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The Planting of English America

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Title: The Planting of English America


1
Chapter 2
  • The Planting of English America

2
Colonization in Early 1600s
  • 1610 Sante Fe Spanish
  • 1608 Quebec French
  • 1607 Jamestown - English

3
England and Exploration
  • North America in 1600 was largely unclaimed,
    though the Spanish had much control in Central
    and South America.
  • Issues in England kept them from exploring
  • King Henry VIII broke with the Roman Catholic
    Church in the 1530s and launched the English
    Protestant Reformation.
  • After Elizabeth I became queen, Britain became
    predominantly Protestant, and a rivalry with
    Catholic Spain intensified.

4
Spain Vs. England
  • England wanted what Spain had money, gold ,
    land, power and prestige.
  • Sea Dogs led by Francis Drake stole from Spanish
    ships
  • King Philip was livid after Drake raided Spanish
    ships on the west coast of South America
  • Philip ordered the building of the Spanish Armada

5
Sir Francis Drake
  • Queen Elizabeth's favorite sea dog
  • Stole from the Spanish and eventually
    circumnavigated the world.

6
Drakes Golden Hind
  • English explorer Francis Drake sailed around the
    world between 1577 and 1580 in his galleon the
    Golden Hind. On his voyage Drake was able to
    seize large amounts of treasure from Spanish
    possessions in South America. As a result of his
    success, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth I of
    England. This replica of Drakes galleon can be
    seen on the Thames River in London.

Joel W. Rogers/Corbis
7
Spanish Armada
  • The Spanish fleet sailed on July 12, 1588. It
    consisted of 128 ships carrying 29,522 sailors.
    The British fleet consisted of 116 large ships
    and numerous coastal vessels
  • The Armada was defeated by the English and Sir
    Francis Drake.
  • Many ships were lost in the battle and because of
    storms on the way back to Spain
  • About half of the ships returned to Spain
  • Turning point in history because now the English
    had confidence to pursue colonization in the New
    World
  • Spains invincibility was shattered

8
Reasons for Emigration
  • Britains population was mushrooming.
  • Farmers were forced off the land
  • Economic depression hit the woolen trade in the
    late 1500s
  • Primogeniture decree that only the oldest son
    was eligible to inherit landed estates
  • By the 1600s, the joint-stock company was
    perfected, being a forerunner to todays
    corporations
  • Confidence because of the victory over the
    Spanish Armada

9
Early English Colonization
  • Sir Humphrey Gilbert
  • Attempted to settle in Newfoundland with a
    charter from king.
  • Lost at sea
  • Sir Walter Raleigh
  • Gilberts half brother
  • Given Gilberts charter
  • Hired John White to take a group to Roanoke
    Island to set up first English colony
  • Lost Colony

10
Roanoke Island
11
3. Jamestown
  • Started by a The Virginia Company, a joint stock
    venture
  • King James I gave a charter to Virginia Company
  • Company hired young, strong men to mine for gold
    and make money for the stock company
  • Settled in a low swampy area protected on three
    sides by water
  • Stagnant water mosquitoes malaria death
  • Indian attack, lack of shelter, drought, and
    starvation became biggest problems

12
Jamestown
  • John Smith
  • Helped desperate situation in Jamestown by
    forcing colonists to work for the good of the
    colony
  • Pocahontas saved Smith from Powhatan Indians
  • Left Jamestown because of a gunpowder accident
  • starving time followed
  • Tobacco
  • Brought over by John Rolfe
  • Became a badly needed source of income for
    Jamestown

13
Pocahontas
14
1619
  • Dutch ship with 20 African indentured servants
    ran aground at Jamestown
  • Dutch traded the servants for supplies
  • Servants became first slaves in North America
  • House of Burgesses started in Williamsburg
    Virginia
  • First representative government in America
  • Beginning of democracy in North America

15
Tobacco
  • Tobacco created a greed for land, since it
    heavily depleted soil and ruined the land.

Tobacco field in Virginia
16
Maryland
  • Founded in 1634 by Cecil Calvert (Lord
    Baltimore), Maryland was the second plantation
    colony and the fourth overall colony to be
    formed.
  • Refuge for Catholics
  • Lord Baltimore gave huge estates to his Catholic
    relatives, but the poorer people who settled
    there where mostly Protestant, creating friction.
  • Act of Toleration all welcome in Maryland as
    long as they believed in the Holy Trinity.
  • Death penalty to those who did not believe

17
Maryland
18
West Indies Plantations
  • As the British were colonizing Virginia, they
    were also settling in the West Indies
  • Thousands of African slaves were needed to
    operate sugar plantations
  • To control so many slaves codes were set up
    that defined the legal status of slaves and the
    rights of the masters

19
Carolinas
  • Created during the Restoration Period
  • Carolina flourished by developing close economic
    ties with the West Indies.
  • Rice emerged as the principle crop in Carolina.
  • Violent colony due to the close border to Spanish
    Florida

20
North Carolina
  • In 1712, North and South Carolina were officially
    separated.
  • Many newcomers to Carolina were Virginia castoff
    squatters, people who owned no land.
  • North Carolinians developed a strong resistant to
    authority, due to geographic isolation from
    neighbors.
  • Most democratic
  • Most independent minded
  • Least aristocratic

21
Georgia
  • Last of the 13 colonies to be established
  • Started by James Oglethorpe as a colony for
    imprisoned debtors from England
  • Also became a buffer by protecting Carolinas from
    Indian and Spanish attack.
  • Undisciplined and doomed to failure

22
(No Transcript)
23
Oglethorpe and Georgia
James Oglethorpe
24
Southern Colonies
  • Maryland
  • Virginia
  • North Carolina
  • South Carolina
  • Georgia
  • Dominated by tobacco plantations
  • All were aristocratic (except for North Carolina)
  • All had cash crop tobacco, rice , sugar or
    indigo
  • Close contact with England due to slow moving
    navigable rivers
  • All had slaves
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