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Early Settlement of Colonial America

Early Settlement of Colonial America. The English Settlements. European Exploration. Europeans set sail in search of the 3 G’s. Gold. God. Glory. Christopher Columbus. Discovers the new world (Not the first European ever to land in America)

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Early Settlement of Colonial America

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  1. Early Settlement of Colonial America The English Settlements

  2. European Exploration • Europeans set sail in search of the 3 G’s Gold God Glory

  3. Christopher Columbus Discovers the new world (Not the first European ever to land in America) Lands in Hispaniola (Haiti & Dominican Republic) Believes he is in India Spanish Explorers

  4. Spanish Territory • Florida, Southwestern US, Mexico, and most of South America

  5. Champlain La Salle, Joliet, & Marquette Canada (Quebec) Mississippi River Valley French Explorers

  6. Henry Hudson New Netherlands (New York) Dutch

  7. Jamestown • Founded in 1607 • Created by the Virginia Company, a joint-stock company. • The goal of the Virginia Company and Jamestown was to make money • 1st Permanent English Settlement in the New World

  8. Jamestown • Jamestown was not chosen because it was the perfect place to settle, it was chosen because it was close to the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic but easily defended against the Spanish. • The first settlers had many problems. • They were not used to work and thought they would find gold and did not think about food

  9. Jamestown • The area was also not very hospitable with poor soil and no fresh water. • The closest water supply was swamp water which means it is brackish and not good for drinking. • They would also have problems with mosquitoes and that meant disease • Most died from starvation (harsh winter), disease (malaria and dysentery) and little food.

  10. Jamestown Mosquito Swampland

  11. Jamestown • The first winter the colonists survived because of the Native Americans (Powhatan) who shared food with them. • When they did not plant food for themselves and a bad winter came upon them, they faced what is known as “Starving Time”

  12. Jamestown • Captain John Smith took charge and was able to save Jamestown. • “No Work, No Food”was Smith’s motto for the colonists. • The colonists did not like Smith, but the Native Americans did because he was a warrior and treated them with respect when trading with them.

  13. Jamestown • Powhatan Tribe led by Chief Powhatan. • Provided food for the early settlers • Became angry when the stole their food and land • His daughter was Pocahontas

  14. Jamestown • Matoaka – this is the Indian name for Pocahontas • She would help save Jamestown and marry a planter named John Rolfe • They visited England where she died and is buried.

  15. Jamestown • John Rolfe came from the Caribbean with Spanish tobacco seeds • He mixed them with the Virginia tobacco and made the plant better. • He turned tobacco into “Virginia Gold” • Plantations - large farms • Cash crop economy

  16. Jamestown • The plantation owners could participate in the Headright system: • If they paid membership in the Virginia Company and paid for passage for any member of their family, including servants, they would get 50 acres of land for each person over the age of 15. • The more land they owned, the more tobacco they could plant and thus make more money • More land=More money

  17. Jamestown • During the early 1600s many people in England were in debtors prisons because of the loss of jobs. • The Enclosure Movement occurred when the price of wool went up and the owners of land in England placed fences around their property to keep sheep and they kicked the tenant farmers off. • The displaced farmers then went into the towns looking for work.

  18. Jamestown • With not enough jobs to go around, the farmers had no money to pay their bills and ended up in debtors prisons. • When plantation owners needed workers, they would go to the debtor prisons and sign agreements with the prisoners to come work for them for a certain amount of time in exchange for paying their debts and paying for their voyage to the New World. • Not all indentured servants were prisoners. Anyone who wanted a chance to improve their lives could sign a contract.

  19. Jamestown • Indentured Servants • 5-7 year service agreement • Voyage to the New World is paid for • Food and shelter is provided • At the end of the contract the indentured servants would be given tools, and seeds. Along with 50 acres of land.

  20. Jamestown • House of Burgesses: • 1st elected legislative body in the colonies • Run by the wealthy plantation owners • Created laws for the Virginia colonists • Today it is known as the Virginia General Assembly or the General Assembly of Virginia.

  21. Jamestown Model

  22. Expansion Problems • Poor farmers (backcountry farmers) want more land (these are the indentured servants) • They can only expand westward and that is Indian territory • They ask the wealthy land owners (gov’t) for help and they refuse because they do not want the Native Americans to attack them and maybe burn their plantations. • The poor farmers turn on the rich farmers

  23. Bacon’s Rebellion • Nathaniel Bacon is the nephew of Governor Berkley of Virginia. • He agrees with the poor farmers and leads them against the Native Americans. • They win and then go after Berkley and chase him out of Jamestown then burn it. • Berkley comes back and chases Bacon and his men into the swamp where Bacon dies.

  24. Bacon’s Rebellion • This rebellion scares the rich landowners and so they decide that the problem was the indentured servants. • They want to avoid this problem in the future and so instead of getting indentured servants, whom they have to purchase and then let go after their contract expires and purchase more, they switch to slave labor. • Bacon’s Rebellion led to the use of slaves for plantation work.

