Title: U.S. History to Reconstruction
1U.S. History to Reconstruction
- Unit 2 - Englands 17th Century Colonies
2Timeline 17th Century England
- Stuart Monarchy
- James I (1603-1625)
- Charles I (1625-1649)
- English Civil War (1642-1649)
- Commonwealth (1649-1653)
- Protectorate (1653-1660)
- Return of the Stuarts
- Charles II (1660-1685)
- James II (1685-1688)
- Glorious Revolution (1688)
- William III (1688-1702) and Mary II (1688-1694)
3 417th Century English Colonialism
- English colonial ventures had the monarchs
blessings but were private ventures - They did not royal money or naval protection
- Spain and Portugal did have royal funds and
protection - This meant that the first English colonies in the
17th century remained small - The success of the English colonies depended
getting the wealth and support of prospering
middle class - These people were originally drawn to the tobacco
production areas of the West Indies such as
Barbados, Montserrat, and Antigua
517th Century English Colonialism
- In addition to financing, colonies needed
colonists - Economics played a large role in emigration
- The religious wars of the first half of the 17th
century caused the wool market to drop - This led to unemployment and lower quality of
life in England - Between 1600 and 1640, 80,000 left England
- Another 80,000 left over the next 20 years
- People also emigrated for religious reasons
- Certain groups such as the Puritans were being
persecuted in England - Some left for personal reasons
- To escape bad marriages, jail terms, or lifelong
poverty
6- Drawing of 17th century mid-Atlantic native
people - Possibly by John Smith
7Perception of the New World
- Those who emigrated to the New World arrived with
two very different images of the Native Americans - Some saw them as gentle people who were eager to
meet the Europeans - There had already been friendly receptions in
earlier encounters - This reflected the European vision of New World
as an earthly paradise, and of desire to trade - The Europeans strong desire to trade also
enhanced their image of the natives
8Perception of the New World
- Others saw them as savage and hostile people
- This was based on earlier encounters that were
violent - Natives were seen as crafty, loathsome, and not
fully human - This reflected the strong desire to take the land
from the settlers - One of the main reasons why the English emigrated
was for the land - Native Americans did not understand the concept
of private property - This led to a sort of moral dilemma for the
immigrants in taking land from the natives
9Perception of the New World
- Robert Gray, an Anglican minister said in 1609
- By what right can we enter into the land of
these savages, take their rightful inheritance
from them, and plant ourselves in their places,
being unwronged or unprovoked by them? - Some believed there really was no dilemma
- One side they believed they were offering a fair
exchange - They would share the land and in exchange offer
Indians access to a higher civilization and
Christianity - Others portrayed the natives as savage brutes who
did not deserve rightful ownership of the land - This gave the settlers moral justification for
taking the Indians lands
10- Migration of English to the New World
- (1630-1660)
1117th Century English Colonies
- Four regions of English colonies in the New World
- The Chesapeake
- New England
- Middle Colonies
- The Carolinas
- Joint-stock companies provided financing
- Establishment of Jamestown, Virginia (1607)
- Was the first permanent English colony in North
America - It was established by the Virginia Company of
London, which was a joint-stock company
12Jamestown
- The main object of this colony was profit
- Settlers expected to find gold, a water route to
China and lucrative trade with Native Americans
in beaver and deer skins - There was a mention of bringing Christianity to
the natives in the charter but this was a distant
second priority - Those who came were unprepared to start a colony
- Over a third of the colonists were untrained
laborers, some with criminal records these were
the ones looking for gold - The rest were skilled tradesmen but they had
problems adapting to the wilderness - Very few of the colonists were trained in
helpful fields such as fishing, blacksmithing,
and farming
13Jamestown
- Exploiting native population
- Colonists believed they could exploit the 24,000
local Powhatan Indians - Believed that if Spanish were able to do so with
the Aztecs and the Incas, they could do it too - Unlike the Aztecs and Incas, the Powhatan
territories were not densely settled and were not
easily subjugated - English did not have an army with them nor
priests like the Spanish - When intimidation failed they attempted to open
up trade - The first year, the natives traded food with the
English
14Jamestown
- The following year, severe drought hit the area
- The natives stopped trading with the English
- Starving Time (1609-1610)
- Severe drought set in, negatively affecting crops
- Powhatan laid siege to the colony hoping to
starve them out - Many died during this two year period
- Of the 900 colonists who arrived between 1607 and
1609 only 60 survived - Most were ill-prepared for life in a new
settlement - They suffered from dysentery, malaria, drought,
and malnutrition - Were saved by Thomas West who arrived with new
supplies
15Jamestown
- Edwin Sandys (1561-1629)
- One of the Virginia Companys proprietors
- Implemented reforms in 1618 to save the Company
- House of Burgesses instituted for Virginia
self-government - Headrights
- Granted 50-acre lots to each colonist who paid
