Title: EXPERIENCE OF EMPIRE: EIGHTEENTHCENTURY AMERICA
1EXPERIENCE OF EMPIRE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA
- America Past and Present
- Chapter 4
2Growth and Diversity
- 1700-1750--colonial population rises from 250,000
to over two million - Much growth through natural increase
- Large influx of non-English Europeans
3Distribution of European and African Immigrants
4Ethnic Cultures of the Backcountry
- 800 miles along Appalachian Range from western
Pennsylvania to western Georgia - Already populated by Native Americans and African
Americans - Large influx of European immigrants in the
eighteenth century
5Scotch-Irish Flee English Oppression
- Many from Northern Ireland
- Concentrate on the Pennsylvania frontier and
Shenandoah Valley - Often regarded as a disruptive element
6Germans Search for a Better Life
- Fled from warfare in Germany
- Admired as peaceful, hard-working farmers
- Tried to preserve German language, customs
- Aroused the prejudice of English neighbors
7Convict Settlers
- Transportation Act of 1718 allows judges to send
convicted felons to American colonies - 50,000 convicts to America 1718-1775
- some felons were dangerous criminals
- most committed minor crimes against property
- life difficult for transported convicts
- British praise system, colonists deplore it
8Native Americans Stake Out a Middle Ground
- Many eastern Indians moved into trans-Appalachian
region - a "middle ground" where no colonial power was yet
established - Remnants of different Indian peoples regrouped,
formed new nations - European trade eventually weakened collective
resistance to European aggression
9Spanish Borderlands of the Eighteenth Century
- Spain occupied a large part of America north of
Mexico since sixteenth century - Range from Florida Peninsula to California
- Indian resistance, lack of interest limited
Spanish presence - Never a secure political or military hold on
borderlands
10Conquering the Northern Frontier
- 1692final establishment of Spanish rule in New
Mexico after Popés revolt (1680) - 18th-century St. Augustine a Spanish military
outpost unattractive to settlers - 1769belated Spanish mission settlements in
California to prevent Russian claims
11Peoples of the Spanish Borderlands
- Slow growth of Spanish population in borderlands
- Spanish influence architecture, language
- Spanish influence over Native Americans
- Spanish exploit native labor
- Indians live in proximity to Spanish as despised
lower class - Indians resist conversion to Catholicism
12The Spanish Borderlands, ca. 1770
13The Impact of European Ideas on American Culture
- Change in eighteenth-century colonies
- Growth of urban cosmopolitan culture
- Aggressive participation in consumption
14Provincial Cities
- Urban areas included Boston, Newport, New York,
Philadelphia, and Charles Town - Economies were geared to commerce
- Inhabitants took lead in adopting new fashions,
the latest luxuries - Emulated British architecture
- Cities attract colonists seeking opportunity
15American Enlightenment
- An intellectual movement stressing reasoned
investigation of beliefs and institutions - optimistic view of human nature
- view cosmos as orderly result of natural laws
- belief in perfectibility of the world
- search for practical ways of improving life
- Mixed reception in America
16Benjamin Franklin
- Franklin (1706-1790) epitomized provincial, urban
culture - Became a writer by emulating British literature
- Achieved wealth through printing business
- Dedicated to practical uses of reason, science
17Economic Transformation
- Rising demand for English, West Indian goods
- Colonists paid for imports by
- exporting tobacco, wheat, and rice
- purchasing on credit
- Dependence on commerce led to colonial resentment
of English regulations - England restricted colonial manufacture or trade
of timber, sugar, hats, and iron.
