Title: Unit 1A: Founding the New Nation
1Unit 1AFounding the New Nation
2Migration to the Americas
- Native Americans
- Migrated across the Bering Strait to N. America
- 33,000 years ago
3Migration to the Americas
Beringia
4Review of Native Americans
- Nomads
- Settled from Alaska to tip of South America
- Adapted into 500 - 650 nations, according to the
area settled - Mayans and Aztecs in Central Mexico
- Incas in Peru
- Tanos in Caribbean Islands
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6A theory based on anthropology and archeology has
been supported using modern technology.
7American Indians
- Adopted to unique environments in the
Northwest, Southwest, Great Plains, Northeast,
and Southeast - Largest include Navajo, Cherokee, Sioux, and
Delaware
8Age of Exploration
9Age of Exploration
- European nations interested in expanded trade
- Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, English, French
explored both the Americas and Africa - Empires built by conquering natives and taking
natural resources and trade routes - Constantly in competition with each other
10Famous Explorers
- Henry the Navigator
- Portuguese sailing school
- Explored African coast to India
- Claimed areas in Africa for Portugal
11Famous Explorers
- Amerigo Vespucci
- Italian mapmaker and explorer
12Famous Explorers
- Ferdinand Magellan
- Circumnavigated the world
- Started with 5 ships
- Crew died of disease, accidents and warfare
- Magellan was killed in the Philippines
- Only 17 men returned to Spain alive
13Famous Explorers
- Christopher Columbus myths
- Spanish explorer
- Only person to believe world wasnt flat
- Discovered the New World
- Landed in the USA
- Died a pauper after searching for the route to
the East Indies
14Famous Explorers
- Christopher Columbus truths
- Landed in the Caribbean, probably 1st on the
island of San Salvador in the Bahamas - Columbus continued to explore the region in
search of a route to the Pacific (4 voyages) - Never landed on the continental USA
- Was granted vast lands and titles from the King
Queen and died wealthy
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16Spanish Conquistadors
17Conquistadors
- Conquered Aztecs and Incas
- Explored and colonized most of South and Central
America, and the SW of North America - Introduced Plains Indians to horses
- Many settled permanently and intermarried with
local people and African slaves - Creation of Hispanic
18The Columbian Exchange
Potatoes, corn, squash, cocoa, tomatoes syphillis
Europe
Wheat, rice, horses, small pox, chickens, measles
America
19Indians Revenge
Indians
Europe
20Treaty of Tordesillas
- Conflict between Spain and Portugal
- Resolved by the pope
- New World divided by the Line of Demarcation
- Portugal gains Africa and outcrop of South
America - Spain gains the remainder of North and South
America
21Spanish
Portuguese
22Spanish Territories
- Southwest USA to tip of South America, except
Brazil and some smaller colonies - Encomienda system
- Enslavement of Indians on plantations
- Indians were supposed to be protected and
converted to Christianity - Bartolome de Las Casas
- Protested the encomienda system
23Africa
- Native Americans were dying rapidly from disease
- Settlers needed a new labor force
- Portuguese became slave traders
- Slaves brought their own culture to the New World
24Native American Populationin North America
25 Black Slave Populationin North America
By 1800, slave population outnumbered N.A.
population
26Conclusions
- Europeans, Native Americans and African Americans
would come together to form a new culture - Europes discovery of the New World brought both
sides opportunities for new goods and customs - Europeans clearly dominated the other two groups,
usually negatively
27Settlement of the 13 Colonies
28Why would colonists go to America?
- Push factors
- Primogeniture (eldest male inherits)
- Lack of land
- Rigid class structures
- No personal freedom (speech, religion) for lower
classes
- Pull factors
- Mercantilism trade between colony motherland
- Gold
- Adventure
- Religious freedom or evangelism
- Land
- Political freedom
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30The English Colonies
- 1st colony Roanoke
- Failed and colonists returned to England
- 2nd colony Roanoke
- Leader John White
- Failing within 1st year
- White returned to England to get help
- Spanish Armada
Colony was organized and funded by Sir Walter
Raleigh but he did not actually go to Roanoke.
He was later executed for treason by King James.
31Spanish Armada
- (1588) Spanish Armada attempted to conquer
England but were defeated by the smaller English
navy
32Roanoke
- (1590) White returned to Roanoke but the entire
settlement had disappeared. - Theories
- Spanish either kidnapped or killed them
- Native Americans either kidnapped or killed them
- They attempted to sail to the mainland and sunk
33Jamestown
- Our men were destroyed with cruel diseases as
swelling, burning fevers, and by wars, and some
departed suddenly, but for the most part they
died of famine. There were never Englishmen left
in a foreign country in such misery as we were in
this new discovered Virginia. - George Percy on his experience in Jamestown in
1607.
