Title: The English Colonies
1The English Colonies
- By Jordan Benford
- Presented by Mrs. Haslam
2Coming to America in the 13 colonies
- Part 1 Coming to America The first colonies in
North America were along the eastern coast.
Settlers from Spain, France, Sweden, Holland, and
England claimed land beginning in the 17th
century. The struggle for control of this land
would continue for more than a hundred years. - The first permanent settlement in North America
was the English colony at Jamestown, in 1607, in
what is now Virginia. John Smith and company had
come to stay. The Pilgrims followed, in 1620, and
set up a colony at Plymouth, in what is now
Massachusetts. - Other English colonies sprang up all along the
Atlantic coast, from Maine in the north to
Georgia in the south. Swedish and Dutch colonies
took shape in and around what is now New York. - As more and more people arrived in the New World,
more and more disputes arose over territory. Many
wars were fought in the 1600s and 1700s. Soon,
the two countries with the largest presence were
England and France. - The two nations fought for control of North
America in what Americans call the French and
Indian War (1754-1763). England won the war and
got control of Canada, as well as keeping control
of all the English colonies. - By this time, the English colonies numbered 13.
They were Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.
3Food in the 13 American colonies
- People who lived on the Atlantic Coast caught
fish and whales. - They sold fish and whale blubber at fish markets.
- Farmers grew wheat, Barley, corn, tobacco, and
rice. - Most of the people were farmers, and they owned
chickens, pigs, and cows, etc.
4Picture of the 13 colonies Map
5A picture of the colonies map before 1763
6Religion
- House worships, but what they learned in those
services depend where they live.
7School in the 13 colonies
- Parents thought that their children should learn
about their Christianity. - Parents taught the kids to read so they could
read the bible. - They had grammar schools, this was only for the
boys!!!! Sorry girls!!!! - The middle colonies learned about one specific
religion. Most of their schools were private.
Girls also was not allowed to attend unless they
were Quakers. - In the school age kids were taught at home. When
becoming a teenager they go off to college or to
Europe. Just like the other colonies southern
girls did not go to school. - Schools were generally small, not like the large
ones many kids go to today. Kids learned to read
from special books called hornbooks. - Kids in colonial America were taught a trade,
usually the one their fathers did, so they could
continue the family business when their fathers
retired. Often, kids would go to school and learn
a trade.
8Parks in the 13 Colonies
- The American colonists had parks in their
communities, but they didn't really have
playgrounds or swing sets. In colonial America,
the park was more commonly called the common.
These areas were found especially in the New
England colonies. Boston still has its common. - The common was short for "common area," a large
area in the center of a village or town where
people would gather before and after meetings.
The common usually contained the meetinghouse.
New Englanders also let their cattle graze in the
common. (This was a large area, after all!) - Villages and towns in the Middle and Southern
colonies had common areas as well. Here, children
played, tutors instructed students, and families
gathered to discuss the news of the day. Games
kids played included tag, marbles, hopscotch,
hide-and-seek, and other names familiar to kids
today. They didn't really have toys, so they
often made their own or played outdoor games that
didn't require toys. An example of this is kids'
making and flying their own kites. - As is the case today with parks, colonial common
areas provided an opportunity for people to
gather in a safe place.
9Farming in the 13 colonies
- Farmers in the New England Colonies had a rough
time of it. Much of the soil wasn't good for
growing crops, especially near the ocean. Also,
the early and long-lasting winters killed many
crops quickly. Still, New England farmers often
grew enough food to feed their families and
maybe even help feed other families. The main
kind of food New Englanders contributed to the
economy was fish. - Farmers in the Southern Colonies grew several
things. The most popular crop was tobacco. The
Jamestown colonists had grown tobacco originally,
and tobacco farms sprung up all over Virginia and
North Carolina. The two southernmost states
(South Carolina and Georgia) also grew indigo and
rice.
10Economy in the 13 colonies
- The New England Colonies were largely farming and
fishing communities. The people made their own
clothes and shoes. They grew much of their own
food. Crops like corn and wheat grew in large
numbers, and much was shipped to England. Foods
that didn't grow in America were shipped from
England. Boston was the major New England port. - The Middle Colonies were part agriculture, part
industrial. Wheat and other grains grew on farms
in Pennsylvania and New York. Factories in
Maryland produced iron, and factories in
Pennsylvania produced paper and textiles. Trade
with England was plentiful in these colonies as
well. - The Southern Colonies were almost entirely
agricultural. The main feature was the
plantation, a large plot of land that contained a
great many acres of farmland and buildings in
which lived the people who owned the land and the
people who worked the land. (A large part of the
workforce was African slaves, who first arrived
in 1619.) - Southern plantations grew tobacco, rice, and
indigo, which they sold to buyers
11Motivations for the 13 colonies
- By and large, the people who settled in the New
England Colonies wanted to keep their family unit
together and practice their own religion. They
were used to doing many things themselves and not
depending on other people for much. Some of these
people came to New England to make money, but
they were not the majority. - The people who founded the Middle Colonies were
looking to practice their own religion
(Pennsylvania mainly) or to make money. Many of
these people didn't bring their families with
them from England and were the perfect workers
for the hard work required in ironworks and
shipyards. - The founders of the Southern Colonies were, for
the most part, out to make money. They brought
their families, as did the New England colonists,
and they kept their families together on the
plantations. But their main motivation was to
make the good money that was available in the new
American market.