his own transportation - Allowed development of huge estates
- Indentured servitude
- Began promising land in exchange for seven years
labor
16Jamestown
- More than 9000 crossed the Atlantic between 1610
and 1622 - Only 2000 were alive in 1622
- Tobacco was first discovered in the West Indies
and quickly became a major crop in the Caribbean - In 1612, John Rolfe attempted to grow tobacco
- It was designed as a way of saving the Jamestown
colony - Land in Virginia was perfect for growing tobacco
- The first tobacco crop shipped from Virginia in
1617 - By 1624, Virginia exported 200,000 pounds of
tobacco - By 1638, despite decline in price, crop exceeded
3 million pounds
17Jamestown
- The biggest problem with tobacco is that it
requires lots of care which meant lots of labor - The tobacco growers needed to find a source of
cheap labor - The settlers first got their labor by recruiting
English and Irish laborers as indentured servants - Three-quarters were males between 15 and 24 years
old and mostly from the lower class - Only one in twenty lived long enough to get their
freedom - They were bought, sold, traded, and gambled away
like slaves - Women servants were sent to the fields and often
subject to sexual abuse - When a servant got pregnant, one to two years
were added to their service
18- Chesapeake Bay warrior
- (c. 1585)
19Hostilities with the Powhatan
- The dramatic rise in population in Jamestown
meant that the settlers would need more land - This put the Jamestown colony on a collision
course with the Chesapeake tribe of Indians - Anglo-Powhatan War (1610-1614)
- In August 1610, the English attacked the village
of Paspahegh - Over 50 natives were killed or injured
- The English captured the weroances wife and
children - When the English returned to their boat, they
threw the children overboard and shot them in the
water - Killing of women and children were not tolerated
in Native American culture
20Hostilities with the Powhatan
- Throughout the war, the settlers used Irish
Tactics - Colonists raided Indian villages, burned houses,
confiscated provisions, and torched cornfields - The Pamunkey Indians were led by Opechancanough
and laid siege to Jamestown - The natives had the advantage and were almost
able to drive out the English - Reinforcements arrived from England just in time
to free Jamestown and lead a counter-offensive
against the Pamunkeys
21Hostilities with the Powhatan
- In 1614, Chief Powhatans daughter, Pocahontas,
married John Rolfe - This led to a temporary stoppage in the war
- However, as long as the settlers continued to
demand land, tensions would remain high between
them and the natives - In 1617, Chief Powhatan died and was replaced by
Opechancanough - His main purpose was to get the settlers to
abandon Jamestown
22Hostilities with the Powhatan
- In 1621, two English servants murdered Nemattanew
- He was a Powhatan religious prophet and a
favorite of Opechancanough - This was the trigger to the start of the next
phase of the war - Second Anglo-Powhatan War (1622-1632)
- Good Friday Massacre (March 22, 1622)
- Opechancanough led a surprise attack against
Jamestown - Over 400 settlers were killed, more than one
quarter of the population - Crops and buildings were destroyed and cattle
killed
23- A 1622 engraving of the Good Friday Massacre
24Hostilities with the Powhatan
- The attack led to the bankruptcy of the Virginia
Company - The king annulled their charter in 1624, making
Virginia a royal colony but allowing elected
House of Burgesses to remain - The Virginians saw the natives as an obstacle to
be removed from the path of English settlement - Launched annual military operations against
Indians - Treaty of 1632 created a native reservation
that was not to be settled by the English - In 1644, Opechancanough made a last ditch effort
to remove the settlers - He was close to 100 years old at this time
25Hostilities with the Powhatan
- On April 18, 1644, Opechancanough attacked
Jamestown - Close to 500 setters were killed
- This was not as devastating a blow as the 1622
attack - There were over 8,000 settlers at this point
while the Powhatan tribes had diminished in size
and power - By June, the settlers turned to offensive
- Opechancanough was captured and killed by the
English - The Powhatan were not able to defeat the settlers
- Treaty of 1646
- It moved the natives off their land and
distinguished Indian land from white settlement
land - It also ended the tribal power of all the nearby
natives
26- George Calvert, First Lord of Baltimore
- (1579-1632)
27Settling of Maryland
- Maryland was the other colony on the Chesapeake
- George Calvert, Lord Baltimore (1579-1632)
- He wanted to create a safe haven for Catholics
- It was also designed to recreate the manor dotted
countryside of northern England in the New World - Unfortunately, he died before his dream could be
fulfilled - In 1632, Lord Baltimores son, Caecilius Calvert,
was granted the charter for Maryland - It was named after King Charles Is wife,
Henrietta Maria - Guaranteed proprietor control over all branches
of government - As time went on, Baltimore was forced to abandon
most of this control
28Settling of Maryland
- Because there were not enough Catholic settlers
to help the colony survive, it was opened up to
Protestants as well - Settlers began arriving in 1634 and immediately
ignored Calverts plans to create his fathers
haven - The 3,000-6,000 acre estate plan was abandoned
- They began importing indentured servants and
growing tobacco - They also governed themselves locally as much as
possible - By 1650 colony had population of 600 but by 1700
