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Title: AP: THE 13 COLONIES


1
AP THE 13 COLONIES
  • MARYLAND TO GEORGIA

2
THE BRITISH
  • 1. ENGLISH EXPLORATION
  • John Cabot--1496
  • 2. COLONIAL INTEREST ENGLAND CHALLENGES SPAIN
    (MOTIVES) QE I.
  • 3. EARLY ATTEMPTS AT COLONIZATION ALL FAILED.
  • 4. WAR WITH SPAIN
  • Spanish Armada 1588
  • 5. TYPE OF PEOPLE THAT WERE INVOLVED IN THE
    COLONIZATION OF AMERICA
  • Monarchy--Mercantilism
  • Merchantsjoint-stock companies East India Tea
    Company 1600
  • Commoners Enclosure Movement 1500s
  • 6. ENGLISH COLONIES (proprietary, charter,
    royal)
  • 1606 Virginia Company of London proprietary
    charter from King James I
  • Dec. 25, 1606, 120 settlers left England on 3
    ships.

3



  • 5.


  • 4. 3.
  • .
    6. 7.

  • . 8.

  • 10

  • 11
  • 12
  • 13..

18
17
1
15
2.
16
9.
14
4
JAMESTOWN
  • Location of the settlement and orders
  • Problems
  • John Smiths Rule
  • 1609 Charter Revised
  • Governor to rule Jamestown from Jamestown Lord
    De La Warr
  • Sold more shares in London Company
  • Company Servants
  • 1609-1611Starving Time
  • Thomas Dale 1611
  • TobaccoJohn Rolfe
  • 1618 Head-right System and Representative Govt.
  • Head right
  • Indentured servants
  • House of Burgesses
  • Introduction of African Slavery
  • Massacre of 1622
  • Charter revoked 1624Royal Colony

5
JAMESTOWN AGAINST ALL ODDS
6
THE PILGRIMS (PLIMOUTH)
  • Their story
  • Dissenters
  • Reactionaries
  • Radicals
  • 1619Company Servants
  • 1620 Mayflower
  • Mayflower Compact
  • Plymouth Colony struggled.
  • Settled in Nov., Squanto, disease, but good
    relations with the Indians and hard work allowed
    them to survive.
  • Thanksgiving Day

7
THE PURITANS
  • 1. Religious reformers interested in purifying
    the Church of England of Catholic ritual.
  • 2. Generally upper class with a high degree of
    political efficacy. As a result by the late 1620s
    had become a powerful voice in Parliament.
    Forced the King to sign the English Petition of
    Right.
  • But in the 16- teens and early 1620s were
    persecuted against.
  • 1628 Massachusetts Bay Co. created. Granted a
    self-governing charter. Create a society that
    the rest of the world will look up the city on
    the hill.
  • Left in 1630
  • 11 ship convoy
  • 1,000 settlers
  • 1 year of supplies
  • Government organization
  • Commonwealth theocracy led by John Winthrop.
  • Legislature General Court, made up of 100
    stockholders (freeman)

8
  • COVENANT THEOLOGY
  • Covenant of Works-
  • When man was created God promised that man would
    never die but Adam broke Gods covenantall men
    fell from grace and could receive damnation.
  • To help mankind achieve salvation--Moral Codes
    were created.
  • Which led to National Covenantthe destiny of
    nation was based on the actions of the people.
    Gods grace shed on those places that obeyed
    Gods Covenant.
  • Covenant of Grace-
  • By Gods good grace, a chosen elect would be
    saved.
  • Based on this Covenant Theology, Massachusetts
    society was devoted to the common welfare for the
    good of all.
  • 1631 several communities around Boston.
  • 1641 15-20,000 had settled in Massachusetts Bay
    and had absorbed Plymouth.
  • NEW ENGLAND SOCIETY
  • Hard work Protestant work ethic
  • Fear of God
  • TradeLumber, grain, shipbuilding, fishing

BOSTON
9
(No Transcript)
10
NEW ENGLAND COLONIES CT., RI, NH
  • Education 1. De Luder Satan Laws
  • 2. Harvard
    University
  • Puritan dissent 1. Puritan intolerance
    and beliefs
  • Economy 1. farming
  • 2. fishing
  • 3. trade
    (triangular trade routes)
  • CONNECTICUT
  • 1. Rev. Thomas
    Hooker 1636 Hartford
  • 2. Fundamental
    Orders
  • RHODE ISLAND
  • 1. Roger
    Williams 1636 Providence
  • 2. Anne
    Hutchinson 1638 Portsmouth
  • 3. 1644
    chartered by Kingself-governing
  • NEW HAMPSHIRE
  • 1. Rev. John
    Wheelwright 1638

11
THE MIDDLE ATLANTIC COLONIES
  • MARYLAND
  • 1. Proprietary Colony
  • 2. George
    Calvert (Lord Baltimore)
  • 3. Inherited
    by son Cecilius
  • 4. Refuge for
    Catholics
  • 5. First
    settlers arrive in 1634
  • a.
    Close to Va.
  • b. Did
    not have to wait for supplies

  • from England.
  • C.
    Tobacco grew well there.
  • 6. Tried to
    rule as a feudal estate but did
    work.
    Land ownership allowed.
  • 7. By 1640
    elected assembly created.
  • 8.
    1640Puritans outnumbered Catholics
  • 9.
    1644Toleration Act passed.
  • 10. Until 1670s
    relied on indentured servants.

