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America: Past and Present

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America: Past and Present Chapter 3: Putting Down Roots Families in an Atlantic Empire SOURCES OF STABILITY: NEW ENGLAND COLONIES OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: America: Past and Present


1
  • America Past and Present
  • Chapter 3 Putting Down RootsFamilies in an
    Atlantic Empire
  • SOURCES OF STABILITY NEW ENGLAND COLONIES OF THE
    SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
  • Replicating a traditional family life and social
    order led to greater stability and longer life in
    New England versus the Chesapeake (Virginia and
    Maryland).
  • Gotta love those Puritans!
  • Various local societies reflected a. supply of
    labor
  • b. abundance of land c. demographic patterns
  • d. commercial ties w/ Europe
  • What two things pulled American settlers
    together? language and religion

2
  • Immigrant Families and New Social Order
  • Puritans believed that God ordained the family
    for human benefit
  • The family was to be patriarchal
  • Family was the source of their societal and
    cultural identities
  • 20,000 came to NE before the English Civil War
    (1642)
  • Great Migration-1630s and early 1640s
  • Life expectancy in NE was greater than that in
    England proper
  • pure drinking water, cool climate, dispersed
    population
  • Grandparents were invented
  • Social and economic stability were enhanced

3
  • Commonwealth of Families
  • Single life morally suspect and physically
    difficult
  • Young men and women initiated their own
    courtships
  • Parents discouraged union with immoral partners
  • Children usually accepted this guidance
  • Men offered land to the marriage
  • Womens dowries1/2 the value of the land
  • Land and home represented survival and hard
    work
  • Small farms produced food and surplus
  • Surplus was used for barter
  • Farms were not self-sufficient
  • Towns were collections of families-people rarely
    moved
  • Single newcomers were not readily accepted

4
  • Church government was built on familial
    connections and election
  • Half-Way Covenant adopted in 1662
  • Allowed sacraments based upon the spiritual
    traditions and
  • reputations of grandparents
  • Parents did not need to show evidence of
    election
  • Massachusetts General Court mandated the
    teaching of reading (1642)
  • For religious and moral purposes
  • 15 families must open elementary school
  • New-England Primer taught children the
    alphabet
  • Allowed publications like The Day of Doom to
    sell
  • fate of sinners on Judgment Day
  • First seminary, Harvard, founded in 1638
  • Yale in 1702

5
  • Womens Lives in Puritan New England
  • All work, no play, but impressive church
    attendance!
  • Quakers gave women a larger role in religious
    affairs. WHY?
  • Womens production of food essential
  • No property rights
  • Divorce was difficult and uncommon (you could
    runquickly)
  • Anne Bradstreet poet-wrote of affection for
    husband

6
  • Rank and Status in New England Society
  • Lack of wealth and title made social status a
    tricky thing to judge
  • Natural leaders became provincial gentry
  • Winthrops, Dudleys, Pynchons
  • Sumptuary laws were passed-only wealthy can
    wear fine apparel
  • Economic status was more fluid than was
    planned
  • Most northern colonists were yeomen-independent
    farmers
  • Economic independence was highly likely in this
    region
  • Possession of land gave agrarian families a
    sense of independence
  • from external authority
  • Some NE families placed their adolescent
    children in nearby homes
  • for 4-5 years as an apprentices

7
  • THE PLANTERS WORLD
  • Why were the regions so different? You know the
    answerplantations!
  • Family Life in a Perilous Environment
  • 70-85 of white immigrants to this region in the
    1600s were not free
  • Most were young men, aged 18-22
  • Ratio of men to women was 6 to 1 before 1640, 2½
    to 1 by 1700
  • High mortality rates brought life expectancy to
    43 for men, women ?
  • Average marriage lasted 7 years
  • Few children were raised by birth parents
  • Women had great value, sort of
  • Infant mortality was 25, another 25 died
    before age 20
  • Young women in servitude lost several
    reproductive years-vulnerable to sexual
    exploitation by their masters

8
  • Rank and Status in Plantation Society
  • Indentured servants and slaves were imported for
    plantation labor
  • Tobacco was the staple of the Chesapeake region
  • Planters dominated society
  • Freemen were the largest classthese survived
    their period of indenture
  • Indentured servants were below planters and
    freemen
  • Slaves were at the bottom
  • A longer-lived creole class (native born
    Americans) developed after 1680
  • NOT mulattodont get confused!
  • Built Williamsburg, College and William and Mary
  • Key to the success of this class was slavery
  • This class did not want education for other
    classes
  • Creoles sent sons to university in England or
    Scotland
  • Even William and Mary did not suffice
  • Opportunities for advancement decreased during
    17th c.
  • Gentry consolidated its hold on political and
    econ. instit.

