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Standard 1: Founding of the US

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Title: Standard 1: Founding of the US


1
Standard 1 Founding of the US
  • Standard USHC-1 The student will demonstrate an
    understanding of the conflicts between regional
    and national interest in the development of
    democracy in the United States.

2
  • USHC-1.1 Summarize the distinct characteristics
    of each colonial region in the settlement and
    development of British North America, including
    religious, social, political, and economic
    differences.

3
Standard 1.1 cont.
  • The 1st settlement in the US was.
  • Roanoke
  • The 1st PERMANENT
  • settlement was at Jamestown, VA
  • Disastrous at first, sickness, death, mostly men
    any success was due to John Smith
  • Eventually John Rolfe finds tobacco ?prosper

Real or legend?
4
Standard 1.1
  • Why did Europeans come over here?
  • GOD
  • GOLD
  • GLORY

5
USHC-1.1 Summarize the distinct characteristics
of each colonial region in the settlement and
development of British North America, including
religious, social, political, and economic
differences
  • Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies were
    settled next
  • More successful in beginning than Jamestown. Why?
  • They cooperated with the Native Americans and
    learned about their new land ?survival skills
  • The Puritans founded Mass Bay (will become
    Boston)
  • Pilgrims founded Plymouth

6
  • So.the EARLY Northern Colonies
  • Had NO RELIGIOUS TOLERATION
  • Rhode Island will be founded for more religious
    tolerance
  • They were subsistence farmers
  • They are known for
  • ship building, trading, and fishing
  • Education was HUGELY important to them because it
    brought people closer to the Bible
  • Town Hall Meetings

7
  • Standard 1.1 cont.
  • Society
  • New England and mid-Atlantic colonies initially
    developed egalitarian society based on religious
    equality that fostered the development of
    democratic ideals.
  • The Congregational (Puritan) church fostered the
    development of towns and educational institutions
    and shaped N. England society.
  • South
  • The South developed a hierarchical social
    structure bc of the plantation system and their
    dependence on indentured servants later slaves.
  • The slave system was transplanted to the
    Carolinas from Barbados
  • Little to no schools land
  • Georgia was initially a penal colony but it soon
    became a plantation colony that allowed slavery.

8
  • Politics
  • Political traditions of the mother country
    impacted colonists.
  • Magna Carta impacted Parliament ideas brought to
    colonies
  • Democracy in colonies Virginias House of
    Burgesses and the New England town meeting.
  • South? less democratic slavery
  • Civil War in England brought Salutary neglect to
    colonies ?authority of the king in the colonies
    and strengthened the role of colonial assemblies.
  • British subjects in the colonies were loyal to
    the Crown, but believed that only their colonial
    assemblies had the power to tax them
  • The English Civil War, the Glorious Revolution
    and the English Bill of Right all influenced the
    colonists perception of their rights as
    Englishmen

9
  • Standard 1.1 cont
  • Economies
  • Geographic location and the natural resources
    determined economy
  • Shipbuilding, merchants and fishermen.
  • New Englanders didnt need slaves like the
    Southern colonists due to geographic conditions
    ?impacted views of democracy.
  • The Mid-Atlantic colonies had fertile soil and
    moderate climate and developed an export trade in
    food stuffs
  • The Southern colonies used their wide expanses of
    fertile soil to grow cash crops, such as tobacco,
    rice, and indigo, with slave labor and to export
    these crops on the ships of New England.
  • Cotton was not a major export crop of the
    colonial era
  • The 3 regions developed were interconnected and
    traded with the British Caribbean as well as
    trade across the Atlantic with Africa and Europe.

10
  • Standard 1.2 Analyze the early development of
    representative government and political rights in
    the American colonies, including the influence of
    the British political system and the rule of law
    as written in the Magna Carta and the English
    Bill of Rights, and the conflict between the
    colonial legislatures and the British Parliament
    over the right to tax that resulted in the
    American Revolutionary War.

11
Standard 1.2
  • Representative govt developed? experienced in
    England and their new life changed them.
  • The English settlers brought with them concepts
    from British govt- ex Magna Carta and the
    English Bill of Rights.
  • The Magna Carta recognized the rights of
    Englishmen in relation to taxes and rights of the
    accused.
  • Colonial charters declared that English colonists
    continued to enjoy the rights of Englishmen.
  • English political tradition also included the
    rule of law, the principle that every member of
    society must obey the law, even the king.
  • Laws are clear, well-understood, and fairly
    enforced.
  • The English Bill of Rights reiterated that the
    people have the right to be consulted, through
    their representatives, on the levying of taxes.

12
1.2 cont.
  • It established that the power of the king
    (executive) should be limited by the Parliament.
  • The English Bill of Rights states that the
    people have the right to religious freedom which
    is included in the First Amendment in the
    American Bill of Rights.
  • The settlers applied the principles of the right
    of the legislature to levy taxes and the rule of
    law to their colonial governments.
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