population was 33,000
29- Chesapeake colonies in 1640
30Everyday Life on the Chesapeake
- Life in Chesapeake was dismal
- Only a minority of the population could marry and
rear a family - Three times as many men as women
- Marriages were fragile within about seven years,
a husband or wife was likely to die - Death claimed half the children before they
reached adulthood - Widows often remarried quickly
- Population increase prevented by imbalanced sex
ratio - 3570 colonists to Virginia, 16191622
- Men outnumbered women 61 after 1619
31Everyday Life on the Chesapeake
- This ultimate led to complex families
- Further destabilized by large numbers of
indentured servants - Contagious disease killed settlers
- In 1618, Virginia population numbered 700
- 16181622, 3000 immigrated
- In 1622, Virginia population numbered 1240
- Major infrastructure was slow to form
- Included churches and schools
- Most lived in crude houses without interior
partitions - Even prosperous planters did not construct
substantial homes until a century after colonys
founding
32- Sir William Berkeley
- Governor of Virginia (1660-1677)
33Growing Tensions in Virginia
- Prior to 1675 there were many problems affecting
the settlement in Virginia - One of these was land hunger
- This was the increasing need to acquire more land
to satisfy the population - The wealthy owned most of the best land which
left very little for the poorer sections of the
population - There was also increasing dissatisfaction with
declining tobacco prices, rising taxes, and lack
of opportunity - Tensions also increased between the natives and
the settlers
34Growing Tensions in Virginia
- In July 1675, the Doeg tribe raided the
plantation of Thomas Matthews - It was based on Matthews not paying the tribe for
certain goods - A group of frontiersmen led to an attack on the
Susquehannock in retaliation - They attacked the wrong tribe
- Governor William Berkeley called an investigation
into the attack - Many people refused to listen to him because they
supported the attack
35Bacons Rebellion
- The retaliation led to more large scale Indian
raids against the settlers - In the winter of 1675/6, the Susquehannock
attacked and killed 36 Virginians - Now Berkeley was calling for restraint on both
sides - Nathaniel Bacon (c.1640-1676)
- A wealthy colonist who decided to take matters
into his own hands - Led a group of yeoman farmers wanting land and
revenge - In the spring of 1676, he led an attack against
the friendly Appomattox tribe on accusations of
stealing corn - Berkeley refused to sanction the attack
36Bacons Rebellion
- Berkeley wanted to keep relations with the native
populations on friendly terms - So he gave them weapons to protect themselves
- To ease the settlers, he called the Long Assembly
in March 1676 - War was declared on the natives who were
considered the enemy - A strong defensive zone was set up around the
state of Virginia to protect the settlers - The assembly also raised taxes to pay for the
army to protect the area
37Bacons Rebellion
- Berkeley then sent militiamen to get Bacon
- Bacon fled into the woods with his men
- Bacon went on to attack the Occaneechee Indians
on the Roanoke River and took their store of
beaver pelts - Berkeley offered Bacon a pardon if he turned
himself in and returned to England to be tried - House of Burgesses overturned that and stated
Bacon must beg for the Governors forgiveness - Many members of the House were sympathetic to
Bacons cause - High taxes, increase in governors powers at
expense of local officials, monopoly of governor
and his friends on Native American trade made
Berkeley unpopular
38Bacons Rebellion
- In order to gather support for his side, Berkeley
called for elections for a new House of Burgesses - He tried to rally public support by extending the
vote to all freemen, not just landowners - The plan backfired as Bacon was elected to the
House - This showed how popular Bacon was
- Bacon apologized to the Governor and was pardoned
- During the Assembly of June 1676, Bacon pushed
for more colonial reforms and actions against the
natives - When Berkeley refused, Bacon had troops take the
city and the governor was forced to flee
39Bacons Rebellion
- Declaration of the People of Virginia (June 30,
1676) - Bacon stated that Berkeley was corrupt, played
favorites and protected the Indians for his own
selfish purposes - On September 19, 1676, when Berkeley attempted to
retake Jamestown, Bacon burned it to the ground - Bacon died on October 26, 1676 of "Bloodie Flux"
and "Lousey Disease" (body lice) - Most likely cause of death was dysentery
- It is believed his soldiers burned his body
because it was never found
40Bacons Rebellion
- This brought an end to the rebellion
- Ironically, this occurred just as 1100 troops
headed to colony from England - Berkeley hanged 23 rebel leaders but also granted
numerous pardons - Bacons Rebellion encouraged uprisings in other
colonies - In North Carolina, rebels drove the governor from
power and temporarily seized control - In Maryland, small planters tried to seize the
government and two leaders were hanged
41Bacons Rebellion
- Effects of the Rebellion
- Prejudice and hatred of the natives became
commonplace in Virginia - Most of Bacons reforms were annulled by the
emerging planter aristocracy - More land was opened up by the war for the
settlers which in turn relieved social tension - Tension was further relieved by shift from
indentured servants to slaves - This lead to racially divided rather than
economically divided society
42- Nathaniel Bacon
- (c.1640-1676)
43Transition to Slave Labor
