1 / 18

Chapter 4 Section 2

Chapter 4 Section 2. Bellwork. Please label the 13 Colonies Write in pencil only! If you know the founder please fill it in Do NOT color the map today! You will need your book, a piece of loose-leaf paper, and a pencil. Review!.

tussey
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 4 Section 2

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. Chapter 4Section 2

  2. Bellwork • Please label the 13 Colonies • Write in pencil only! • If you know the founder please fill it in • Do NOT color the map today! You will need your book, a piece of loose-leaf paper, and a pencil

  3. Review! • Which religious group left England on the Mayflower and formed Plymouth Colony? • Which group left England and formed the Massachusetts Bay Colony? • What was the difference between the two groups?

  4. Review! • Why did Thomas Hooker leave Massachusetts Bay Colony? • What colony did he start? • Why did Roger Williams leave Massachusetts Bay Colony? • What colony did he start?

  5. Review! • What was the name of the Wampanoag chief who attacked English settlements? • Why did this “war” begin?

  6. New Netherland • Began as a Dutch colony on the Hudson River • New Amsterdam was built as a port for the fur trade, but quickly became a popular port • The Dutch government tried to encourage farming by giving rich families large amounts of land to rent out • Most people lived in New Amsterdam however and came from all over Europe

  7. New Netherland • New Netherland was like Rhode Island, both had religious freedom. • Most people were Protestant from the Dutch Reformed Church, but Catholics, Jews, and other Protestants were welcome and could hold land. • African slaves were in high demand, nearly a quarter of the population were slaves

  8. New Netherland • In 1664 English rivalry with the Dutch over trade and colonies caused England to attack New Amsterdam • The governor wants to fight the English, but he is so unpopular the people refuse to help him • The colony is surrendered to England without a single shot fired • The King of England gives the colony to his brother, the Duke of York who renames is New York

  9. New Jersey • The Duke of York decided New York was too big to govern easily • He gives some land to some friends to create a colony • Starts as a proprietary colony, land given to someone to divide and rent • New Jersey later becomes a royal colony in 1702, it becomes ruled by the King directly • Their charter protected religious freedom and right of assembly

  10. New Jersey • New Jersey has very fertile farmland and lots of resources • Colonists from Sweden, Germany, Scotland, Germany and other countries begin to come • Some New York colonists move to New Jersey, New England colonists start coming as well for the better farmland

  11. Pennsylvania • Founded by William Penn in 1681 • Penn founded the colony to give Quakers a place to practice their religion • Quakers were Protestants, they were among the most disliked group in England because of their beliefs • Believed that all people were equal in God’s sight, women could preach, spoke out against war

  12. Pennsylvania • Penn wanted to be a model of religious freedom • Protestants, Catholics, and Jews came to Pennsylvania to escape persecution • Later were pressured to turn away Catholics and Jews • Penn also wanted fair treatment for Native Americans and fair pay for land taken from them • There were very few conflicts with Native Americans

  13. Pennsylvania • Pamphlets were sent out to European countries, settlers came from all over • Large numbers of “Pennsylvania Dutch” came over, about a third of immigrants were African slaves • Penn planned the city of Philadelphia meaning “city of brotherly love”

  14. Delaware • Delaware began as the Lower Counties of Pennsylvania • Settlers did not want to send delegates to Philadelphia so Penn allowed them to elect their own assembly • They broke away in 1704 to become their own colony

  15. Life in the Middle Colonies • Most people made their living farming • It was much easier to farm in the Middle Colonies than New England • Winters were much less intense so the growing season lasted longer • Farmers grew barley, wheat and rye as cash-crops, crops sold for money instead of just food • Farms were very large and required lots of work. African slaves worked on some farms, but most had paid farmhands

  16. Life in the Middle Colonies • Houses tended to be farther apart, which placed less importance on towns. The county became the center of local government. • Different groups built different types of houses ranging from log cabins to red brick homes • Every member of a house had duties to make sure the family survived

  17. The Backcountry • Thousands of Germans and Scotch-Irish came to Philadelphia and traveled east onto the slopes of the Appalachian Mountains. • They originally meant to farm, but found it very challenging. • Learned how to survive off the land from the Native Americans • The large amount of new settlers caused some to move onto Indian lands, causing tensions to rise and some violent disputes to occur

More Related