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Title: Objectives:


1

Life in the Colonies
  • Objectives
  • Describe the triangular trade and how it affected
    colonial society.
  • Analyze why slavery grew in America.
  • Explain the differences between the regions of
    the English Colonies as they developed.

2
Life in the Colonies
  • Population increase.
  • Settlers 250,000 (1700) to 2,500,000 (1775)
  • Slaves 28,000 to 500,000

3
Triangular Trade
4
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5
The Middle Passage
  • Shipping Africans to the West Indies.

6
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7
This plan above of a slave ship developed by
Clarkson and his co-workers shocked the public
when it appeared in 1789. It shows how 482 slaves
could be packed on board the Brookes of Liverpool
for the 6 to 8 week voyage to the West Indies.
The Brookes actually carried 609 slaves on one
voyage.
8
There is one final poignant link. Under the slave
trade system people suffered to provide luxuries
like sugar, chocolate, coffee and tea for
colonists at an affordable price. This was
morally wrong but most people were not aware of
their wrongdoing until the abolitionist campaign
exposed it for what it was. Today, the people
who put those very same items on our table are
suffering because they do not get a fair price
for their production. Again, this is so we can
buy these relative luxuries at an affordable
price, again it is morally wrong and again people
are not aware of it. Who today is going to
point it out for them, and how?
9
TaskMaking it Relevant!
  • Research worker conditions in third world
    countries that produce goods for America.
  • Write down what it is like to be a worker and
    what they are paid?
  • In your opinionhow is this similar or dissimilar
    to the salve trade? Are they equally morally
    wrong?

10
End Day 1
11
Colonial Regions
12
New England Colonies
  • Colonies
  • Massachusetts
  • Connecticut
  • New Hampshire
  • Rhode Island
  • Climate/Geography
  • Cold winters and mild summers
  • Soil was generally rocky, making farming
    difficult
  • Cold winters reduced the spread of disease.

13
New England Continued
  • Religion
  • Dominated by the Puritans, reformers seeking to
    purify Christianity, who came over from England
    to practice religion without persecution.
  • Puritans followed strict rules and were
    intolerant of other religions
  • Life in New England was dominated by church
  • Severe consequences for those who failed to
    attend, or, those who spoke out against the
    Puritan ways.
  • Economy
  • Economy was largely dependent on the ocean
  • Fishing (especially codfish) was most important
    to the New England economy
  • Whaling, trapping, shipbuilding, and logging were
    important also.
  • Shippers grew wealthy buying slaves from West
    Africa in return for rum, and selling the slaves
    to the West Indies in return for molasses. This
    process was part of triangular trade.
  • Subsistence farming
  • Farmers focus on growing enough food to feed
    their families

14
Middle Colonies
  • Colonies
  • New York
  • Pennsylvania
  • New Jersey
  • Delaware
  • Climate/Geography
  • temperate in climate with warm summers and cold
    winters
  • This area had good coastal harbors for shipping
  • Climate and land were ideal for agriculture
  • These colonies were known as the breadbasket
    because of the large amounts of barley, wheat,
    oats, and rye that were grown here.

15
Middle Colonies Continued
  • Religion
  • Religion varied, no single religion dominated
  • Religious tolerance attracted immigrants from a
    wide-range of foreign countries who practiced
    many different religions.
  • Quakers, Catholics, Jews, Lutherans and
    Presbyterians were among those religious groups
    that had significant numbers in the middle
    colonies.
  • Economy
  • Largely agricultural, farms in this region grew
    numerous kinds of crops, most notably grains and
    oats
  • Logging, shipbuilding, textiles production, and
    papermaking
  • Big cities such as Philadelphia and New York were
    major shipping hubs
  • Craftsmen such as blacksmiths, silversmiths,
    cobblers, wheelwrights, wigmakers, milliners, and
    others contributed to the economies of such
    cities.

16
Southern Colonies
  • Colonies
  • Maryland
  • Virginia
  • North and South Carolina
  • Georgia
  • Climate/Geography
  • Warm climate with hot summers and mild winters
  • The soil was perfect for farming and the growing
    season was longer than in any other region
  • Hot summers, however, propagated diseases such as
    malaria and yellow fever.

17
Southern Colonies Continued
  • Religion
  • Anglican (Baptist or Presbyterian)
  • Most of the original settlers from the Maryland
    colony were Catholic, as Lord Baltimore founded
    it as a refuge for English Catholics.
  • Religion did not have the same impact on
    communities as in the New England colonies or the
    Mid-Atlantic colonies because people lived on
    plantations that were often distant and spread
    out from one another.
  • Economy
  • The Southern economy was almost entirely based on
    farming
  • Rice, indigo, tobacco, sugarcane, and cotton were
    cash crops
  • Crops were grown on large plantations where
    slaves and indentured servants worked the land.

18
The Southern Economy
  • Because of the good soil and long growing season
    the South did not develop commerce or industry.
    The depended on English merchants to manage their
    trade.
  • Cultivated large farms known as plantations
  • Which needed a large unskilled labor force.
  • Slaves!

19
Tobacco and Rice
  • The cash crop of Maryland and Virginia was
    tobacco. However, overproduction would cause
    profits to fall.
  • So, farmers began the switch to corn and wheat.
  • The cash crop of South Carolina and Georgia was
    Rice.
  • Rice cultivation is a very labor intensive and
    nasty. Imagine working in the rice fields all
    day standing in mud up to your knees.
  • Do you think that you could get an indentured
    servant to do this?

