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APUSH Early Beginnings Ch' 1 and 2

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Title: APUSH Early Beginnings Ch' 1 and 2


1
APUSHEarly Beginnings (Ch. 1 and 2)
  • By M. Siebert

2
Early Beginnings
  • Paleo-Indians pursued giant mammals (wooly
    mammoths and mastodons) across Beringia. This
    was possible because of the colder climate
    Beringia is now submerged beneath the Bering Sea.
  • 1st migrants were approx. 15 20,000 yrs ago.
    Some studies argue over 30,000 40,000yrs ago.
  • Due to rapid population growth and change in
    climate (water filled areas became arid
    territories due to the increase in global
    temperature), led to the eradication of the
    mammoths and mastodons, camels, and horses.
    Horses were reintroduced by the Spanish in 1547.
  • Agricultural Revolution Approx. 5,000 yrs ago
    Indian people in the Mexico region developed the
    knowledge to cultivate crops such as maize
    (corn), squash, and beans. Led to less reliance
    on hunting and gathering provided more
    stability.

3
Diverse Cultures
  • Anasazi (ancestors of the Pueblo) Chaco Canyon
    was connected to over 70 villages by highways
    that were over 100 miles long.
  • Adena and Hopewell Ohio and Mississippi
    Valleys. They built large ceremonial mounds.
    Cahokia (ceremonial site in IL) represented
    greatest achievement of Mississippian people.
    Covered almost 20 acres and supported approx.
    20,000 people.
  • Chaco Canyon and Cahokia were abandoned shortly
    before the Europeans arrived. Possible reasons
    climate change, population growth diminishing
    food supply, chronic social warfare
  • Mayan and Toltec (Aztecs) Central Mexico.
    Built vast cities that were very advanced.
    Conquered by the Spanish in the 1500s.
    Tenochtitlan had 250,000 inhabitants in 1519.
  • Algonquian (Powhatan, Narragansett, Creeks, etc)
    Scattered communities along the Atlantic coast.
    Fishing, hunting and crops.

4
Cahokia 1150 AD
5
Tenochtitlan (Mexico City) in 1500s
6
What Encouraged European Exploration?
  • Europe became more prosperous increase in
    population and economic security created new
    incentives for exploration and trade.
  • Renaissance encouraged bold new creative
    thinking.
  • The centralization of political authority
    (stronger Nation-States). For instance Ferdinand
    of Aragon married Isabelle of Castille. The
    marriage merged two nations and made much
    stronger state. The stronger state generated
    more financial and military stability.
  • Technical knowledge The invention of printing
    helped spread knowledge of new geographic
    findings.

7
3 Worlds Meet The Impact
  • Prior to Columbus Eric the Red encountered
    Greenland (984). A few yrs later, his son Leif
    founded Vinland in Newfoundland. Hostility of
    Native Americans, poor lines of communication,
    climatic cooling, and political upheavals in
    Scandinavia made maintenance of these distant
    outposts impossible. Columbus was unaware of
    these earlier exploits.
  • Native Americans decimated by small pox, measles,
    and influenza. Also many harmed by alcoholism.
    Some tribes lost 90 95 of their people. The
    Caribs (from the Caribbean) were virtually
    extinct after 1 generation.

8
3 Worlds Meet The Impact Continued
  • Colombian Exchange (corn, squash, potatoes,
    tomatoes, peppers, sugar, bananas, pineapples to
    Europe Cows, horses, sheep, pig to Americas)
  • Decimation of Indian population led European
    settlers to seek slaves from Africa
  • Portuguese developed more sophisticated
    ships/caravels, which allowed the exploration of
    Sub-Sahara Africa for Gold and Slaves. (This
    took place before demand in the Americas for
    slaves)

9
The Columbian Exchange
10
Caravel
11
Jamestown
  • Laborers in the Virginia colony are often
    referred to as lazy. 1 or 2 would work, while
    others just sat around and watched. Then they
    would help for an hour or two. It was cultural
    b/c it is what they were used to in England.
  • 1608 John Smith took control and helped the
    colony. When he returned to England in 1609 due
    to a gunpowder accident, the colony suffered.
  • During the starving time (winter of 1609 1610),
    some colonists became cannibals. 1 man ate his
    wife, but then was sentenced to death.
  • Lord de La Warr arrived in 1610, which led to an
    increase in tension with the Native Americans.

