Title: EMPIRES
1EMPIRES
- Part I
- Great Britain Turns to North America
2Types of Colonies
- Corporate Colonies
- Joint-stock companies
- Jamestown (Virginia Company)
- Royal Colonies
- Under direct authority of kings government
- Virginia after 1624
- Proprietary Colonies
- Under authority of individuals granted charters
of ownership by the king, usually as gifts for
support - Proprietors have almost total power
- Maryland, Pennsylvania
3Great Britain The Turn to North America
- Puritan forces execute Charles I in 1649
- Oliver Cromwell (Englands Protector) leads
until his death in 1658 - Followed by son, who cannot control the country,
Parliament calls kings son out of exile to rule - 1660, Charles II restored to the throne, rewards
supporters with colonies - Has no heir, brother James (Duke of York)
inherits throne in 1685, rules as James II - Restoration Colonies
- Despite unrest, continuous and increased
influence and expansion in North America
4Settlement of the Coast Carolina
- Carolina (1663)
- Proprietary Title given to supporters for all
land between Florida and Virginia, west to the
sea - No one really knew where that was
- Proprietors needed to attract settlers
- Many from Virginia settled in the North
- Displaced planters from Barbados settled further
south, bringing slaves - What will be South Carolina began with a system
of black chattel labor - Why might this be important to understand?
5Carolina Contributions
- Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina (1669)
- Attempt to establish an almost feudal hierarchy
to the colony, but attract settlers
It did Provide for Grand Council (court
executive) Provide for an elected
assembly Provide for voting by secret
ballot Contain policies for religious toleration
It did not Provide for any kind of local
government like other colonies Never go into full
effectgrew much more slowly than anticipated
FUN FACT John Locke was a secretary to one of
the proprietors at the time!
6Carolina Development
- Divisions began to develop between the southern
and northern provinces
- Albemarle ? North Carolina
- Timber, livestock and tobacco
- No major port, sold through Virginia
- Much less slavery
- South Carolina
- Develop major port at Charles Town
- 1st planned city in North America
- Trade in timber, livestock, rice
- By 1708, population is majority black slaves
- Formally split in 1721
- Become Royal Colonies
7Settlement of the Coast New York (dont tell
the Dutch!)
- Charles gives James all land between the
Connecticut and Delaware Rivers - Produces conflict with New Netherland and New
Sweden - Stuyvesant surrenders New Amsterdam in 1664
- All other outposts follow
- James doesnt want elected assembly, but is
forced to agree - Only lasts from 1683-87, when he becomes king
8New Jerseys
- NY Governor gives some land to pesty Puritans
from New England
Berkeley sells to QuakersWest New Jersey
- James gives the area between the Hudson to
Delaware to a couple of followers, Carteret and
Berkeley - Didnt tell New Yorks governor. Let the games
begin
- Carteret takes over East New Jersey alone
- Carteret dies, heirs sell off land to
surveyors, who sell off land without reliable
surveys
- Moral of the story New Jersey has always been a
mess. - Consolidated into one Royal Colony in 1702
9Settlement of Pennsylvania
- William Penns family owed a large debt from the
British Crown. Given a land grant in 1681.
Becomes Pennsylvania (Penns woods) - Becomes a haven for Quakers, who do not believe
in any religious authority and are persecuted in
England - Refused to kneel, bow, use titles, engage in war
- On occasion, acted outrageously
- Penn governs in the colony, unusual for a
proprietor - Parliament had learned from past colonial
conflicts, and placed some restrictions on Penn - Had to follow Parliament's trade laws, keep an
agent in England - Had to allow customs officials, and permit
appeals to British courts - Had to send transcripts of all laws to England
for review
10Pennsylvania The Holy Experiment
- Frame of Government (1682)
- Included elected assembly that could reject laws
that he proposed - Charter of Liberties (complete freedom of
worship, open immigration), fair treatment of
Native Americans - Advertised in Europe, promising land freedoms
- Population would include Swedes, Finns, Welsh and
Irish settlers - Came for liberty and land
- 50 acres to settlers, and to their freed servants
- Plans Philadelphia to be a decentralized,
wholesome town - Symmetry, green space, plain street names
supported Quaker ideals
11 12Unrest on the frontiers
- Increased expansion brought new conflict with
Native mericans - Roger Williams, William Penn among those who
thought Indians deserved to be treated with
respect, but were in the minority of the time
period - Penn actually purchased lands that the king had
given him from Native Americans
13King Philips War
- Relative peace between Plymouth Colony and
Wampanoag Indians from 1621-1675 - In 1662, Metacom (King Philip) accepted agreement
that subjugated his people to the English Crown
- Attacks town of Swansea on June 20, 1675
- Fighting will last over a year, kill thousands of
settlers and Indians - What caused this, and how did it change life in
the colonies?
