. Contact with Europeans • Transatlantic exchange (“Columbian Exchange”) 1) Old World received food (corn, potatoes etc), syphilis, gold 2) New World received horses, smallpox, Christianity, slavery B. Most Native American groups were decimated by displacement, disease & warfare 1) Arawaks met by Christopher Columbus numbered 250,000 in 1492. By 1550, 500 survived. By 1650, 0! 2) Native Americans of North America met the Spanish in the West, the English & Dutch in the East & the French in Canada. In almost all encounters, the Native Americans were conquered or made dependent upon the Europeans

  9. The Columbian Exchange

  10. Colonial Beginnings John Winthrop: Puritan leader of Massachusetts Bay Colony

  11. I. European Models for Colonizing America • Spain: colonization with conversion 1. earliest colonies in America (St. Augustine 1565, Santa Fe 1610), though most outposts were destroyed by Native American attacks 2.  Spain turned to Franciscan missionaries to control Native Americans, placing land grants in the hands of encomenderos. Spanish rule was cruel, used slavery& was limited, except for New Mexico. California was virtually ignored until the late 1700s 3. by 1560, the main goal of Spanish colonial policy was keeping other Europeans from establishing colonies B. France: fur-trading empire 1. Native American wars developed as tribes fought for the French fur trade 2. French missionaries did not enslave Native Americans & attempted to limit trading of alcohol 3. though few in number, French settlers brought diseases that wiped out up to 90% of the Native Americans in the Great Lakes region C. Netherlands: commerce & farming 1.  colonization was slow & small-scale, with only one proprietor (Kiliaen van Rensselaer) able to attract 50 tenants2. rejecting representative rule, the Dutch lost the settlement of New Amsterdam (New York) to the British in 1664

  12. D. Great Britain (England): tobacco & settlers 1. causes for English colonizing in North America: a. fall of the Spanish Armada in 1588 opened up North Atlantic to English expansion b. England infused with a spirit of self-confidence & enthusiasm for adventure c. England could plant, supply & protect colonies easily 2. changes in the English economy: a. rise of merchant class to provide business leadership & wealth for colonial investment b. joint-stock companies allowed for pooling of capital with limited risk c. surplus population in cities as farmers were pushed off lands converted to sheep herding 3. Protestant Reformation a. priesthood of all believers inspired religious dissidents b. anti-”Popish” believers (Puritans) felt that the Church of England was not Protestant enough in its beliefs & practices c. persecution of Puritans, Catholics & Quakers led to conflict with religious & political authorities d. North America was seen as a desirable haven for these groups

  13. II. Jamestown & Virginia • Virginia Company received charter (guaranteeing settlers the same rights as Englishmen at home) from King James I for settlement in America (1607). Goals (the 3 G’s: God, glory, gold): • gold & wealth • convert Native Americans to Christianity • find a passage to the Indies • early group suffered from laziness, starvation & malaria. Saved by the leadership of John Smith & enterprise of tobacco planter John Rolfe, who perfected methods of raising & curing tobacco

  14. tobacco brought capital & workers to Virginia. Exports rose to 10 million pounds by 1660. The Virginia Company provided land, established a head-right system & courts & allowed self-government by the planters • problems with tobacco farming: • chained prosperity of Virginia to one crop • exhausted the soil • promoted large-acreage plantations which needed large amounts of cheap labor. First indentured servants with few rights or chances to advance & then slaves with fewer rights & no chance to advance C. Bacon’s Rebellion (1676) • attacks on Native Americans by poor whites led to the killing of 300 whites. A defensive military strategy failed as Nathaniel Bacon attacked Native Americans & then seized control of the colony • Bacon died in 1676, but his followers pushed for tax cuts, voting rights for landless whites & an end to corruption • the planter class sought to limit the number of white servants who might rebel again, thus opening the way for slavery’s expansion D. Contributions of early Virginia: 1. provided model for further investment in America 2. first representative self-government (House of Burgesses: 1619) 3. demand for slaves (first slaves sold by Dutch to settlers in 1619)

  15. III. New England Colonies(settled most frequently by families) • Separatists (Pilgrims) arrived at Plymouth in 1620 on Mayflower after initial settlement in Holland 1. Mayflower Compact: first document of self-government in America 2. after difficult first winter (44 out of 102 survived), Pilgrims survived under the leadership of Governor William Bradford B. Puritans established Massachusetts Bay in 1630 (John Winthrop & 900 settlers) for economic & religious reasons 1. large numbers of middle class settlers, many of whom were educated 2. successful as fur traders, fishermen & shipbuilders 3. Great Puritan Migration of 1629-1640 brought many new settlers 4. ruled as “Bible Commonwealth” with franchise restricted to male members of Puritan (later Congregational) church: probably 1/5 of adult white male population