12
TheLondonCompany,1606
13
Chesapeake Bay
14
JamestownSettlement1600s
15
Jamestown Continued
  • The first women arrived in 1608, but b/c they
    were recruiting male workers, men outnumbered
    women by as much as 6 to 1. Such gender
    imbalance meant that even if a male servant lived
    to the end of his indenture, which was
    unrealistic, he couldnt expect to start a family
    of his own.
  • The death rate was extremely high in VA compared
    to New England. In 1618, the population was 700.
    The company sent at least 3,000 more people.
    But by 1622, only 1240 were still alive.
  • The major killers were contagious diseases, salt
    in the water and 347 were killed in the
    Anglo-Powhatan war (surprise attack by the
    Powhatans).
  • In 1624, King Charles dissolved the bankrupt
    Virginia Company. Virginia was transformed into
    a royal colony.

16
Jamestown Housing
17
Captain John Smith
There was no talkbut dig gold, wash gold, refine
gold, load gold
18
English Migration 1610-1660
Headright System
19
Why Was There Such High Mortality?
  • POPULATION
  • 1607 104 colonists
  • By spring, 1608 38 survived
  • 1609 300 more immigrants
  • By spring, 1610 60 survived
  • 1610 1624 10,000 immigrants
  • 1624 population 1,200
  • Adult life expectancy 40 years
  • Death of children before age 5 80

20
John Rolfe
21
Tobacco Plant
Virginias gold and silver. -- John
Rolfe, 1612
22
Early Colonial Tobacco
1618 Virginia produces 20,000 pounds of
tobacco. 1622 Despite losing nearly
one-third of its colonists in an
Indian attack, Virginia produces
60,000 pounds of tobacco. 1627 Virginia
produces 500,000 pounds of
tobacco. 1629 Virginia produces 1,500,000
pounds of tobacco.
23
Tobacco Prices 1618-1710
24
Indentured Servitude
  • Headright System
  • Each Virginian got 50 acres for each person whose
    passage they paid
  • Indenture Contract
  • 5-7 years.
  • Promised freedom dues land,
  • Forbidden to marry.
  • 1610-1614 only 1 in 10 outlived their
    indentured contracts!

25
Chief Powhatan
26
Pocahontas
A 1616 engraving
27
Powhatan Confederacy
28
Why was 1619 a pivotal year for the Chesapeake
settlement?
29
VirginiaHouse of Burgesses
30
17c Populationin the Chesapeake
31
Population of Chesapeake Colonies 1610-1750
32
Maryland
  • Sir George Calvert Lord Baltimore, decided in
    1625 to publicly declare his Catholicism. This
    forced him to resign from office.
  • His son, Cecilius (the second Lord Baltimore) was
    granted a charter for a colony to be located
    north of Virginia.
  • The boundaries of the settlement were named
    Maryland in honor of Charless queen.
  • The colony drew in both Protestants and
    Catholics. The 2 groups may have lived in
    harmony if civil war had not broke out in
    England. Cromwell and the Puritan faction
    executed Charles (Charles took up arms against
    the supporters of Parliament), which transformed
    Europe into a republic. This led to the Act of
    Toleration put in place in Maryland.
  • Local Puritans seized the colonys government.
    They promptly repealed the Act of Toleration.

33
George Calvert, Lord Baltimore
34
Changes in England that impacted Colonies
  • In 1660 Cromwell died from natural causes. The
    Stuarts returned to the English throne. During
    this period known as Restoration, neither Charles
    II nor James II (both sons of Charles I) was able
    to establish political stability.
  • In 1688 James II (known to be an authoritarian)
    lifted some of the restrictions governing the
    Catholics. A Protestant nation rose up in what
    the English people called the Glorious Revolution
    (1688) and sent James into permanent exile.
  • The Glorious Revolution resulted in less
    authority in the King. The King could no longer
    make decisions without Parliament. This directly
    impacted the course of political history not only
    in England, but in the American colonies as well.

35
What was the impact of Spanish Exploration?
36
Proposition Statement Chapter 1
  • Because the Native Americans
  • were not making the best use of
  • the land, the Europeans had every
  • right to settle North America.

37
Proposition Statement Chapter 2
  • The Iroquois were more civilized
  • than their European conquerors.
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