12Beliefs for the 13 colonies
- The Pilgrims in Massachusetts and the Quakers in
Pennsylvania were examples of people who had left
England so they could practice the religion they
chose. Maryland and Rhode Island passed laws of
religious toleration (meaning that people
couldn't be harmed just because their religion
was different from other people's). - These American colonists also believed that they
had a right to govern themselves. More and more,
they believed that they shouldn't have to pay so
much in taxes to England, especially since they
couldn't serve in the English government and have
a say on how high or low those taxes were. -
13Revolution during the 13 colonies
- As more and more Americans voiced their concerns
over higher and higher taxes, a conflict began to
build. The English response was to isolate the
colonies from each other, in hopes that the
American people would not pull together as a
whole. An example of this is the Intolerable
Acts, which singled out Massachusetts in general
and Boston in particular. One provision of these
Acts was to close the port of Boston entirely.
This was serious business. Boston was one of the
largest ports in America. Closing it meant that
Americans couldn't get food and other essentials
from England or anywhere else, unless they paid
extra for it to be transported from other ports,
like New York. - But the punishment of Boston backfired. The
Americans pulled together as never before. They
took up arms against their English governors and
fellow soldiers. Even though they had fought for
England in the French and Indian War (George
Washington included), they now fought against
England for the right to govern themselves. The
result was the Revolutionary War, which ended in
American victory. - A new nation was born, one that had its roots in
the conflicts between several European nations.
That new nation would have to make its own way in
an angry world.
14Timeline of the 13 Colonies
- 1607 1607 - In 1607, at Jamestown, was founded
the first permanent English colony in , ,
America. From the earliest times to the present.
The South Early settle- the New World has been
regarded as a land of boundless possibilities.
The first English colonists in Virginia ... Show
moreFrom Problems of American Democracy -
Related web pagesbooks.google.com/books?id_gNJAA
AAIAAJpgPA58 ... - 1619 1619 - Jury trial and representative
government were both established upon a lasting
foundation in America in 1619, while Virginia was
the only English colony. These two bulwarks of
freedom were not then known in any large country
except in England and they were not to ... Show
moreFrom History of the American People -
Related web pagesbooks.google.com/books?idPXkAAA
AAYAAJpgRA1 ... - 1651 1651 - To secure control of colonial trade,
therefore, Parliament began in 1651, thirty-one
years after the landing of the Pilgrims, to pass
the famous Naviga- The Navigation tion Laws and
Acts of Trade. These laws Laws and Acts required,
(i) that all trade between the ... Show moreFrom
A History of the United
15Timeline continued
- 1664 1664 - Charles II promised his brother
James, the Duke of York, the title to any Dutch
holdings he could capture. In 1664, James arrived
with a fleet of ships at the port of New
Amsterdam, declaring that New Netherlands was
henceforth an English colony. The colony's ...
Show moreFrom The American Testimony Discovery
and Colonization of the New World - Related web
pageswww.history2u.com/book1_discovery.htm - 1733 Feb 12, 1733 - On February 12, 1733,
General James Edward Oglethorpe and 19 associates
named as Trustees, founded the colony of Georgia.
The purpose of the colony, the 13th and the last
of the English colonies in the New World was to
aid the poor in England, increase trade ... Show
moreFrom Konter Realty - Related web
pageskonterrealty.com/home.cfm/page/Savannah.html
- 1754 1754 - You would hardly expect a man of
these tastes to be the one to work out a plan to
unite the English colonies. Yet it was he who,
seeing clearly that the English colonies would be
much stronger if they would work together,
proposed in 1754 a "Plan of Union." This ...
16Timeline continued
- 1763 1763 - Part two explores the political,
social, and cultural history of the state from
the first successful English colonies in the
1600s to the eve of the Revolution in 1763.
Definitions heathen n. Derogatory term used to
describe a member of a people that does not ...
