1 / 28

English Colonies

This essay explores common conditions and experiences of American colonists in the New England, Middle, and Southern colonies, including conflicts such as King Philip's War and Bacon's Rebellion, trade regulations, and the role of the Iroquois Confederation. It analyzes the social, political, and economic factors that shaped colonial development.

hpamela
Télécharger la présentation

English Colonies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. English Colonies Social/Political/Economic Conflicts

  2. Essay 1 • Though there where many differences in the development of the New England, Middle, and Southern colonies, they had much in common. • What conditions and experiences were common to American colonists regardless of their colony or region?

  3. Outline War and Rebellion and King Phillip’s War • Bacon’s Rebellion • Outline section addressing Trade Pages • Outline the Iroquois Confederation • Outline King William’s War • Outline Salem Witchcraft

  4. More English population-causes Native hostility New England- 1675 Metacom- or King Phillip of the Wampanoag tribe- Planned a war across New England Attacked 25 of 90 Puritan towns Bloodiest Indian war Naragansatt tribe helped the Wampanoags Puritans unite to put down the revolt Significance- Indians are in New England devastated thousands killed King Phillip's War 1675

  5. Bacon’s Rebellion • Virginia- class conflict is beginning “Rich v. Poor” • Land starts to become scarce • New immigrants and former indentured servants want land • People move West and this causes Native problems- fear and violence • Begins about the time of King Phillip’s War 1675-76

  6. Tidewater Virginia

  7. Frontiersmen and Indians fight • Violence erupts in the western portion of Virginia • Frontier settlers ask for protection from Governor Berkeley

  8. Governor Berkeley • A old, Royal appointee • Was seen as corrupt, protecting landowners and not attacking a major problem- the Indians • Frontier settlers wanted Indians killed or removed for more land to be settled Berkeley did not send and army but built forts.

  9. Nathaniel Bacon • Bacon wanted to remove the Indian presence in the west • Became the leader of a group of Frontiersmen who attacked the Indians • Berkley called for Bacon’s arrest • Bacon very popular, raises troops and goes after Berkeley- • Berkeley flees and Bacon dies young of natural causes • Charles II sent 1000 soldiers to restore order

  10. Significance of Bacon’s Rebellion • Conflicts existed and patterns are reinforced: Anglo and Native societies don’t mix • Conflict between rich and poor are evident in the earliest period of American history • The Royal Government was determined to assert control when threatened- <economic interest>

  11. Triangular Trade

  12. English and Trade • Mercantilist Philosophy • Trade/colonies= wealth and power for “Mother Country” • Earliest colonial development was regulated but not strictly- • Idea was for more movement of people- freedom was advocated to motivate settlers • Gradually changes occur- to strengthen Empire and control of colony

  13. Wealth of colonies causes controls • Navigation Act 1651 • Navigation Act 1660 • Navigation Act 1696 • Is there a pattern associated with these actions? • Purpose: to 1.Tax and 2.gain control

  14. 1st Navigation Act 1651 • All trade was to go to England • Carried on British Ships • Problem: Couldn’t enforce effectively

  15. 1660 Navigation Acts • Laws were tightened to control trade • Everything through Britain-Or British ports • Monopoly on export trade from colonies • Royal Customs Agents- to help regulate trade in colonies • Lords of Trade- created- (later Board of Trade) • Advised king • Oversee colonies • Set Colonial Policy

  16. Navigation Act 1696 • Established Admiralty Courts-1696 • In the colonies to settle trade issues • Royal Judges- no jury

  17. Consequences of Trade Acts • Smuggling- lack of enforcement and readily available markets for trade cause smuggling • More controls- Customs Agents stationed in Colonial ports • Corruption- wealth overcomes limitations bribery is widespread • Hostility of Colonists toward British Government- controls

  18. Iroquois Confederation • 5 Indian tribes of the Northeastern Woodlands • Mohawk, Seneca, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayuga • The Great League of Peace Created a limited alliance of Indian tribes in order to maintain peace between the 5 Nations. • Become hostile to French and align with British

  19. Iroquois Confederation • Iroquois tribes wanted to remove the Huron power- and take over the trade with French • War broke out between Iroquois and Huron- (Beaver Wars) • Huron were middle man traders- collected furs from Algonquians- sold to French

  20. King William's War 1690OrThe French and Indian War Part 1 • As a result of antagonisms in Europe- • French and English rivalry- cause as series of wars and fighting takes place in North America • Significance: Iroquois will be aligned with British at then try to stay Neutral- • Wars continue through the early 1750’s when the French and Indian War – ends French presence in North America

  21. Wars Between France and BritainDuring the 1600-1700s • King William’s War (1689-1697) • French and Algonquians v. British colonists and Iroquois Tribes • Queen Anne’s War (1701-1712) • French lose Acadia to British (Nova Scotia) • King Georges War (1744-1748) • French and Indian War (1754-1763) • French are kicked out of North America

  22. Salem Witchcraft Trials (1692) • Accusations of witchcraft come to a small village in Massachusetts • Bad things were happening to Mass: and the very religious Puritans believed the devil was responsible. • Names remain: Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, Tituba…

  23. Salem Witches • 19 people executed 2 die in jail, one is tortured to death • Prominent people are accused and the court is disbanded • Classic Witch Hunt: • “Accused could save their lives only by confessing and implicating others…” • “Vivid example of people’s capacity to turn against fellow humans, however innocent, in an effort to save themselves.”

More Related