34Jamestown
- Queen Elizabeth was succeeded by King James I
- Virginia Company of London formed and given a
charter - Original voyage carried gentlemen and merchants
ill-equipped for labor - Of 100 that arrived late summer 1607, only 38
survived by Jan. 1608
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37Jamestown
- John Smith arrived with 300 more settlers
- He who shall not work shall not eat.
- (1609) Returned to England after an injury
This image from the Library of Congress depicts
Pocahontas saving the life of Jamestown leader
Capt. John Smith. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
38Jamestown
- 800 more settlers arrived
- (1609-1610) The Starving Time
- Only 68 settlers alive at the end of the winter
- Recent research (tree rings) indicates that
settlers landed during the worst drought in over
700 years - Game, corn and other foodstuffs scarce for both
settlers and Powhatans
39Pocahontas
- Indian tribe called Powhatan
- Daughter Pocahontas rescued John Smith in 1608
and visited the settlement until 1609 - She was captured in 1613 and held hostage for a
year. Peace was restored for a short time - She then married Sir John Rolfe and moved to
England - She died in England in 1617
- Her children were raised in VA and became one of
the most influential families (FFV)
40Jamestown
- 1612 Tobacco introduced as a cash crop
- Need for more land
- Need for more laborers
- Indentured Servants
- Headright System
- Development of gentry class of planters
41Jamestown
- 1619 House of Burgesses formed
- Upper house appointed in England
- Lower house elected by citizens
- 1619 1st African slaves arrived
- By 1623 - 4000 of 5500 settlers had died
42Stirrups and bridle recovered from Jamestown,
useless after the English ate their horses and
were reduced to rats, snakes, and mice and to
grubbing for roots. When those resources were
exhausted, colonists turned to eating the dead.
43Maryland
- Proprietary Colony
- Founded by Sir George Calvert, 1st Lord Baltimore
- Haven for Catholics
- 1649 Act of Toleration
- Guaranteed toleration of all Christians
- Imposed death penalty to non-Christians
44North South Carolina
- Royal charter to group of investors
- Strong ties to West Indies plantation system
- Slave trade in both Africans and Indians
- Rice and indigo became major crops
- Charleston became busiest southern seaport
45North South Carolina
- French Huguenots migrated there for religious
freedom - Catholic Spaniards in Florida often raided and
burned early settlements - Georgia is later built as a buffer
- North South Carolina separated in 1712
46North South Carolina
- North Carolina was settled by dissenters from
Virginia South Carolina - Tended to have smaller farms and less slaves
- Independent thinkers and, along with Rhode
Island, the most democratic of the colonies - Outer banks haven for pirates
47Blackbeard is one of the pirates that inhabited
the islands in the outer banks. He was killed in
1718 by an expedition sent down from Virginia.
48Georgia
- The last of the original 13 colonies to be
founded - Charter granted to James Oglethorpe and other
philanthropists - Haven for debtors
- Created a buffer between prosperous South
Carolina and Spanish held Florida
49The Northern Colonies
50New England Colonies/States
- Massachusetts
- Connecticut
- Rhode Island
- New Hampshire
- Vermont (Formerly part of New York)
- Maine (Formerly part of Mass.)
51- Religion played a major role in the northern
colonies - Protestant Reformation (1517)
- Henry VIII established Church of England
- Puritans sought to purify the church
- Predestination
- Original sin
- Visible saints the elected
- Disliked or outright persecuted by Monarchy
52Pilgrims
- Originally part of the Virginia Co. of Plymouth
- Appox. ½ separatists
- Off-course, landed north at Plymouth Rock
- Mayflower Compact
- All agreed to submit to the will of the majority
- Only males could vote
- Theocracy
- Town meetings
- Landed in December, 1620
53Plymouth, Mass
Hudson River,NY
Mayflowers Voyage Dec. 1620
54Plymouth (Plimoth) Plantation
- William Bradford elected governor 30 X
- 1st year ½ of original 100 settlers died
- Indians assisted by helping them to grow corn
- Thanksgiving was the celebration of that harvest
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56Plymouth (Plimoth) Plantation
- Eventually granted their own charter
- Economy
- Farming
- Fur trade
- Lumber
- Maintained friendly relationships with local
Indian tribe, Wampanoag . - Wampanoag are later virtually wiped out by wars
with settlers
57Massachusetts Bay Colony (Boston Salem)
- Plymouth Co. reorganized as the Massachusetts Bay
Co. - Received a charter from the King
- Pilgrims arrived in 1630 with 1000 people
- Better provisioned than earlier groups
- Governor John Winthrop
58Massachusetts Bay Colony (Boston Salem)
- Most were non-separatists
- Later called Congregational Church
- No frills humility
59Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Theocracy
- Whole purpose of government was to enforce Gods
laws. (Kennedy, P. 47) - Most important rules obedience and harmony
- Taxes paid to support the church
- Attendance was mandatory
- Only visible saints allowed to have membership
- Only members could vote
- Public interrogations to prove you were a visible
saint - People always looking for signs from God
60Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Great Migration
- By 1643 over 20,000
- Dissenters punished quickly and harshly
- Literacy highly rated
- Problems with Indians increased with population
61Dissenters
- Anne Hutchinson
- Antinomianism
- Women could also preach obedience to God more
important than to church leaders - Banished with entire family
- Moved several times and was killed by Indians
62Rhode Island
- Roger Williams
- Dissenter from Mass Bay
- Fair treatment of Indians payment for Indian
lands - Separation of church and state
- Religious Toleration for all
63Connecticut
- Settled 1st by settlers from Mass Bay looking for
fertile land - Population grew problems with Indians
- 1637 8 settlers killed by Pequot Indians
- Retaliation included burning 400 of them alive in
their wooden fort - Eliminated most Indians in that area
64Connecticut
- Thomas Hooker
- Fundamental Orders 1639
- Worlds 1st written constitution
- Granted charter in 1662
65New Hampshire Maine
- Setters from Mass Bay developed new villages to
the north - Maine remained part of Mass Bay until it became a
state in the 1820s - New Hampshire was claimed by Mass but the king
gave it its own charter in 1679
66Vermont
- Claimed by both NY and NH
- King backed NYs claim
- After Rev. War, Vermont declared its independence
from NY - After several disputes over land were settled,
Vermont became the 14th state in 1791
67- New England Confederation
- 4 colonies voluntarily united for common good
- New England Dominion
- United by King James II to have more control over
the colonies - Sir Edmund Andros
- Collapsed after the Glorious Revolution in
England dethroned James II and gave the throne to
William and Mary
68War with Indians
- King Phillip's (Metacom) War
- (1675) King Phillip and his followers attacked
Plymouth Colony and killed 2000 settlers - Colonists retaliated by killing 4000 Indians
- War lasted for several years - Indians were
ultimately defeated and King Phillip was killed - Indians lost all control in New England
69The Middle Colonies
- New York
- Pennsylvania
- New Jersey
- Delaware
70New York / New Netherlands
- Originally settled by the Dutch
- Governor Stuyvesant and landed gentry along the
Hudson - Dynamic seaport on Manhattan Island
- English took it over without a fight (1664)
- King Charles II gave it to his brother, the Duke
of York - It included NY, NJ and part of DE
71New Jersey
- Given to 2 Lords by the Duke of York
- Received a separate charter in 1702
- Added to William Penns holdings by the Duke of
York in 1681 - Declared itself a state in 1776
Delaware
72Pennsylvania
- William Penns father was owed a debt of 16,000L
by King Charles II - The King gave him Pennsylvania to pay the debt
- Penn needed to leave England, after being
arrested for refusing to remove his hat!
73Pennsylvania
- Became the Quaker State
- Holy Experiment
- Treated Indians fairly.
- Bought their land and protected their rights.
74Pennsylvania
- Freedom of worship to all that believed in one
Almighty and Eternal God - Quakers believed in
- direct salvation
- pacifism
- equality
- humility
- social justice
75Pennsylvania
- Attracted settlers from many nations by promoting
the colony in newspapers and pamphlets - Rich land and political stability helped the
colony to grow and prosper - By 1685 in held 9000 settlers by 1700 that
number had doubled.
76Proprietary
- Pennsylvania
- Delaware
- Maryland
77Charter
78Royal
- Virginia
- North Carolina
- South Carolina
- Georgia
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- New York
- New Jersey
79Life in America - 17th Century
Chapter 4
80Chesapeake Colonies
- Unhealthy environment
- High mortality rates
- Low life expectancy
- Majority were single men
- No natural population increase until the 18th
century - Few laborers available
81Chesapeake Colonies
- Soil and climate suitable for tobacco
- Labor - Indentured servants
- Land - conflicts with Indians
- Overproduction - lower prices
- Larger divide between rich and poor economies
of scale
82Jamestown
- 1619 House of Burgesses formed
- Upper house appointed in England
- Lower house elected by citizens
- 1619 1st African slaves arrived
- By 1623 - 4000 of 5500 settlers had died
83Bacons Rebellion
- 1676
- Led by Nathaniel Bacon
- Western farmers
- Protest against lack of support from the
government - Particularly hated Gov. Berkeley
- Seized Jamestown and overthrew the government
- Bacon died suddenly of natural causes and the
rebellion lost support.