Show moreFrom Benjamin Wadsworth on the duties
of children to their parents - North - Related
web pagesalpha.learnnc.org/lp/pages/4112 - 1765 1765 - 8 The most elaborate composite of
data derived from every source is the chapter on
"Virginia in 1765," in Henry Cabot Lodge's Short
History of the English Colonies, in which he
depends very largely on the survival of manners
in the days when Burnaby, Anburey ... Show
moreFrom Narrative and Critical History of
America - Related web pagesbooks.google.com/books
?idAucV9msJxIMCpg ... - 1775 1775 - The powers of the governments of the
English colonies in America, before the
Revolutionary war, beginning in 1775, were all
written instruc-. "uons," accompanied-"by
charters and grants of title and formulated
frameworks of government. The English colonists
were ... Show moreFrom Constitutional History
and Political Development of the United States -
Related web pagesbooks.google.com/books?idB3o_AA
AAIAAJpgPA1 ... - 1776 Jul 4, 1776 - On July 4, 1776, the English
colonies said that they were "free and
independent states" and named themselves "The
United States of America." Although the colonies
said they were free, our colonial fore fathers,
had to fight for eight long years before England
... Show moreFrom Alabama History in the Us -
Related web pagesbooks.google.com/books?idoloCXg
gPxDQCpgPA88 ...
17The 13 Original Colonies
- The original thirteen colonies were Connecticut,
Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and
Virginia.
18Map of when these colonies were founded
19Womens Dutys in the 13 Colonies
- They were responsible for indoor duties like
preparing food ( gardening, smoking meats,
milking cows,) Sewing, Cleaning. They were most
free from labor in summers before food
preservation, spinning and weaving again.
20Mens Dutys in the 13 Colonies
- Men on the farm were responsible for outdoor
duties like planting crops, building fences, and
butchering livestock. They were most free in
labor in the winter when crops required no care.
21Life in the 13 Colonies
- Life in 13 ColoniesThe colonists of the
thirteen colonies immigrated to the New World due
to poverty and religious restrictions in England.
The colonists settled in the New Land, with many
assurances from the European government. However,
they had to earn their living through farming.
There was limitless stretches of land, but this
was uncultivated land with most of the part
covered with primeval forests and rocky valleys.
But, every colony did not have fertile land for
farming and had to find out different ways to
make a living. The colonies were divided into
three categories, viz. New England Colonies,
Middle Colonies and Southern Colonies. The
distribution of the colonies was as follows
22The 3 colonies divided into 3 groups
- New England New Hampshire, Rhodes Island,
Connecticut, and MassachusettsMiddle Colonies
Pennsylvania, Delaware, New York and New
JerseySouthern Colonies South Carolina, North
Carolina, Georgia, Maryland and Virginia
23Where Were these Colonies founded?
- They Were founded along the Atlantic Coast of
America. - Each of these groups had its unique aspects in
many areas, from architecture to economics. They
all had a common goal to govern themselves and
to have a say in how they were represented.
24What colonies the states are in.
- They were divided into three groups, as below
- New England ColoniesRhode IslandConnecticutMass
achusettsNew Hampshire - Middle ColoniesDelawarePennsylvaniaNew
YorkNew Jersey - Southern ColoniesMarylandVirginiaNorth
CarolinaSouth CarolinaGeorgia
25The states in the 13 Colonies
- VirginiaJohn Smith, and a number of rich
Englishmen, sailed through the Chesapeake Bay to
reach the Powhatan's river. They settled along
the banks of this river and named it as 'James
river' after King James I. Although the territory
was named Virginia, this settlement was known as
the Jamestown. The English government lured and
sent many English men with the promises that they
will get gold and land in Virginia.
Unfortunately, no gold was found in Virginia.
These Englishmen did not know farming and so had
no means to make a living. They also did not get
any land, as promised by the Company of Virginia.
Many Englishmen died in Indian attacks and others
died due to starvation or epidemic. The year 1610
was known as 'Starving Time' in which 90 of the
population of Virginia died.Nine ships were sent
to Virginia from England, but they were caught in
an hurricane. One of the survivors of this voyage
was John Rolfe. He started the cultivation of
tobacco in Virginia in 1612. Tobacco brought
wealth which in turn brought Englishmen to
Virginia. New YorkDutch refugees from France
and Holland purchased the island of Manhattan. In
1626, Peter Minuit, the Governor of this colony
named it as New Amsterdam. Though the harbor of
New Amsterdam was suitable for trade, Dutch
colonists made money through piracy. New
Amsterdam colony was surrounded by English
colonies. This well-situated harbor tempted the
British. They attacked New Amsterdam in 1664 and
it was renamed as New York after the Duke of
York.
26The states continued
- Massachusetts BayIn 1608, English separatists
left England and settled in Holland. Later, they
decided to settle in America in 1620.
