Title: COLONIAL SOCIETY: Family, Social Order, and Religion
1COLONIAL SOCIETYFamily, Social Order, and
Religion
2Sources of Stability New England Colonies of
the Seventeenth Century
- New Englanders replicated traditional English
social order - Contrasted with experience in other English
colonies - Explanation lies in development of Puritan
families
3Immigrant Families and New Social Order
- Puritans believed God ordained the family to
prevent temptation outside the family - Reproduce patriarchal English family structure in
New England - Greater longevity in New England results in
invention of grandparents - Multigenerational families strengthen social
stability
4Commonwealth of Families
- Most New Englanders married neighbors of whom
parents approved chose godly partners - Education provided by the family
- Towns of families, not of individuals
- New England families did not need indentured
servants
5Womens Lives in Puritan New England
- Women not legally equal with men
- Marriages based on mutual love
- Most Women contributed to society as
- wives and mothers
- church members
- small-scale farmers
- Women accommodated themselves to roles they
believed God ordained
6Womens Roles
- Women cooked, washed, made clothes, milked the
cows, and gardened day in and day out - deputy husbands there was both dependency and
independence
7Social Hierarchy in New England
- Absence of very rich necessitates creation of new
social order (neither rich nor poor) - New England social order becomes
- -leader not based on wealth but other criteria
- - much greater social mobility than in England
8The Challenge of the Chesapeake Environment
- Imbalanced sex ratio among immigrants
- High death rate
- Scattered population
9Family Life at Risk
- Normal family life impossible in Virginia
- mostly young male indentured servants
- most immigrants soon died
- in marriages, one spouse often died within a
decade - Serial marriages, extended families common
- Orphaned children raised by strangers
10Women in Chesapeake Society
- Scarcity gives some women bargaining power in
marriage market - Women without family protection vulnerable to
sexual exploitation - Childbearing extremely dangerous
- Chesapeake women died 20 years earlier than women
in New England
11The Structure of Planter Society The Gentry
- Tobacco the basis of Chesapeake wealth
- Early gentry become stable ruling elite by 1700
12 The Structure of Planter Society The Freemen
- The largest class in Chesapeake society
- Most freed at the end of indenture
- Live on the edge of poverty
13The Structure of Planter Society Indentured
Servants
- Servitude a temporary status
- Conditions harsh
- Servants regard their bondage as slavery
14The Structure of Planter Society Post-1680s
Stability
- Gentry ranks open to people with capital before
1680, no matter reputation or social standing - Demographic shift (life expectancy
increased)after 1680 creates creole(born in
America) elite - Shift adds stability/legitimacy to colony
- Ownership of slaves consolidates planter wealth
and position - Freemen find advancement more difficult
15The Structure of Planter Society A Dispersed
Population
- Large-scale tobacco cultivation requires
- great landholdings
- ready access to water-borne commerce
- Result population dispersed along great tidal
rivers - Virginia a rural society devoid of towns
- Dispersion results in lack of institutions, like
schools
16Rise of a Commercial Empire
- English leaders ignore colonies until 1650s
- (Salutary Neglect)
- Navigation Acts passed to regulate, protect,
glean revenue from commerce
17Regulating Colonial Trade The Navigation Act
of 1660
- Most important law passed by the Crown prior to
the American Revolution - Ships engage in English colonial trade
- must be made in England (or America)
- must carry a crew at least 75 English
- Enumerated goods only to English ports
- 1660 list included tobacco, sugar, cotton,
indigo, dyes, ginger - Pay tariff at port, England makes money,
colonists lose money (initially)
18Regulating Colonial Trade The Navigation Act
of 1663
- Goods shipped to English colonies must pass
through England - Increased price paid by colonial consumers
because colonists had to pay the duties added on
in the English port.
19Results of 1663 Act
- Encouraged domestic shipbuilding
- Prohibited European rivals from getting these
enumerated goods anywhere else but England
20Regulating Colonial TradeImplementing the Acts
- New England merchants skirt laws
- English revisions tighten loopholes governors
now responsible to keep other countries out of
ports - 1696--Board of Trade created(to enforce)
- Navigation Acts eventually benefit colonial
merchants because 25 of all Englands needs come
from American Colonies.
21Civil War in Virginia Bacon's Rebellion
- Nathaniel Bacon leads rebellion, 1676
- Rebellion allows small farmers, blacks and women
to join, demand reforms - Governor William Berkeley regains control
- Rebellion collapses after Bacons death
- Gentry recovers positions, unite over next
decades to oppose royal governors
22COMMON EXPERIENCES, SEPARATE CULTURES
23Growth and Diversity
- 1700-1750 colonial population rises from
250,000 to over two million - Much growth through natural increase
- Large influx of non-English Europeans, especially
African, Scotch-Irish, and Germans