14King Philips War
- Possible Causes
- Plymouth started to fine Indians
- Colonists pasturing animals on Indian lands
- Incidents of colonists hanging Indians accused of
murder - Constant threat and spread of disease
- Effects
- Fighting spread across colonies and tribes
- Some tribes neutral, or even joined colonists
- So-called praying Indians sent to internment in
Boston Harbor - Indian population decimated, some tribes
virtually eliminated - Many Indians sold into slavery, sent to Bermuda
15Berkeley vs. Bacon in Virginia
- Governor Berkeley, Royal Governor of Virginia
adopted policies that - favored large planters,
- failed to protect smaller farmers that were
pushed inland, along with Native Americans - Fun Fact Brother of the New Jersey Berkeley
- Frontier farmers worried after news of King
Philips war
- In 1676, recruit Nathaniel Bacon to lead them in
attacking Indians - Berkeley sends 300 troops to stop him
16Bacons Rebellion
- Berkeley arrests Bacon when he is elected to the
assembly - Bacon apologizes, is released
- Berkeley declares Bacon followers rebels
against the king - Bacon moves troops to Jamestown, burns it,
harasses the governor Bacon briefly gains control
of the government, dies on October 26, 1676 - Fun fact Exactly 300 years before Mr. D is born!
- Effects
- Importance to people of right to keep and bear
arms - Importance of local governments to the people
- Highlights class differences, reactions to
perceived corruption - Colonial resistance to Royal control
17Trade takes Center Stage
- England jealous of the trading power, worldwide
influence of the Dutch - Acts of Trade and Navigation (1650-1673)
- Mercantilism
- Trade only on English or colonial ships
- All goods must first travel to English ports
- Specified goods from colonies could only be
exported to England (eventually includes most
goods)
18Effects of Mercantilism
- POSITIVES
- N.E. shipbuilding prospers
- England prosperous, grants some colonies more
rights, self govt - Protection of British military forces
- NEGATIVES
- Manufacturing limited
- Chesapeake farmers get low prices with no
competition - High prices on manufactured goods from England
- Increased bureaucracy, resentment
British government often lax in enforcement,
corruption was rampant
19Triangular Trade
20Trend toward Centralization
- Throughout 1660s more colonies coming under royal
control - James II comes to power in 1685, increases the
trend - Dominion of New England
- Combines New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Plymouth,
Rhode Island and Connecticut - Governor, council, no elected assembly
- New York and New Jersey added in 1688
21The Glorious Revolution
- James II becomes deeply unpopular, angering
everyone - English with Catholic leanings
- colonists with increased royal control over the
colonies - Going around Parliament on financial matters
- The Glorious Revolution ousts James II as king,
replaced with William and Mary - Creation of a limited monarchy
- Supremacy of the House of Commons
- William and Mary dismantle the Dominion of New
England, but kept Massachusetts a royal colony - Establishes elected assemblies as essential to
government - Colonies regain historic identities, but still
increased presence of the crown
22EMPIRES
- Part II
- Competition Among the Europeans in North America
23France
- New France small, relied on trade, missionary
activity - Fighting among the Huron (traded with French) and
Iroquois (traded with Dutch and English) nearly
bankrupted them - Louis XIV takes direct control
- Expand throughout Great Lakes region, mostly by
establishing trading posts - By early 1700s, had claimed and established forts
at the mouth of the Mississippi - Biloxi (1699), New Orleans (1722)
24Imperial Iroquois
- Identifield selves with words meaning long
house - Primarily agricultural society, matrilocal
- Men went to live with wives families, elder
women held power to determine which men headed
their villages - Form Great League of Peace between the different
Iroquois people, Iroquois Confederation as a
result of conflict with French over trade - Not governments in the European model, but
Europeans treated negotiations that way - How might that cause problems down the line?
25European Entanglements
- War between Britain and France in the late
1680?90s (surprise, surprise) - War of the League of Augsburg in Europe
- King Williams War in British America
- Iroquois (Five Nations) side with the British,
Abenaki (NH/Maine) side with French - Fighting marked by burning down villages, killing
livestock, taking men hostage - British villages destroyed, heavy casualties on
both sdies - French turn to fight Iroquois
- Lose ¼ to ½ of fighting men
- Impact on alliances for the future
26Spain
- Held fort at St. Augustine (since 1565) on the
Atlantic, Built Pensacola on the Gulf in 1698 - Have control over the Gulf of Mexico
- Since Carlos II died and naed Louis XIVs
grandson heir, French allowed to develop New
Orleans - Yes, European history can also be learned by
watching One Tree Hill on the CW - Concentrated on New Mexico
- Much resentment among native populations
- Tributes to encomenderos, relied on coerced
Indian labor, regularly sold Indians into slavery - Frequent rebellions by Indians
27Rain on Spain in the American Plains
- Popés Rebellion (1680)
- Pueblo uprisingmost successful in North American
history - Pueblo Indians had largely been converted,
subjugated to Spanish - Drought, attacks by Apache and Navajo cause turn
back to their traditional gods - Spanish hang, whip Pueblo leaders
- Pueblo unite behind Popé
- Attack farms, ranches,
- Kill over 400 colonists, including Catholic
missionaries - Destroy Cathlolic imagery
- Revolt spreads across region
- Spanish fail to regain total control
- Whose fault is it?
- The devil, of course!
- Explanation will be used in New England as well
28(No Transcript)
29Major Ideas to Remember
- Similarities and Differences in the British
colonies - Including impact of developments in democratic
ideas - Short- and Long-Term impact of Europeans
views/treatment of Native Americans - Impact of European competition in the New World