- The English first looked to Native Americans as a
source of labor - However, disease and the determination of the
tribes made them difficult to subjugate - For most of 17th century, the colonists relied on
white indentured labor - Beginning in 1610, a few Africans entered the
Chesapeake colonies - As late as 1671 there were still fewer than 3,000
Africans in Virginia - Only in last quarter of 17th century did labor
force shift to black slaves
44Transition to Slave Labor
- Reasons for shift to slave labor
- Rising commercial power of England increased
their participation in the slave trade - Allowed southern planters to purchase slaves more
readily and cheaply starting in 1680s - Supply of white servants began drying up
- Bacons Rebellion encouraged search for more
pliant labor force - Early African slaves were brought over as bond
servants - Worked a term of labor and then were set free
- Once free, they could buy land and hire out labor
- Their children, like those of white indentured
servants, were born free
45Transition to Slave Labor
- Chesapeake planters gradually began to tighten
descriptions of slavery - They ended all rights of Africans and established
Black Codes of behavior - Over time, Africans lost more and more freedoms
- In 1640s, Virginia forbade all blacks from
carrying firearms - In 1660s, marriages between white women and black
servants were outlawed - By end of century, free blacks were pushed to
margins of society - Slavery was now associated with black skin and
slaves were seen as property - Eventually, slavery became a hereditary state
46Transition to Slave Labor
- The main step in dehumanization of Africans was
hereditary lifetime slavery - Mothers condition passed to child
- Slavery was not only a system of forced labor but
a pattern of human relationships enforced by law - Black codes prevented slaves from testifying in
court, engaging in commercial activity, holding
property, congregating in public, traveling
without permission, or legally marrying or
becoming parents
47 48The Massachusetts Colony
- Since the early 1500s, fishermen had worked off
the coasts of Cape Cod and Maine - In 1614, Captain John Smith coined the term New
England while he was hunting whales off the
coast - Some of the people who settled in New England in
the early 1600s did so to build a more religious
society - Dedicated to transforming a corrupt world
- Belief in special mission
- Attempt to banish religious diversity
- The religious situation in England made it
difficult for those who were not Anglican to
practice their faith
49Pilgrims
- Act of Uniformity (1559)
- Made it illegal not to attend the official Church
of England services - Conducting unofficial services was subject to
imprisonment - Hampton Court Conference (1604)
- James I was not willing to allow the Puritans or
other Separatists to be independent from the
Church of England - The Pilgrims were a separatist movement
- They were led by Robert Clyfton, who was a parson
in Nottinghamshire from 1586 to 1605 - In 1605, Clyfton was stripped of his position as
parson and was replaced by an Anglican minister - In 1606, the Archbishop began a campaign to drive
out all Papists and Separatists out of the
country
50Pilgrims
- The Pilgrims attempted to migrate to Amsterdam, a
more tolerant city - They were unable to get necessary papers to leave
England - They tried to bribe their way onto a ship in 1607
but were all arrested - A second attempt was made in the Spring 1608
- An armed contingent showed up before the women
and children could board - The men were able to get the ship out in time but
those left behind were arrested - Ultimately, 150 members total made it to Amsterdam
51Pilgrims
- The situation in Amsterdam did not turn out any
better - The combination of the lack of opportunity,
language barriers, and the threat of Spanish
retaliation in the Netherlands prompted the
Puritans to seek a better location - On June 19, 1619, the Puritans were able to
negotiate a charter with the London Company - King James would not officially recognize them as
an English colony - The charters finalization was changed and
delayed numerous times - They were finally were given a land grant in New
England
52Pilgrims
- Not everyone could settle personal matters by the
time of the voyage - It was decided that the young and strong would
make the first passage - Two ships were purchased the Speedwell and the
Mayflower - William Brewster would lead the American
congregation in the New World - They were forced to stop at Plymouth, England
because the Speedwell was taking on water - The boat was sold and part of that crew was taken
aboard the Mayflower
53Pilgrims
- They set sail again on September 6, 1620
- One crewman and one passenger died en route
- A child was born en route and named Oceanus
- Land was spotted on November 10, 1620
- Pilgrims had hoped to sail down to the Hudson
area but encountered reefs and shoals too
difficult to pass - Decided to land at Provincetown the next day
- Exploration groups found native graves and
unoccupied buildings, which they quickly
scavenged through - They attributed this booty to Gods good
providence
54Pilgrims on Cape Cod
- By December 1620, most of the settlers were sick
with scurvy - First contact with the native Nauset tribe was
made on December 20, 1620 - They fled when they saw the settlers
- The next day, the natives returned and lobbed
arrows at the settlers until the settlers got
their guns and returned fire - Explorers traveled farther west and discovered
the abandoned village of Patuxet - It was proof that the local natives had been
