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Chapter 5 Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution

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Title: Chapter 5 Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution


1
Chapter 5Colonial Society on the Eve of
Revolution
2
The Colonial Population
  • Increase by immigration and natural increase
  • Early English settlers laborers of indentured
    servitude
  • Huge population growth caused a shift in the
    balance of power between the colonies and England
    (mother country)
  • 1700 300,000 but by 1775 2.5 million
  • Average age in 1775 16
  • In 1700 England outnumbered the colonies 201, by
    1775 it was only 31.
  • Only 4 major cities

3
Philadelphia (largest in the 1750s)
4
New York City
5
Charles Town (Charleston) -- Largest City in the
South
6
Boston
7
Urban Population Growth1650 - 1775
8
Ethnic Groups
9

BIRTH DEATH
  • Exceptional longevity in New England
  • Mortality rates in Chesapeake region markedly
    higher
  • More balanced sex ratio
  • Medicine and midwives
  • Chesapeake Male authority undermined
  • Male-dominated New England
  • Patriarchal Puritan family

10
A Mingling of the Races
  • Many people created new societies out of diverse
    ethnic groups including the English, Africans,
    Indians, and French.
  • The Scots-Irish had no love for the British
    government. So what? American Revolution.
  • 12 future Presidents were of Scots-Irish
    descentAndrew Jackson.
  • Out of the 56 signers of the Declaration of
    Independence 18 were non-English and 8 were not
    born in the colonies.
  • Which non-English group was the largest?

11
Ethnic Racial Composition of American People
1790
  • British 49
  • African
    19
  • German 7
  • Scottish 7
  • Scots Irish
    5
  • Dutch
    3
  • Irish
    3
  • French
    .4
  • Swedes, Jews, Swiss .3

12
Products from the 13 Colonies
13
Too Many Products
  • Leading industry was agriculture
  • Navigation Acts in 1651 was passed to guarantee
    that England alone would profit from trade with
    the colonies
  • English government tried to inhibit the colonial
    trade to the French West Indies by passing the
    Molasses Act of 1733
  • Colonists ignored it and circumvented the law
    with triangular trade

14
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15
Triangular Trade
  • Review your map from Chapter 4 page 93.

16
Middle Passage
17
Mercantilism
  • Also known as the English Trade System
  • Goal Mother country wants to
  • Be self-sufficient
  • Expand trade to increase gold reserves and become
    rich
  • To limit foreign imports and to encourage a
    favorable balance of trade
  • A policy in which colonies existed for the
    benefit of the mother country, exchanging raw
    materials for manufactured goods

18
Mercantilism How did it work?
  • Get raw materials from America
  • Make the finished product in England
  • Make colonists buy products only from England
  • Export more products from England than England
    imports

19
What are Enumerated Goods?
  • Goods that England needed but didnt have the
    natural resources to produce
  • Had to get them from the colonies

20
Enumerated Goods
  • Sugar
  • Tobacco
  • Cotton
  • Indigo
  • Rice

21
Too Many Products
  • The colonies produced too many products for
    England so they started selling to other
    countries
  • The English government turned a blind eye to
    colonies trading outside of England.
  • Salutary neglect

22
But after the French Indian War
  • Changed economic policy.
  • From Salutary Neglect
  • To strict enforcement with the Navigation Acts of
    1660 and 1663
  • All products must be sold through England, no
    direct sales to other countries

23
Horsepower and Sailpower
  • Roads were poor, transportation was slow
  • First Holiday Inns were called taverns
  • Considered a cradle of democracy
  • Hotbeds of agitation for the Revolutionary
    movement
  • Important in crystallizing public opinion
  • Places providing amusements
  • Taverns served all classes of people

24
Dominant Denominations
  • Anglican Church Church of England
  • Congregational Church (used to be Puritans)
  • Presbyterian Church
  • Quakers (Society of Friends)
  • Jews