  25. Bacon before and after Rebellion

  26. Review • What problems were faced by the settlers in the New World? • Native Americans, disease, harsh winter, little food (bad conditions) • Who was the colonist that saved the colonists from starvation? • John Smith • What crop saved the Virginia Company? • Tobacco

  27. Review • What were the big farms called? • Plantations. • Who worked on the farms? • First indentured servants and later slaves • Name of the 1st legislative body in the English colonies? • House of Burgesses

  28. Southern Colonies • Virginia, Maryland, North and South Carolina, Georgia

  29. Maryland • Proprietary Colony: Private land grant • Founded: Lord Baltimore (George Calvert)

  30. Maryland • Purpose: Safe place (haven) for Catholics • Significance: Toleration Act • Protected religious freedom for all Christians

  31. Carolinas • Royal Colony: King controlled the government in the colony • Purpose was to grow food for the West Indies • Charleston (Charles Town) was the major city; largest city in the south • South Carolina grown wealthy through trade • Rice and Indigo were her cash crops • North Carolina lacked a good port • Tobacco was her cash crop

  32. Carolinas North Carolina South Carolina

  33. Georgia • Last of the original colonies • Founded by James Oglethorpe • Purpose: • Buffer colony • Protect S.C. from Spanish Florida • Debtor Colony: A place to start over.

  34. Southern Colonies • Virginia and the other Southern colonies were settled by people seeking economic opportunity. • Some of the early Virginia settlers were “cavaliers”, English nobility who received large land grants in eastern Virginia from the King of England.

  35. Life in the South • Politically: the government is run by the rich plantation owners • White males who owned land were the only ones allowed to vote • Virginia’s House of Burgesses – first legislative body in English colonies.

  36. Life in the South • Economically: Plantation (cash-crop) economy • Tobacco, Rice, Indigo • Few towns • Charleston: Largest city in the south.

  37. Southern Economies • The economy of colonial Virginia and the other Southern colonies in the eastern coastal lowlands was based on “cash crops” such as tobacco, rice, and indigo. • These cash crops were grown on large plantations and exported to Europe. • Farther inland, in the mountains and valleys of the Appalachian foothills, the economy was based on small-scale subsistence farming, hunting, and trading.

  38. Southern Social Structure • Social structure based on family status and the ownership of land. • Large landowners in the eastern lowlands dominated colonial government and society and maintained an allegiance to the Church of England and closer social ties to England than did those in the other colonies. • Society further inland, was characterized by small-scale subsistence farmers, hunters, and traders of Scots-Irish and English descent.

  39. Slavery • Plantation labor needs came to be satisfied by the forcible importation of Africans. • Some worked as indentured servants, earned their freedom, and lived as free citizens during the Colonial Era. • Over time, larger and larger numbers of enslaved Africans were forcibly brought to the Southern colonies. • First Blacks came to America in 1619 and worked as indentured servants because they were Christian.

  40. Slavery • Slaves replace indentured servants • Middle Passage:Journey from Africa to America • Part of the Triangular Trade • Slave Codes: Harsh laws against slaves • Slave Response: • Suicide, vandalism, revolts

  41. Slavery • You will need to know the story of slavery, from its beginning to how and why it came to be so strong in the Southern colonies. • Sounds like it may be a question on a test, doesn’t it???? • Now, listen to my long and drawn out story of slavery, take notes as you feel you need to and ask questions if you have them.

  42. Middle Colonies • Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware • Colonial Breadbasket • Rich Economy: Farming & Industry

  43. Middle Colonies • Home to multiple religious groups that generally believed in religious tolerance, including Quakers in Pennsylvania, Huguenots and Jews in New York, and Presbyterians in New Jersey. • These colonies began to develop a middle class of skilled artisans, entrepreneurs (business owners), and small farmers.

  44. Pennsylvania • Pennsylvania: Proprietary Colony • Founded By: William Penn • Purpose: Home for Quakers • Pacifist religious group • Philadelphia: “City of Brotherly Love”

  45. New York • Originally owned by the Dutch and called New Netherland • English, in 1664, took over and renamed it New York, after the Duke of York, brother of King Charles I

  46. New Jersey • Named after the Island of Jersey off the coast of France • George Carteret was given title to the land and he was originally from Island of Jersey

  47. Delaware • Named after Baron De La Warr, first colonial governor of Virginia • 2nd smallest state after RI • Known as the first colony to ratify the Constitution

  48. New England • Northern area of English colonies. • Made up of people seeking religious freedom (sort of!!!) • Plymouth Bay Colony (PBC), Massachusetts Bay Colony (MBC), Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire

  49. Massachusetts Created for religious purposes Two groups of settlers: Puritans Pilgrims

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