affected by smallpox and were thus weakened - They also found a suitable location for a
permanent settlement in present day Plymouth
55Pilgrims in Plymouth
- First permanent settlement took root in 1620 at
New Plymouth - They were ill-prepared for harsh winter
encountered upon arrival in November 1620 - Half of the colonists, including 13 of the 18
married women died - William Bradford became governor of the Plymouth
Colony in 1621 - Bradford signed a peace treaty with Massasoit of
the local Wampanoag tribe on March 22, 1621
56Pilgrims in Plymouth
- In the autumn of 1621 they celebrated a three-day
harvest feast with the native Wampanoag people - Without their help, the Pilgrims would not have
survived the winter of 1620/1 - Over time, more and more people, including
non-Pilgrims came to settle the land - One of the larger groups were the Puritans
- In 1691, the colony was absorbed by Massachusetts
Bay Colony
57- Puritans come to the New World
58Puritans
- The Puritans were Protestants in England who
followed Calvinism - Their beliefs
- Believed they were The Elect, those predestined
for salvation - Stressed hard work as a primary method of serving
God - Organized themselves into religious congregations
- Each member hoped for personal salvation but also
supported others in their quest - Assumed responsibility for coercing and
controlling unconverted people around them
59Puritans
- Adherents to the Puritan movement
- Wanted to purify the Church of England
- Hoped that religion would provide an antidote to
the unsettling changes taking place in England - Feared the crumbling of traditional restraints of
English society - Wanted to preserve the ideal of community and the
belief that people were bound together by
reciprocal rights and responsibilities - Puritans clashed with James I and Charles I
- By 1629, many felt ready to expatriate to the New
World if it meant religious freedom
60Puritans
- They believed that God intended for them to go to
the New World - This way they would be able to carry their
religious and social reforms beyond the reach of
the persecuting authorities - A declining economy added to their discouragement
about England - In 1629, the Puritan-controlled Massachusetts Bay
Company received a charter from Charles I - In 1630, the Puritans arrived in Boston
61The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Their intention was to establish communities of
pure Christians who collectively swore a covenant
with God - They were determined to set up a nation under
God in the New World - Those who settled there were willing to give up
certain freedoms to get religious freedom - Their first winter (1630/1631) was extremely
harsh - More than 200 of first 700 settlers perished
while 100 returned to England
62The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- The colony grew due to steady flow of immigrants
who were fleeing religious persecution - By the end of 1631, there were 2,000 colonists
- Expanded into Rhode Island and Connecticut
- Thrived because were predominantly families with
appropriate skills and a strong work ethic - From 1630 to 1642 over 18,000 colonizers came to
New England - Not all of them were Puritans
- Their economy was based on free labor
- It focused on agriculture, fishing, timbering and
trading for beaver with local Native Americans
63The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- The Puritans established a representative
democracy - Free male church members (freemen) annually
elected its officials including the governor - Their assembly was composed of two houses
- General Court - Voted and selected two deputies
from each town - Councilors This one was composed of the
governors assistants - Consent of both houses was required to pass laws
64The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Massachusetts Body of Liberties (1641)
- It was the first code of laws set down in the
colony - Reflected the combination of religious beliefs
and laws - It included such things as freedom from military
draft, monopolies, and restrictions upon hunting - In 1636, Harvard was founded
- The first printing press was established there in
1638 - In 1642, the Massachusetts school law was passed
- Requiring that every male child learn how to read
and write - This way they would be able to read the Bible and
understand the laws
65The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Even with such advanced movements, the Puritans
still suffered internal tensions - Thomas Morton (c. 1579-1647)
- Founded Merry Mount (Near Quincy, MA) in 1626
- Wanted to create a utopian community where
every man was a freeman - He also encouraged trading with the native
populations - This including giving them salt to preserve food
- Pilgrims condemned Morton as a heathen
- Morton was known for his drinking and
fraternizing with the Native Americans - He also celebrated a May Day festival, which was
highly frowned upon because of its ties to pagan
religions
66The Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Puritans did not like him either
- May have been due to the fact that Merry Mount
was the fastest growing colony in New England - In May 1628, Morton held a second May Day
festival - He was arrested by Miles Standish, thrown in the
stockades and then exiled from the colony - Morton returned to the colony two years later but
was rearrested and banished - Governor William Bradford wrote
- They... set up a May-pole, drinking and dancing
about it many days together, inviting the Indian
women, for their consorts, dancing and frisking
together (like so many fairies, or furies rather)
and worse practices.