25
The First Great Awakening
  • A series of religious revivals that swept through
    the English colonies spreading evangelistic
    fervor and challenging the control of traditional
    clerics over their congregations.
  • The Old Light preachers opposed the
    emotionalism of the revivalists
  • New type of ministers upset the old guard
  • The New Light preachers delivered intensely
    emotional sermons

26
The First Great Awakening
  • an outpouring of passionate Christian
    revivalism swept through the 13 colonies
  • Jonathan Edwards
  • William Tennent
  • George Whitefield

27
The First Great Awakening
  • Challenged patterns of traditional religion
  • The individual can choose his religion
  • First genuine united movement in the colonies
  • Helped to nurture seeds of independence as people
    felt united by a common history and shared
    experiences.

28
Results of Great Awakening
  • Undermined the prestige of the learned clergy in
    the colonies
  • Split colonial churches into several competing
    denominations (Congregationalists, Presbyterians,
    Methodists)
  • Led to the founding of Princeton, Brown,
    Dartmouth, and Rutgers colleges
  • Was the first spontaneous mass movement of the
    American people

29
Schools and Colleges
  • Education was most zealously promoted in New
    England colonies
  • Reading the Bible
  • Middle Colonies had some tax-supported schools
  • Southern colonies dame schools, tutors for
    wealthy children

30
Todays Ivy League
  • Harvard
  • College of William and Mary
  • Yale
  • Princeton
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Columbia
  • Brown
  • Rutgers
  • Dartmouth

31
Deism
  • Deists believed in God but rejected organized
    religion
  • Morality could be achieved by following reason
    rather than the teachings of the church

Lord Edward Herbert of Cherbury, founder of deism
32
Deists
  • God set the universe in motion and left it to
    natural law without intervening again
  • Most famous Deist Ben Franklin

33
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
34
Franklins Political Cartoon that Impacted History
  • First used in
  • 1754 to gather
  • support for the
  • the Albany
  • Plan of Union
  • Later used
  • again for the Revolution

35
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
36
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Born January 17, 1706
  • 15th Child
  • Attended school for 2 years
  • Apprenticed as a printer
  • Fought with his brother
  • Left Boston for London

37
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Stayed for 2 years
  • Moved to Philadelphia
  • Married Deborah Reed in 1730
  • Started the University of Pennsylvania
  • Started the first lending library

38
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Reformed the police department
  • Organized the first fire department
  • Raised money to build a hospital
  • Discovered electricity
  • Built the first electric battery

39
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Invented bifocals
  • Created the Franklin Stove
  • Improved the post office and become the first
    Postmaster General
  • Invented the Glass Harmonica

40
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Published the Pennsylvania Gazette
  • Wrote Poor Richards Almanac
  • Publication with many pithy sayings such as
    Honesty is the best policy
  • Wrote The Autobiography of Ben Franklin

41
Ben Franklin First Civilized American
  • Signed the Declaration of Independence
  • Signed the Treaty of Paris of 1783
  • Signed the U.S. Constitution

42
Pioneer Presses
  • John Peter Zenger
  • Thrown in jail for 9 months because he printed an
    article critical of the Royal Governor of New
    York
  • Jury found him innocent
  • Newspaper editors allowed some freedom of the
    press
  • It pointed the way to open public discussion
  • Encouraged editors to be more critical of public
    officials.

43
The Great Game of Politics
  • Royal colonies 8 colonies had royal governors
  • Proprietary Colonies 3 colonies led by people
    (proprietors) appointed by the King
  • Charter colonies elected own governors under
    charters

44
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45
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46
All colonies were royal colonies by the 1750s
and most governors were appointed by the King by
1775.
47
The Structure of Colonial Society
  • Gentry Class
  • South Plantation Owners
  • North Lawyers, Officials, Clergymen, Merchants
  • Middle Class
  • Yeomen Farmers, Physicians, Tradesmen
  • Poor Class
  • Indentured servants, Lesser Tradesmen, Poor
    Farmers
  • Slaves

48
Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists
  • The most honored profession was the Christian
    ministry
  • Doctors were the least honored why?
  • Lawyers great power in colonial America

49
Social Structure
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