20
The Three Kings of the Southern Economy (1700
1860)
21
Backcountry
  • Appalachian Mountain Foothills
  • Small farms
  • Few slaves
  • Outnumbered large plantation owners

22
Conclusion
  • Majority of colonist, even in the South were not
    slave holders. However, much of the economy was
    either based on slave labor or indirectly through
    the slave trade.
  • African Slaves brought with them their languages
    and cultures. They also brought with them the
    knowledge of cultivating rice.

23
Stop and Write!
  • In your IANS
  • On the right side identify which colonial region
    you would want to live in, if you lived back then
    and list 5 reasons why
  • On the left side draw a picture or print out
    pictures that represent things that you learned
    about the region you chose.

24
Types of Colonies
  • Government in the colonies varied by the type of
    charter for that colony.
  • Question What are the three types of colonial
    charters?
  • Charter Colonies
  • Proprietary Colonies
  • Royal Colonies

25
Charter, Royal and Proprietary
  • In a charter colony, the King granted a charter
    to the colonial government establishing the rules
    under which the colony was to be governed.
  • A proprietary colony was a colony in which one or
    more individuals, usually land owners, remaining
    subject to their parent state's sanctions,
    retained rights that are today regarded as the
    privilege of the state, and in all cases
    eventually became so.
  • Crown, or royal, colonies were ruled by a
    governor appointed at first by the Monarch

26
Table of Colonies Type, Government and Notes
Type
Charter
Proprietary
Royal
Colony
Connecticut, Rhode Island
Government
Governor and Legislature Elected by Colonists
Note
Great Britain had the right to approve governor, but governor could not veto legislature.
Connecticut, Rhode Island
Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania
Proprietor selected the governor and upper house. Colonists Elected the Lower House
Proprietor free to rule.
GA, MA, NH, NJ, NY, NC, SC, VA
Directly Ruled by Britain.
King appointed Gov. and Upper House. Colonists elected the Lower House.
27
Colonial Government
  • As the colonies grew, so did the colonists views
    on government.
  • Time and distance from the mother-country
    necessitated some form of government to be in
    place.
  • The Crown also had the responsibility to enforce
    its laws on the colonies.

28
Colonial Life
29
Men, Women and Children
Men Worked the fields, built houses and barns,
represented family in community
Women Cooked, made butter and cheese, made
clothes, tended livestock, etc.
30
A Child's Life in The Colonies
Boys Indentured servants or apprentices
Young Women Maids, cooks, nurses, until married.
31
Education
Pennsylvania and Massachusetts set up public
school systems by law.
Colonists valued education and children were
usually taught to read and write at home.
85 Percent Literacy Rate
32
Change is Coming?Set-up for the Revolution
  • The Glorious Revolution
  • Mercantilism
  • The Navigation Acts
  • Differences in colonial governments
  • Voting rights
  • America and the Great Awakening

33
The Glorious Revolution
  • King James forced off the throne in 1688 and
    placed his daughter Mary and her husband, William
    of Orange on the thrown.
  • The Parliament is getting more powerful.
  • William and Mary sign the English Bill of Rights.

34
The English Bill of Rights
35
Mercantilism
  • The English viewed the colonies as an economic
    resource.
  • The colonies provided raw materials for English
    manufacturers and a market for finished products.
  • As a nations trade grew, its gold reserve
    increase, and the nation becomes more powerful.

36
The Navigation Acts1751 - 1763
  • Series of acts (laws) that directed the flow of
    goods between England and the Colonies.
  • Smuggling
  • Only British ships could transport imported and
    exported goods from the colonies.
  • The only people who were allowed to trade with
    the colonies had to be British citizens.
  • Commodities such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton
    wool which were produced in the colonies could be
    exported only to British ports.

37
The Great Awakening
  • What are they awakening to?
  • A religious movement concentrated in New England
    and the Middle Colonies.
  • They called for a re-birth, A return to the
    strong faith of earlier days.
  • Why would this movement not take hold in the
    South?

38
The Great Awakening
Fire Brimstone Preachers
Jonathan Edwards
39
I Think, Therefore I Am
Experimentation
Ideas
The Enlightenment
Social and Political Reforms
The Social Contract
40
The Enlightenment
And the One who holds the Key
41
The Enlightenment
  • The Age of Enlightenment was an elite cultural
    movement of intellectuals in 18th century Europe
    that sought to mobilize the power of reason in
    order to reform society and advance knowledge.
  • It reached the colonies
  • It promoted intellectual interchange and opposed
    intolerance and abuses in church and state
  • Politically the age is distinguished by an
    emphasis upon liberty, democracy, republicanism
    and religious tolerance
  • Thoughts start colonies on road to revolution and
    independence
  • Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson and others

42
Freedom of the Press
  • English Right of Free Speech
  • Zenger v. Royal Governor
  • Zenger was put on trial for libel (printed an
    article the criticized governor)
  • Found INNOCENT
  • Foundation for freedom of press

43

Life in the Colonies
  • Objectives
  • Describe the triangular trade and how it affected
    colonial society.
  • Analyze why slavery grows in America.
  • Explain the differences between the regions of
    the English Colonies as they developed.
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