67- Morton and friends erecting a may pole
68Roger Williams (c.1603-1683)
- Roger Williams (c.1603-1683)
- A Puritan minister who emigrated to Massachusetts
in 1630 - When he arrived he had certain problems with the
Puritans there - Williams considered himself a Separatist
- He wanted complete severance with the Church of
England - Puritans still considered themselves to be a part
of the CoE - Puritans combined religion and government
- Williams believed in Soul Liberty People
should have freedom of opinion on religious
matters - He argued that government officials should
confine themselves to civil affairs and not
interfere with religious matters - He was against mandatory worship
69Roger Williams (c.1603-1683)
- He also charged the Puritans with illegally
intruding on Native American lands - In 1636, the colony issued a Decree of Banishment
against Williams - Williams fled with followers and founded
Providence in what would become Rhode Island - He named it Providence because God had taken care
of him and his followers and saw that he was
brought to this new land - He set up a government that expressly provided
for religious liberty and a separation between
civil and ecclesiastical authority
70- Narragansett Indians receiving Roger Williams
71Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
- Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
- Her father was Francis Marbury, an outspoken
Deacon at Christ Church in Cambridge - He believed that most CoE ministers wanted their
jobs for political reasons, not religious - He had been arrested numerous times for
subversive words of dissent - As a child, Anne studied the Bible
- She was not afraid to be assertive or to question
the principles of the church - In 1634, Anne Hutchison, her husband and her
children moved to Massachusetts to seek religious
freedom
72Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
- She found that the colonies did not have the
religious freedom she sought - Instead she found very strict rules set by the
Puritan church - Was not allow to express her faith in her own
personal way - The oppressed had become the oppressors
- She began to lead Bible study classes for women
- Discussed the Scriptures and review the sermons
- Gave her a forum to discuss her opinions with
others and over time became popular - She believed in salvation through faith alone
- Its your faith, not what you do, that will
save you - She denounced that good work and restriction of
behavior was required for salvation
73Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
- She began to suggest that some members of the
clergy were not among the Elect - Elect were those who were predestined to go
to Heaven - If they were not among the Elect, they were not
entitled to any spiritual authority - She questioned the role of women in Puritan
society - Puritans believed that giving women the freedom
to think the same as giving them to freedom to
sin - This would unravel the fabric of society
- By 1636 Boston was dividing into two camps
- Those who supported Hutchinson
- Those who followed the strict guidelines of the
Puritan church
74Anne Hutchinson (1591-1643)
- There were many in the colony who were unhappy
with the Puritan lifestyle - The strict Puritans saw her as offensive
- She questioned the subordinate position of women
- In August 1637, Hutchinson was put on trial
- Convicted of sedition and contempt in a civil
trial for holding subversive gatherings - She was banished from the colony
- In March 1638, the First Church of Boston
excommunicated her - Hutchinson and some of her followers went to
Rhode Island - She eventually settled in the Bronx where she
died after an attack by the Mahican Indians
75 76Relations Between Puritans and Natives
- Puritan settlers had a very negative impression
about the native populations - The original Massachusetts Charter talked about
converting natives - However, Winthrops instructions were to train
all men in use of firearms because the natives
were seen as a threat - This was a change from the English policy in the
16th century which required the disarming of the
population to quell public disorder - Magistrates attempted to quell the threat by
the natives - They threatened to deport any colonist selling
arms to the Indians or training them in their use - They also prevented natives from entering Puritan
towns
77Relations Between Puritans and Natives
- Initial Puritan conflict was sporadic because the
Natives had been devastated by disease - In 1616, English fisherman triggered an outbreak
of smallpox and respiratory viruses that killed ¾
of the 125,000 population - Puritans saw this as God intervening on their
side - Natives originally welcomed Puritans
- They had surplus land and hoped that through
trade, they would gain English protection against
tribal enemies to the north
78Relations Between Puritans and Natives
- Puritans did attempt to Christianize natives
- Believed that God would punish them for not
civilizing the natives - Tried to make the savages strictly accountable
to their ordinances - This succeeded with smaller, disease-ravaged
tribes of eastern Massachusetts but not in the
larger populated areas - As the population increased, the settlers began
looking at tribal land that had not been affected
by disease - This lead to increasing conflict
- During the 1630s, the Connecticut River Valley
