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New England Colonies An overview.

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Title: New England Colonies An overview.


1
New England ColoniesAn overview.
2
The people who lived there
  • NEW ENGLAND
  • New England is in the northeast of North America
    and has generally thin and stony soil, relatively
    little flat land, and long cold winters, making
    it hard to make a living from farming.
  • New Englanders harnessed water power and
    established grain mills and sawmills. Good
    forests encouraged shipbuilding.
  • Excellent harbors promoted trade, and the sea
    became a source of great wealth. In
    Massachusetts, the cod (fishing) industry alone
    quickly furnished a good basis for profit and
    prosperity.

3
Founding of Massachusetts Bay Colony and Plymouth
Colony
4
  • On Sept. 16, 1620 the ship "Mayflower" set off
    from Plymouth, England on it journey to the New
    World. There were 102 passengers on the Mayflower
    including 41 Christian Puritan Separatists.
  • After spending many years in Holland exiled from
    the English Church, the Puritans were seeking a
    new life of religious freedom in America.

5
  • The group had obtained a Patent from the London
    Virginia Company which indentured them into
    service for the Company for seven years after
    they arrived and settled.
  • When they arrived they anchored off the tip of
    Cape Cod, in an area now known as Massachusetts,
    and before they even set foot on shore they
    wrote, and signed, an agreement called the
    "Mayflower Compact" that would set the rules to
    guide them through the early hard times. The
    Compact served as the official Constitution of
    the Plymouth Colony for many years.

6
Pilgrim Fashions
7
  • After landing they explored the area around Cape
    Cod for over a month using the maps they had
    obtained in England.
  • During their exploration they had a few minor
    encounters with the local natives. Finally, on
    December 21, they decided on a location near
    Plymouth Harbor which they named Plymouth.
  • Nearly half of the colonists and crew died from
    illnesses that first winter as they struggled to
    build their town.

8
Squanto and the Pilgrims.
  • The following spring they were visited by a local
    Wampanoag native named Samoset who introduced the
    settlers to another native named Squanto who's
    village had occupied the area before the Pilgrims
    arrived. His people had all been killed by
    diseases brought by European explorers.
  • Squanto spoke English very well and he stayed
    with the Pilgrims and taught them many valuable
    skills that enabled them to survive in their new
    country. He also played a very big part in
    bringing the Pilgrims and the local native
    population together, leading, eventually, to a
    lasting peace treaty.

9
John Winthrop and the Puritans
  • Not long after the Pilgrims arrived in Plymouth
    more Puritans came to Massachusetts and settled
    Naumkeag (later named Salem).
  • John Winthrop, carrying the Massachusetts Bay
    Charter, arrived in 1630 and founded Boston.
    Maine was annexed (claimed and taken) by
    Massachusetts in 1652 and later the Plymouth
    Colony was too.

10
Rhode Island Colony
  • In 1635, Roger Williams was put on trial by the
    Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and found
    guilty of holding four opinions at difference
    with those officially allowed.
  • His sentence was banishment from the colony
  • After spending the winter with the Indians he
    finally bought land from them in what is now
    called Providence. The new Rhode Island colony
    became a haven for those seeking religious
    freedom.

11
  • The colony of Rhode Island, founded on complete
    religious toleration, separation of church and
    state, and political democracy, became a refuge
    for people persecuted for their religious
    beliefs, even in Massachusetts.
  • Rhode Island colonists participated in a simple
    form of democratic government, with each family
    represented in political meetings by the vote of
    the head of the family.
  • Anabaptists and Quakers fled the persecutions of
    the Puritans to settle in Rhode Island.
  • In 1658, a Jewish community arrived in Newport,
    Rhode Island, seeking religious freedom.

12
Rhode Island Native Americans
  • Roger Williams maintained close ties to the
    Narragansett Indians and continued to protect
    them from the land greed of the Massachusetts Bay
    Colony.
  • His respect for the Indians, his fair treatment
    of them, and his knowledge of their language
    enabled him to carry on peace negotiations
    between the native peoples and European settlers.
  • Although Williams preached to the Indians, he
    gave up the attempt to convert them, extending
    his principle of religious freedom to include all
    forms of worship.

13
Connecticut Colony
  • Clergyman Thomas Hooker and his followers arrived
    in Hartford and declared freedom from all save
    Divine Authority. In 1639 the "Fundamental
    Orders" were enacted to govern the colony. In
    1662 Connecticut finally obtained a Royal Charter
    under John Winthrop Jr.

14
Thomas Hooker
  • Thomas Hooker arrived in Massachusetts in 1633.
    For a time Thomas and his family settled there
    while he served as the pastor of the 8th church
    in that colony. The civil situation was not
    completely harmonious between the leaders.
  • John Cotton, another leader, wanted to set up a
    community in which only men who were members of
    the church and held property could vote. Thomas
    Hooker, like Cotton, wanted to build a godly
    community, but he believed all the men should
    have a voice and a vote.

15
  • Thomas Hooker left and led about one hundred
    people away to begin a new settlement, which is
    now called Hartford, Connecticut.
  • Later, three settlements merged to form the
    Connecticut Colony. This colony put Hooker's
    principles into practice when it adopted the
    Fundamental Orders of Connecticut which is
    sometimes called the first written constitution
    in America.

16
New Hampshire
  • John Wheelwright, banished from Boston, founded
    the colony of New Hampshire. In 1639 the settlers
    signed the "Exeter Compact" patterned after the
    "Mayflower Compact".
  • The towns that formed the colony were all on land
    claimed by Massachusetts and were subject to its
    authority
  • Each town would send a representative to the
    massachusetts council in Boston until finally
    being given self government by the King in 1679.
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