18Birth of a Consumer Society
- English mass-production of consumer goods
stimulated rise in colonial imports - Wealthy Americans began to build up large debts
to English merchants - Intercolonial, West Indian trade earn colonists
the surplus needed for imports - Inter-colonial commerce gave Americans a chance
to learn about one another
19The Great Wagon Road
20Religious Revivals in Provincial Societies
- The Great Awakening was a series of revivals
- revival a phenomenon among Protestant
Christians characterized by large meetings where
large numbers experience religious conversion in
response to gifted preaching - People began to rethink basic assumptions about
church and state, institutions and society
21The Great Awakening
- Awakening occurred among many denominations in
different places at different times - New England in the 1730s, Virginia in the 1750s
and 1760s - Jonathan Edwards was a prominent minister during
this time - His sermons encouraged people to examine their
eternal destiny
22The Voice of Popular Religion
- George Whitefield symbolized the revivals
- Whitefield preached outdoor sermons to thousands
of people in nearly every colony - Itinerants disrupted established churches
- Laypeople, including women and blacks, gain
chance to shape their own religious institutions - The Awakening promoted a democratic, evangelical
union of national extent
23The Voice of Popular Religion (2)
- Most revivalists well-trained ministers
- Revivalists found Princeton, Dartmouth, Brown,
and Rutgers - Revivalists held optimistic attitudes toward
America's religious role in world history - Fostered American patriotism
24Clash of Political Cultures
- Colonists attempted to emulate British political
institutions - Effort led to discovery of how different they
were from the English people
25The English Constitution
- The British Constitution universally admired
- not a written document, but a system of
government based on statute and common law - Believed to balance monarchy, aristocracy and
democracy - Balance believed to guarantee liberties
26The Reality of British Politics
- Less than 20 of English males could vote
- Members of Parliament notorious for corruption
and bribery - Commonwealthmen criticized corruption, urged
return to truly balanced constitution
27Governing the Colonies The American Experience
- Colonists attempt to model Englands balanced
constitution - Royal governors
- most incompetent
- most bound by instructions from England
- possessed little patronage for buying votes
- little power to force their will
- Governors councils steadily lose influence
28Colonial Assemblies
- Elected officials depended on popular sentiment
- Assemblies more interested in pleasing
constituents than in obeying the governor - Assemblies controlled all means of raising
revenue - Assemblies jealously guarded their rights
- Assemblies held more popular support than governor
29Colonial Assemblies (2)
- Commerce, communication, religion broaden
colonists horizons by 1754 - Colonial law courts increasingly adopt English
usage - Growing awareness of ideas, institutions,
problems shared with England, each other
30Century of Imperial War
- British Americans increasingly drawn into
European conflict during eighteenth century - Main opponents France and Spain
- British colonies militarily superior to New
France but ineffective
31North America, 1750
32King William's and Queen Anne's Wars
- King Williams War (1689-1697) French frontier
raids on New York, New England - Queen Annes War (1702-1713) French frontier
raids on North, Spanish South - Wars settled nothing
- France subsequently extended its American empire
from Canada into Louisiana
33King George's War and Its Aftermath
- Fought 1743-1748
- Embroiled colonists more extensively than earlier
wars - 1745--New England troops captured Fort Louisbourg
on Cape Breton Island - 1748--Louisbourg returned to France by Treaty of
Aix-la-Chappelle - 1750s--fresh conflict over Ohio Valley
34Albany Congress and Braddock's Defeat
- Albany Congress, 1754--Benjamin Franklin propose
plan for a central government - Albany Plan disliked by English and Americans,
fails - 1755--General Edward Braddock leads force to
drive French from Ohio Valley - Braddocks army ambushed, destroyed
35Seven Years' War
- 1756--England declares war on France
- Prime Minister William Pitt leads English to
concentrate on North America - 1759--Quebec captured
- 1763--Peace of Paris cedes to Great Britain all
North America east of Mississippi
36The Seven Years War, 1756-1763
37Perceptions of War
- Colonists realize how strong they could be when
they worked together - English learn that Americans took forever to
organize, easier to command obedience
38North America after 1763
397th ed. revisions by Don Whatley, Blinn College
40Rule Britannia?
- Most Americans bound to England in 1763
- Ties included
- British culture
- British consumer goods
- British evangelists
- British military victories
- Empire seemed bound by affectionate ties