  16. C. Puritans & Pequots: series of disastrous contacts 1. smallpox epidemic of 1633 killed over 10,000 Pequots 2. 500 Pequots killed by Puritans in 1636 3. disease, military force & religion (praying towns) essentially pacified Native Americans of New England by 1670 D. King Philip’s War or “Metacom’s Rebellion” (1675-78): Wampanoag leader organized neighboring tribes to attack settlements in 1675, resulting in 1,000 white & 4,500 Native American deaths

  17. American Colonies Penn's Treaty with the Indians by Benjamin West(Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts)

  18. American Puritanism The Puritan by Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1887)Brookgreen Gardens, South Carolina 

  19. I. Key Puritan Beliefs & Values • Godly people were sober, hardworking & responsible. English society had been corrupted by foreign influences & by disorder & needed to be purified • Catholicism had undermined the relationship between God & the individual • rituals & sacraments administered by a powerful & complicated hierarchy (pope, cardinals, bishops etc.) • insistence on Latin as the only language of religion • confession only through the priest & the confessional booth C. election & predestination: God chooses who is saved & who is damned. No one can earn salvation through works, yet the saints are responsible for their actions (Calvinism & “TULIP”) D. the congregation of saints chooses its members, hires & fires its ministers & recognizes no other religious authority

  20. E. worship should be plain, lack mystery & be focused on God. No stained glass, instrumental music, or art F. value of education 1. the Bible should be read by everyone. New England in the 17th century was the most literate place in the world (probably 70% literacy) 2. publicly supported schools needed to oppose Satan ("Old Deluder" laws). Each town with 50 families was required to support a teacher 3. Harvard College (Cambridge) founded in 1636 to train ministers G. intolerance: error must be opposed & driven out 1. persecution & expulsion of Anne Hutchinson (1638): a) criticized ministers for not preaching covenant of grace b) held religious meetings in her home c) challenged the political & religious leadership of Massachusetts Bay 2. Roger Williams expelled for "new & dangerous opinions" (1638) a) preached complete separation of church & state: the state should have no influence over a person's conscienceb) religious groups should be supported by voluntary tithes, not taxes c) Native Americans should be paid for landsd) settled Rhode Island & established complete freedom of religion (including Jews, Catholics & Quakers) 3. Puritans persecuted & expelled Baptists (opposed to child baptism) & killed Quakers (such as Mary Dyer) for preaching "inner light" doctrines & opposing any religious authority (no ministers or sermons)

  21. II. Puritan Political Life A. freemen (adult male heads of families) ruled in church meetings & town meetings B. blurring of political & religious authority: theocracy, not democracy was the goal. John Winthrop's vision of a "City Upon a Hill” C. Halfway Covenant developed to allow un-baptized members (children of Puritans) to vote & thus preserve influence of Puritan authorities III. Salem Witchcraft Crisis (1692) A. group of girls accused fellow villagers of witchcraft B. trials (featuring "spectral evidence" & body searches for birthmarks) resulted in convictions of many & executions of 20 people & 2 dogs C. goal was restoration of the disciplined community. No confessed witches were hanged or burned D. reaction resulted in anti-Puritan sentiment, weakening of Puritan authority & apologies from some religious leaders

  22. IV. Puritan Contributions A. self-government & community responsibility 1) democracy in church rule led to democracy in town meetings 2) all community members responsible for conduct of citizens B. education critical for individual & community success C. hard work & thrift demanded of all D. high standards of moral excellence & conscience E. the family is the central element of the community

  23. Slavery in the American Colonies The Old PlantationAbby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Center: Williamsburg, Virginia

  24. Slavery's Early Presence A. 1st African-Americans that arrived in Jamestown in 1619 were brought as servants, not slaves B. very small numbers of slaves in the Southern colonies in the early years. Indentured servants were cheaper & available. By 1650, only 300 blacks lived in Virginia 1. after 1660, white servants became harder to obtain as English economy improved 2. slaves became seen as a better long-term investment & were more easily recaptured C. slavery formally established by the House of Burgesses in 1670 with law declaring "all servants not being Christians imported into this colony by shipping shall be slaves for their lives” D. by 1700, there were 25,000 slaves in the American colonies & by 1750 there were 100,000 slaves in Virginia, far outnumbering indentured servants 1. breaking of the Royal African Company monopoly in 1697 opened the slave trade to competition, forcing prices down & increasing the number of slaves (Triangular Trade & “Middle Passage”) 2. in some Southern areas, slaves were beginning to outnumber whites

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