Separatists, also called Pilgrims, came to
America in the ship 'Mayflower'. 102 pilgrims
sailed through the sea in Mayflower to a place
called Cape Cod bay. They settled in a harbor
which was to the west of Cape Cod bay and named
it as Plymouth harbor. John Alden, William
Bradford, William Brewster, John Carver, Myles
Standish were some of the famous men who sailed
to America in Mayflower. The separatists started
the tradition of Thanksgiving Day. Mayflower
Compact signed by 41 men laid the foundation of
the governing law in America. It states that one
should have - Faith and belief in God
- Loyalty towards the King of England
- Equality amongst each other
- Ability to establish democratic laws
- Englishmen who wanted to reform the ideologies of
Church and Christianity were called Puritans.
They came to the New World, ten years after the
Pilgrims. At the beginning, the Puritan group was
granted the permission to trade with America.
Their company was called Massachusetts Bay
Company. John Winthrop was the Governor of
Massachusetts Company which had 1000 Puritans.
They initially decided to stop at Salem, but then
settled in Shawmut Peninsula of Massachusetts
Bay. Later, this colony was known as New Boston.
27Continued
- New HampshireIn 1623, John Mason formed a
fishing company in Massachusetts. He sent some
fish merchants and a number of other people to a
place near the mouth of Piscataqua river. They
named this place as Little Harbor which is now
known as Town of Rye. Fishing business flourished
in this province. This colony was under the
British reign and was previously known as North
Virginia. Later, the King James I changed this
name to New England. This colony came under the
legal power of Massachusetts in 1698. Scottish
and Irish people formed a part of the population
of this colony. Chief magistrate Benning
Wentworth named it New Hampshire in the 18th
century. MarylandKing Charles I sent Cecil
Calvert to America to form the colony named
Maryland. Cecil Calvert was the second Lord
Baltimore. Maryland was named after the king's
wife, Queen Mary. People who adopted Maryland as
a new home wanted to get away with the
ill-treatment of the Church in England. Annapolis
was declared as the capital of Maryland in
1694.ConnecticutIn 1636, many people from
Roxbury settled down in a place on the banks of
the Connecticut river. They named this place
Woodstock after Oxford. The Dutch used this place
as a trading post. Later, in 1749, a separate
colony of Connecticut was formed.
28Continued
- Rhode IslandIn 1636, Roger Williams and a number
of other people left the Massachusetts Bay
colony. They wanted to get rid of the religious
restrictions in Massachusetts Bay and desired to
have the freedom to worship in their own way. In
1663, Rhodes Island became a separate colony with
the consent of King Charles II. People from
various religious sects settled in Rhodes Island
due to its religious freedom. However, this later
led to fights amongst these sects.DelawareIn
1609, Henry Hudson, along with many Spaniards and
Portuguese, explored the coastline of Delaware.
Later, in 1631, a Dutch trading company was
established on this coastline. However, Indians
set their buildings on fire and no one survived
this attack. Finally, in 1638, the Swedes formed
the first permanent settlement of Delaware.
Delaware was a Swedish colony until the Dutch
governor, Peter Stuyvesant, quashed the Swedish
rule in 1655, and it became a Dutch colony.
29Continued
- North CarolinaEnglishmen explored North Carolina
in the 16th century. Walter Rayleigh was the
first Englishman who came to this tribal place.
Three tribes Iroquoian, Siouan and Algonquian
lived in this territory before the English people
arrived and the colonization of North Carolina
started in 1650. People from southeastern
Virginia shifted to North Carolina.New
JerseyIn the 16th century, Giovanni De Verrazano
first came to New Jersey where trading posts were
set up. Dutch came to New Jersey when they lost
New Amsterdam. This territory was divided into
two halves one under the supervision of Sir
George Carteret and the other under Lord John
Berkley. South CarolinaKing Charles II
appointed eight Lords Proprietors to control
South Carolina. The colonists revolted against
the Proprietors and South Carolina became an
individual province in 1719. The plantation in
South Carolina had a close resemblance to the
plantation in West
30Continued
- PennsylvaniaPeople of Mongolian ancestry
inhabited Pennsylvania. King Charles II gave
William Penn, a part of the land between Maryland
and New York because he owed a debt to William
Penn's father. Penn utilized this inherited
wealth for the betterment of a prosecuted sect
called Quaker. In 1681, William Markham, cousin
of William Penn, became the Governor of
Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania became the land of the
Quakers.GeorgiaThe last British colony in
America was Georgia which was chosen so that it
could act as a defensive support to South
Carolina. James Oglethorpe was the founder of
this colony and wanted to help the poor and needy
people in England. He was granted permission from
King Charles II in 1730. The first step he took,
to make Georgia a better place, was to sign a
treaty with the Indians living there as Indians
were greatly influential in Georgia. Colonies
were then classified, according to the
geographical location as new England, middle
colonies and southern colonies. These colonies
formed the cornerstones of a big nation, now
known as the United States of America.