9
  • Brother Ali
  • The Travelers

10
  • RACE AND FREEDOM IN BRITISH AMERICA
  • Roots of Slavery
  • Africans first landed in VA in 1619 as a cargo
    of slaves stolen by
  • a Dutch trader from a Spanish merchant ship in
    the Caribbean.
  • Slavery grew quickly in the 1700s
  • Males outnumbered females 2 to1
  • English masters saw slavery as a great way to
    civilize Africans
  • Why is Anthony Johnson important? His life
    illustrates the complexity of race relations in
    early Virginia. What happened to his land when
  • he died?
  • Race was only a single factor shaping relations
    among colonists
  • Slavery was assumed to be a lifelong legal status
    after 1680
  • 11,000 slaves were sold to Virginians between
    1695-1709
  • Slaves were legally considered to be property
  • Race mixing was not acceptable to English
    colonists
  • Mulattos were considered black for legal
    purposes
  • Lineage was traced through slave mothers

11
  • Constructing African American Identities
  • The size and density of the slave population
    determined in large measure how successfully
    black would maintain a separate cultural
    identity.
  • 60 of SC lowland population was black
  • These men and women were on isolated rice
    plantations, and their contact with whites was
    limited (creole languages). They also developed
    elaborate kinship networks.
  • Native-born blacks looked with contempt on slaves
    who had just arrived from Africa. Newly arrived
    slaves were more likely to run away, assault
    their masters and organize rebellions.
  • 40 of VA population was black
  • Gullah (creole language spoken on some Sea
    Islands and other pidgin languages developed (A
    pidgin is a simplified language that develops as
    a means of communication between two or more
    groups that do not have a language in common.)
  • Slaves mixed African culture with Christianity,
    music and art
  • Mainland slaves had a longer life expectancy
    than island slaves

12
  • Major turning point of African American people
    occurred in early decades of 18th c. Blacks
    living in Englands mainland colonies began to
    reproduce successfully. WHY? Even with imported
    slaves the creole population was always much
    larger than that of the immigrant blacks.
  • Slave rebellions were often rumored and planned
  • The Stono Rebellion was most successful (Sept
    1739)
  • 150 SC blacks rose up and killed several
    planters
  • They hoped to reach freedom in FL
  • Local militia killed a majority
  • This persuaded whites everywhere that their own
    blacks might secretly be planning a bloody
    revolt.
  • 18 of mariners were African American in 18th
    c.
  • These men brought news of distant rebellions
    and spread radical political ideologies to other
    slaves.

13
  • COMMERCIAL BLUEPRINT FOR EMPIRE
  • Salutary neglect (British policy of avoiding
    strict enforcement of parliamentary laws meant to
    keep the American colonies obedient to Great
    Britain.)
  • reigned until Charles II.
  • The beginnings of enforced mercantilism
    developed.
  • Response to Economic Competition
  • Yes, our old friend Adam Smith (18th c. Scottish
    economist) coined the term mercantilism
  • Aspects of this system developed over time-
  • a.king needed money,
  • b. English merchants wanted to exclude Dutch
    rivals from American markets,
  • Parliament wanted to improve navy,
  • and almost everyone agreed England needed a more
    favorable trade balance.

14
  • An Empire of Trade
  • Navigation Act of 1660-most important piece of
    imperial legislation drafted before the American
    Revolution.
  • Required trade to be conducted with crew that
    were 75 English
  • Permitted domestic shipbuilding
  • Limited trade of colonial goods to English or
    colonial ports for enumerated goods-tobacco,
    sugar, cotton, indigo, dye-woods and ginger.
  • Rice and molasses added in 1704, rosins, tars
    and turpentines in 1705
  • Required colonists to pay import duties

15
  • Staple Act of 1663 prohibited almost all non-Brit
    imports to the colonies unless first transshipped
    through England
  • Dutch trade was excluded and colonial expenses
    rose dramatically-especially for small planters
  • New Englanders simply ignored regulations
  • Navigation Acts of 1673 were passed to rectify
    this situation
  • Enhanced collection of import duties at colonial
    ports
  • GB did not have enough agents to enforce the law
  • Those who did collect taxes were unpopular
  • (Think Edmond Randolph-most hated man in Mass.)
  • 1696 Parliament est. vice-admiralty courts to
    settle disputes that occurred at sea-no juries,
    nor cross examination.
  • William III established the Board of Trade to
    more closely regulate the
  • colonies

16
  • COLONIAL GENTRY IN REVOLT, 1676-1691
  • Different factions fought with each other over
    political viability
  • Civil War in Virginia Bacons Rebellion
  • Bacon envied govt patronage.
  • Governor Berkeley denied a-fur trading license
    to Nathaniel Bacon
  • These were reserved for Berkeleys cronies
  • Berkeley then refused to send an army to
    retaliate against natives
  • Bacon volunteered to raised troops for free
  • In exchange for the right to fight other
    Indians
  • Berkeley said NO-build forts instead (by his
    friends?)
  • Both Berkeley and Bacon appealed to the
    populace
  • Bacon burned Jamestown-forced governor to leave
  • Women made political views clear during
    rebellion (Sarah Glendon)
  • Bacon died of dysentery and the rebellion
    subsided
  • Berkeley recalled to England