84Bacons Rebellion
- Results
- 20 Rebels hanged
- Governor Berkeley was recalled
- House of Burgesses pledged to support western
farmers - Decreased use of indentured servants
- Increased use of slave labor
85Settlers Fighting Native AmericansDuring Bacon's
Rebellion
86- First African slaves landing in Jamestown
- By 1800 400,000 slaves had been sent to America
- Another 9.5 million went to S. America and the
Caribbean
87Africans in America to 18th Century
- Slave revolts did occur, but overall there were
few of them - Slaves were easier to manage than white
indentured servants - (1712) Rebellion in New York
- 12 whites were killed
- 21 blacks were executed (some by burning at
stake with a slow fire) - (1739) the Stono Rebellion in South Carolina
- tried to march to Spanish Florida,
- stopped by the white militia
88Africans in America to 18th Century
- Black slavery in the deep South was the harshest
- Worked on rice and indigo plantations
- Climate was extremely unhealthy
- Labor was difficult and lonely (because
plantations were so spread out) - Mostly male laborers (meaning no family life for
most) - Slave population only increased with fresh
imports, not natural procreation
89New England Families
- Healthier climate than the South
- Clean water and cool temperatures less
contagious diseases - Added 10 years to their lives after moving from
England - Average lifespan of 70 years
- First true generation of grandparents
90A Puritan Family
91Women in New England
- Family life with man as head of household
- Women gave up property rights at marriage
- Widows lost their property under some
circumstances - Women in the south were generally treated better
because of the shortage and the number of men
that died young. Most were allowed to keep their
property whether married or widowed.
92New England
- Communities organized for efficiency and defense
- Town hall and town green
- Harsh public punishments for crimes
- Education important
93An Early 18th Century View ofHarvard College
94Halfway Covenant
- By 1662 church membership was waning
- Less people claimed to be visible saints
- Halfway Covenant allowed children of those saved
to be baptized - Later allowed to become full members erased
distinction between elected and others
95Salem Witch Trials
- (1692)
- Trials may have been motivated by greed, fear,
expediency (husbands testified against wives) - Subsistence farmers from one side of town
testified against people involved in commerce
from the other side of town - 20 people and 2 dogs executed due to hysteria
over mysterious illnesses and occurrences
96Colonial Society
97Economy
- North and middle states
- Small farming
- Lumber
- Shipping
- Artisans
- Philadelphia largest city, followed by Boston and
New York - South
- Large plantations and small farms
- Seaports only major cities
98Great Awakening
- George Whitefield
- Ended period of slackening religious fervor
- Theology salvation available to all, not
predestined - Good works and good intentions led to salvation
- Split churches along class lines
- Fostered questioning of authority
- Encouraged education
99Great Awakening (1730-1740)
- Pious threatened by new beliefs in salvation and
free will - Jonathon Edwards preached that only Gods will
(predestination) allowed the converted (visible
saints) to go to heaven - Famous speech Sinners of an Angry God about the
fires of hell and Gods retribution
100Colonial Presses
- Zenger decision (1734)
- Legality of printing critical words about public
officials if they were true - 1st time jury found in favor of the press
- Beginning of freedom of the press
- Necessary for a democracy
101Colonial Politics
- Liberal by the standards of the day
- Allowed most male property owners to vote some
colonies allowed all white males over 21 - All colonies had legislatures, court systems, and
law enforcement - Governors were either elected (RI CT) or
appointed by the king or proprietor
102Colonial Demographics
- Population continued to grow in the 18th century
mostly from natural growth - By 1775, average age in colonies was 16!
- Prosperity in colonies resulted in greater
economic and political power - of poor people in America remained tiny
compared with England/Europe
103- Population increased dramatically in the colonies
- 1750 - population was 1.5 million
- Cash crops and natural resources were making many
colonists prosperous
Indian Population 10,000
White population 225,000
Black population 160,000
104Colonial Society
- 3 regions very different economies, lifestyles
- South cash crops tobacco, rice, indigo
- Poor conditions
- Slave labor
- Middle artisans, farmers, merchants
- Healthier environment
- Family or hired labor
- North rocky soil small subsistence farms,
lumber, trade - Healthier environment
- Family or hired labor
- Agriculture was largest industry in all 13
colonies
105AddendumPrimary Sources
106Folk Art
107Folk Art
- What is it?
- What purpose does it serve?
- Why do historians study it?
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117ARMCHAIR WITH VIEW OFITHACA FALLSChairmaker
unidentifiedIthaca, New Yorkc.
18171825Paint, bronze powder stenciling, and
gold leaf on wood, with rush seat37 3/4 x 21 x
16 1/2 in.
118DOWER CHESTJohannes Kniskern
(1746?)Schoharie County, New York1778Paint on
pine with iron hasp, key, and hardware19 3/4 x
47 x 21 in.
119FEDERAL SIDEBOARD TABLEArtist unidentifiedNew
England18101830Paint on wood with brass
knob34 7/8 x 26 x 20 in.
120The End!