became a hotbed of tension between settlers and
natives
79 80Pequot War of 1637
- The Pequot Indians, one of many tribes in the
region, were aggressively extending their control
over the area - They were fighting the Wampanoag, Narraganset,
Algonquians, and Mohegan tribes - Those tribes, in turn, were fighting with one
another for dominance and control of trade with
the settlers - In 1634, the one of the Pequot tributaries, the
West Niantic, murdered privateer John Stone - The Niantic thought he had been a Dutch trader
involved in the murder of a local sachem - Stone was a privateer and smuggler and probably
had been kidnapping natives to sell as slaves
81Pequot War of 1637
- The Puritans knew of Stones actions
- They still considered his murder one of many
crimes committed by the Pequot - Sassacus, the Pequot chief sachem, wanted to
negotiate peace terms with the Massachusetts Bay
Colony - The Colony was willing to do this as long as
certain requirements were met - The Pequot were required to hand over Stones
killers - They had to allow English purchases of land and
settlement in the Connecticut Valley - And they had to pay a substantial restitution of
four hundred fathoms of wampum, forty beaver
skins, and thirty otter skins
82Pequot War of 1637
- The Pequot were not going to agree to such an
exorbitant sum - The Puritans promised to send them a trader to
open up trade with them - John Oldham, the trader, was murdered en route by
the Niantic on Block Island - They were a tributary group of the Narragansett
- The Bay Colony sent John Endicott out to seek
retribution against the Block Islanders - Most of the Niantic in the village escaped
- Endicott burned down the village and crops and
confiscated their winter food supply
83Pequot War of 1637
- Endicott then attacked a Pequot village near Fort
Saybrook - Demanded old payment for the death of Stone and a
new one for Oldham - Pequot stalled and were able to escape before
Endicott burned down their village and crops and
took their winter stores - April 23, 1637 the Pequot retaliated by raiding
the town of Wethersfield - They killed nine settlers, including three women,
and kidnapping two girls - This gave the English the excuse for a full scale
war of extermination against the Pequots
84Pequot War of 1637
- Mystic Massacre (May 26, 1637)
- John Mason along with 400 men led a surprise
attack on Misistuck (Mystic) - Most of the Pequot men were not in the village as
they were preparing a raid on Hartford - Mason ordered the village to be set on fire,
killing almost all the natives in the village
(estimated to be between 600-700) - The remaining Pequot fled the area to seek refuge
with the southern Algonquian peoples - Mohegan and Narragansett tribes hunted down those
who fled
85Pequot War of 1637
- In June 1637, John Mason fought the largest group
of Pequot refugees near present-day Fairfield - 180 Pequot were killed or captured
- Puritan colonial officials continued to encourage
the hunting down of the remaining Pequot - Treaty of Hartford (1637)
- The victorious Mohegan and Narragansett tribes
met at the General Court of Connecticut - They agreed on the disposition of the Pequot and
their lands - The surviving Pequots were sold into slavery
- Colonists were able to claim the land on the
basis of this being a just war
86 87Growing Tensions
- After the Pequot War, there were mounting
tensions between the Puritans and the Natives - There were three major tribal powers left in
southern New England - The Narragansett, Mohegan, and Wampanoag
- The Puritans continued to seek land in their
territories - By 1670s, New England population had reached
50,000 - There was a growing dependence on English goods
by the Wampanoag - They were willing to sell their land to get them
88Growing Tensions
- Beginning in 1646, John Eliot led a campaign to
Christianize the natives - Over 1,000 Native Americans converted and settled
into numerous praying villages - There they gave up their savage ways and were
civilized - The policy of the Puritans to convert the natives
led to even more tensions between the English and
the natives - Many tribes refused to allow missionaries into
their villages - In 1662, Metacomet became the Grand Sachem of the
Wampanoag Confederacy - The English called him King Philip, HRH Crown
Prince of Rhode Island
89- Metacomet
- aka King Philip
- (c.1639-1676)
90King Philips War (1675-1676)
- King Philip began a resistance movement against
the Puritan settlers - He had an open distrust of the English
- He believed that the Wampanoag had not only given
up their territory to the Puritans but also their
political rights as well - In 1675, John Sassmon, a Praying Indian
translator was murdered - He had allegedly just relayed information about a
pan-tribal attack the colonists - The Puritans arrested three Wampanoag and
executed them for his murder in June 1675 - Many of the Wampanoag believed they had been set
up by the settlers
91King Philips War (1675-1676)
- In response, a band of Pokanoket Indians attacked
a number of homesteads in the Swansea area - They laid siege to the town and burned it down
- The English, in return, set up an expedition to
destroy the Wampanoag town at Mount Hope (present
day Bristol, RI) - By that autumn, the Wampanoag were joined by many
tribes including Narragansett - By November 1675, natives had destroyed