17
  • Planter elite did not see the legitimate
    grievances and Bacons followers were demanding
    substantial reforms, not just a share in the
    governors fur monopoly.
  • This was a sign of rebellion against greedy
    royal appointees

18
  • The Glorious Revolution in the Bay Colony
  • Politic crisis between new merchants (Anglican)
    and Puritans emerged then
  • Metacomet (King Philip) declared war on New
    Englanders
  • The spark that ignited King Phillip's War was a
    report from a Native American Christian convert
    (Praying Indian") early Harvard graduate,
    translator, and adviser to Metacom named John
    Sassamon. Sassamon told Plymouth Colony officials
    the news of King Philip trying to arrange Native
    American attacks on widely dispersed colonial
    settlements. Before colonial officials could
    investigate the charges, John Sassamon was
    murdered his body was found beneath an
    ice-covered pond, allegedly killed by a few of
    Philip's Wampanoag angry at his betrayal. Other
    texts mention a stolen cow.

19
  • On the testimony of a Native American witness,
    Plymouth Colony arrested three Wampanoags,
    including one of Metacomet's councilors. A jury
    having some Indian members convicted them of
    Sassamon's murder they were hanged on June 8,
    1675 at Plymouth. Some Wampanoag believed that
    both the trial and the court's sentence were an
    insult to Indian sovereignty. In response, on
    June 20, a band of Pokanoket, possibly without
    Philip's approval, assaulted several isolated
    homesteads in a small Plymouth colony. Laying
    siege to the town, they destroyed it five days
    later and killed several settlers and others
    coming to help the settlers
  • The Narrangansetts joined Metacome
  • Thousands died, debt remained-Over 600
    colonists and 3,000 Native Americans had died,
    including several hundred native captives that
    were tried and executed or sold as slaves in
    Bermuda.
  • King Philip's War was proportionately one of the
    bloodiest and costliest in the history of
    America.

20
  • In her book, The Name of War, Boston University
    Professor Jill Lepore theorizes that King
    Philip's War was the beginning of the development
    of a greater American identity, for the trials
    and tribulations suffered by the colonists made
    them into a group distinct from their English
    ties.
  • Tribes lost most of their power, creating a
    political vacuum that spurred bickering among
    factions of English in Connecticut,
    Massachusetts, Plymouth, and Rhode Island.
  • The colonists argued over topics ranging from
    colonial boundaries to blame for the bloody
    conflict from which they had just emerged.
  • This factionalism eventually drew the attention
    of England's imperial authorities who, until this
    point, had largely ignored the activities of New
    Englanders.
  • In 1686, Royal officials finally created the
    Dominion of New England, which put the New
    England colonies under the rule of New York's
    Governor Edmund Andros. (pronounced Andrews)

21
  • Ironically, even though New England's colonies
    had prevailed on the battlefield, King Philip's
    War led to the loss of much of their political
    autonomy.
  • The colonial charter was rescinded, the Dominion
    of NE created
  • By James II, no lover of Parliament
  • Sir Edmund Andros was selected as governor
    abolished elective assemblies, enforced Nav.
    Acts, declared town meeting illegal, packed
    courts with supporters.
  • Andros was overthrown after the Glorious
    Revolution
  • He was peacefully arrested
  • Increase Mather convinced William to abandon the
    Dominion
  • Massachusetts received new royal charter in
    1691-gov. chosen by king
  • The franchise was granted to male property
    owners
  • Colonial government became more secular

22
  • Contagion of Witchcraft
  • Instability of Mass. govt led this to be a major
    colonial crisis
  • Increase Mather and others did urge restraint
    here-troubled over spectral evidence (dreams and
    visions)
  • You know how it turned out (summer 1692)
  • 19 dead
  • Why?
  • a. religious discord-factions over choice of a
    minister
  • b. economic tensions-poorer farmers accused
    commercially oriented
  • c. misogyny
  • d. fear of Native American attacks
  • So much for moderation

23
  • The Glorious Revolution in New York and Maryland
  • Glorious revolution in NY more violent than in
    Mass. Bay-religious and ethnic differences
  • English newcomers and Anglo-Dutch v. older Dutch
    elite
  • Jacob Leisler leads the fun in NYC (1689)
  • Seizes the local fort in the name of Wm and Mary
  • Royal governor Sloughter tells him to surrender
    (1691)
  • He refuses-Was Sloughter sent by James or
    William?
  • Is quickly arrested, tried and executed
  • He was pardoned by Parliament a few years after
    his death
  • John Coode leads a more healthy protest in
    Maryland
  • Protestant Association forces the resignation of
    the governor
  • Maryland becomes a royal colony, excluding
    Catholics from public service
  • 1715 crown restored proprietorship to the
    fourth Lord Baltimore
  • who had been raised as a member of the Church
    of England
  • Calvert family ruled until 1776
  • COMMON EXPERIENCES, SEPARATE CULTURES
  • Political experiences converged despite regional
    cultural differences
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