12
RESTORATION COLONIES
  • ENGLISH CIVIL WAR 1642-1649
  • 1.
    Puritans v. Royalists
  • 2.
    Interregnum Period 1649-1659

  • Oliver Cromwell ruled.
  • RESTORATION 1660
  • 1.
    King Charles II put on the throne.
  • 2.
    Payment for that debtcolonies
  • RESTORATION COLONIES
  • CAROLINA

  • 1. 1663 Proprietary Charter to the 8

  • Lords Proprietors.

  • George Carteret, Anthony Ashley-Cooper, John

  • Colleton, William Berkeley,
    John Berkeley, George

  • Monck, Edward Hyde, William,
    Earl of Craven

13

  • 2. Sea to Sea grant.

  • 3. Fundamental Constitutions

  • John Locke, James Harrington

  • 4. 1670 Charles Towne

  • 5. Economytrade with West
    Indies, rice, tobacco,
    deerskins,

  • 6. 1719 rebellion in NC

  • 7. 1729 NC-SC split-- Royal

    Colony
  • NEW YORK
  • 1. Dutch War
    The Nutmeg War
  • 2. 1664,
    Eng. sent4 warships to New Amsterdam
  • 3. Dutch
    influences today
  • 4. James,
    Duke of York, Proprietor.
  • 5.
    Government Dukes Laws

  • Absolute Government.
  • 6. Gov.
    Edmund Andros forced
    Dutch settlers to take
    oath.
  • 7. 1683
    Charter of Liberties

14
  • NEW JERSEY
  • 1.
    1665--Duke of York granted estate to

  • John Berkeley and George Carteret.
  • 2. To
    sell the land they promised

  • - religious freedom

  • - elected assembly

  • - political freedom and

  • - cheap land
  • 3.
    1674, Berkeley sold his half to

    Quakers.
  • 4.
    1680, Carteret sold his to Quakers.
  • 5.
    1702 Chartered as New Jersey
  • QUAKER RELIGION GEORGE FOX 1600s
  • BELIEFS

15
RESTORATION COLONIES CONTINUED
  • PENNSYLVANIA
  • 1. 1681
    King Charles II-charter-to William
    Pennpay off debt for
    Penns father.
  • Penn
    was a Quaker.
  • 2.
    Colony based on Quaker beliefs.

  • Experiment in Holy Christian Living
  • 3.
    Freedom of religion for all Christians
  • 4.
    Self-government unicameral assembly.
  • 5. First
    settlementPhiladelphia City of

  • Brotherly Love
  • 6.
    Bought land from the Indians and tried to
    treat them with
    fairness.
  • 7.
    Advertised the colony throughout Northern
  • Europe.
    Attracted many Germans.

  • Pennsylvania DutchMennonites (Amish)
  • 8.
    Economyshipping, wood products,
    farming

16
  • DELAWARE
  • 1. 1704
    broke from Pa.
  • 2. Not
    Quaker.
  • 3. Raised
    tobacco.
  • GEORGIA
  • 1. James
    Oglethorpetrustee for a colony of
    debtors. 1733 subsidized by
    the King.
  • 2. Serve
    as a buffer zone between
    Spanish
    Florida and the Carolinas.
  • 3. First
    settlementSavannah
  • 4.
    Settlers50 acres, tools and
    supplies.
  • 5.
    Mulberry trees (silk) and olive trees.
  • 6.
    Alcohol, lawyers and slavery
    forbidden.
  • 7. 1752
    Royal Colony

17
COLONIAL GOVERNMENT
  • Because of the distance between England and the
    American colonies, England adopted the policy of
    salutary neglect.
  • As a result the colonies were left to govern
    themselves.
  • Colonies created governments based on English
    tradition.
  • Limited Government (Magna Carta, Petition of
    Right and English Bill of Rights)--John
    Lockenatural rights and social contract theory.
  • Parliament
  • Every colony had a governor.
  • In self-governing colonies they were elected.
  • In all other colonies they appointed by the King.
  • Every colony by 1740 had a colonial legislature.
    Most all were bicameral. (Pa. was the
    exception).
  • Assemblyelected by the landowners. Made
    colonial laws, appropriated money, passed local
    tax laws and paid the governors salary.
  • Council members were chosen by the governor or
    King, gave advice to governor.
  • COLONIAL WOMEN
  • By law and custom women were considered 2nd class
    citizens.
  • They were technically under the control of their
    husband or father.
  • In America they did have more opportunities than
    women in England.
  • Under some circumstances they could operate
    businesses and own property.

18
COMPARISON OF COLONIAL REGIONS
  • NEW ENGLAND
    MIDDLE ATLANTIC SOUTHERN

  • (Chesapeake)
  • RELIGION Puritan
    Quaker, Anglican, Catholic
    Anglican
  • EDUCATION Public schools
    English tutors
    Tutors
  • ECONOMY Fishing, farming, trade
    Tobacco, grain crops, trade Cash
    crops, fur
  • MAJOR CITIES Boston, Newport
    New York, Philadelphia
    Charleston
  • POLITICAL landowners, elders,
    landowners, Young men landowner,
    Young men
  • POWER Merchant class
    Tidewater tobacco farmers
    Plantation owners
  • TRANSPORTATION Roads
    Rivers
    Rivers
  • THE ENLIGHTENMENT AND GREAT AWAKENING
    (1600s-1780s)
  • EnlightenmentEra of scientific discovery,
    political change and humanistic beliefs.
  • John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Jean Jacques Rousseau,
    Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin.
  • Great Awakening period of religious revival.
    Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield,
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