Title: The Colonies Come of Age
1Chapter 3
2Section 1 England and its Colonies
- Benefits of the trade relationship
- a. Mercantilism- countries were in competition
to acquire gold and silver. Britain used the
colonies as a supplier of raw materials and
producer of goods and materials to be sold to
other nations.
3- b. Navigation Acts- series of laws restricting
colonial trade. Passed in 1651. - Pro-spurred a boom in colonial shipbuilding.
- Con-colonial merchants resented the trade
restrictions.
4Section 2 The Agricultural South
- Plantation Economy
- Cash crop- grown for sale than farmers own use.
- Maryland/Virginia/NCarolina- tobacco
- South Carolina/Georgia- rice and indigo
-
- Life in Southern Society
- Women treated as second class citizens
- Indentured servants- declining number in the mid
1600s
5European Slave Trade
- Triangular trade- process for trading rum and
other goods from New England to Africa exchanged
for African peoples transported to the West
Indies and sold for sugar and molasses. Goods
sent to New England. - Middle passage- a part of the triangle trade
considered the most harshterrible, cruel
treatment - Slave life- difficult life of bondage. 80
worked in fields. Others worked in domestic or
artisan work.
6Section 3 The Commercial North
- Economy
- Middle- farms raised a variety of crops and
livestock- wheat, corn, cattle and hogs. - New England- grinding wheat, harvesting fish and
sawing lumber, shipbuilding, iron -
7 Urban Life
- Large cities developed- New York, Charleston,
Philadelphia, Boston. - Immigrants came for religious and economic
reasons. - Slavery considered property but had greater
legal standing than other colonies - Women extensive work responsibilities but few
legal rights. Could not vote, buy or sell
property, or keep their own wages.
8 Witchcraft Salem, Massachusetts
- February 1692, several Salem girls accused a West
Indian slave woman, Tituba, of practicing
witchcraft. - Hysteria ensued and more false accusations were
made. - 19 persons were hung
- 1 killed by crushing
- 4-5 died in jail
- 150 were imprisoned
9New Ideas
- The Enlightenment- used reason and scientific
method to obtain knowledge. Scientists looked
beyond religious doctrine to investigate how the
world worked. - a. Copernicus, Galileo, Newton- influenced
Enlightenment period - b. Benjamin Franklin believed in truth through
experimentation and reasoning. - c. Thomas Jefferson- concluded individuals have
natural rights, which government must respect.
10 - 2. The Great Awakening
- a. religious revival- traveling preachers urged
people to rededicate themselves to God. - b. brought many colonists, Native Americans and
African Americans into organized Christian
churches. - These movements helped the colonists to question
Britains authority over their lives. -
11Section 4French and Indian War
- 1750sFrance and Great Britain were struggling to
build world empires - Major area in the rivalry was the Ohio River
Valley - 1754..French built Fort Duquesne on land the
British had previously granted to a group of
wealthy planters - The Virginia governor sent a militia, led by
George Washington to Fort Necessity (40 miles) - French forced Washington to surrender.
- These battles began the war
12- Another attack on Fort Duquesne led by Ed
Braddock also ended in French victory - Finally the British won - led by William Pitt,
aided by the Iroquois Native American tribe. Area
just outside Quebec. - War officially ended with the Treaty of Paris in
1763 - Great Britain claimed all of North America east
of the Mississippi River, including Florida (from
Spain, which was an ally of France) - Spain gained French lands west of the Mississippi
River - France kept control of few small islands near
Newfoundland and West Indies
13Native American relations
- The loss in the war for the French was also a
loss for Native Americas. - The Ottawa leader Pontiac attacked the British
in the Ohio River Valley. - British retaliated by infecting the Native
Americans with small-pox - To avoid further conflicts, the Proclamation of
1763 was passed - Banned all settlement west of the Appalachians
for colonists. However, it could not enforce the
ban and colonists continued to move west