settlements in the entire upper Connecticut River
valley - This was done through a series of raids
- The settlers, in turn, retaliated against native
settlements
92King Philips War (1675-1676)
- Great Swamp Massacre (December 16, 1675)
- English attacked the Narragansett stronghold near
South Kingstown, RI - 300 Narragansett were killed and their food
stores destroyed - By March 12, 1676, the native forces were less
than 20 miles from Boston - Attacked but could not overtake the Plymouth
Plantation - Natives almost succeeded in driving out the
English - Plagued with food shortages, disease, and lack of
ammunition - Metacomets allies began to desert him
- August 12, 1676 Metacomet was killed in battle
- His head was displayed in Plymouth for 25 years
93King Philips War (1675-1676)
- The war was very costly for both sides
- Thousands of colonists and natives were dead
- Out of the 90 Puritan towns, more than have had
been attacked, and 13 of those were completely
destroyed - Whole native villages were destroyed and their
populations killed, including a few praying
towns - Cost of war was over 150,000 which exceeded the
value of all personal property in New England - Because of the devastation to the settlers, they
did not expand their territory for another 40
years - There was now plenty of land to be settled on
94- King Philips War (1675-1676)
95Slavery and Economy in New England
- New Englands crops were not labor intensive
- Coerced labor never became the foundation of its
workforce - Slavery did take root in cities where slaves
worked as artisans and domestic servants - The economy of New England was tied in heavily to
the Atlantic commercial network - That depended on slavery and slave trade
- New England merchants participated heavily in
trade - This included over half the merchant fleet of
Newport by 1750 - Became more involved as New England became the
center for distilling rum (Rum Triangle)
96Changes to England
- English Civil War (1642-1649)
- Between royalist/Anglicans and parliamentarians/Pu
ritans - Charles I was beheaded in 1649
- Commonwealth and Protectorate (1649-1659)
- Under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell
- Puritans were in charge of the government and
were now able to reform religion and society in
England - Because of this, there was end of migration to
the New World - In 1643, the Confederation of New England was
formed - It was designed to coordinate the Puritan
governments of New England - Rhode Island was excluded
97 98French Conflicts with Natives
- In the 1620s, the Dutch began to settle the
Hudson River area - They traded with the Iroquois for fur in exchange
for firearms - By the 1640s, the beaver had been almost
exterminated from the northern regions of New
York - The Iroquois turned their attentions to the Huron
and Algonquin beaver supply - The Huron had already been decimated by disease
spread by Jesuit priests which made them an easy
target - In 1647, the Iroquois attacked Huron villages
along the St. Lawrence River - They hoped this would disrupt the French fur
trade - The attacks started off with small villages
99French Conflicts with Natives
- In March 1649, the Iroquois attacked the
mission-villages of St. Ignace and St. Louis - The towns were destroyed
- Hundreds of Huron were killed along with two
Jesuit missionaries - By the 1650s, the Iroquois began to attack the
French directly - The Oneida and Onondaga had friendly relations
with the French but were imposed upon by the more
powerful Mohawk - In 1661, the French King Louis XV declared war
against the Iroquois - This starts the French-Iroquois War
100French-Iroquois Wars
- In 1664, the Dutch lost their control of New
Netherlands to the English - With this, the Iroquois lost valuable allies
- In 1665, the French king made New France a royal
colony - This was mainly to protect the colony against any
possible attack by the English - French troops were sent that year to the colony
as reinforcements for the settlers - This was due to the threat of the Iroquois and as
well as the English to the south - This marks the turning point of the war
101French-Iroquois Wars
- In January 1666, the French captured and
imprisoned the Mohawk Chief Canaqueese - He was known as the Flemish Bastard because his
father had been Dutch - In a series of attacks in September 1666, the
French traveled down to Lake Champlain - There they found a number of recently abandoned
Iroquois villages - Instead of chasing after the Iroquois, they
burned the villages and crops - This led to the death of many Iroquois due to
starvation that winter
102French-Iroquois Wars
- By 1667, the Iroquois had been decimated by
smallpox and starvation - They sued for peace
- Many of the French troops called in to help with
the war remained to settle in Quebec and Montreal
after it - The settlers then set up their own militia to
protect the settlements - In 1683, Governor General Louis de Buade decided
to expand New Frances fur trade - He did so by moving into areas still controlled
by the Iroquois
103French-Iroquois Wars
- La Petit Guerre Little War
- The French began using the same tactics on the
Iroquois that they had used on them - Long silent expeditions through the forests
- Sudden violent descents on the villages
- Inhabitants were slaughtered or taken as
prisoners - French also used these tactics on English
settlements as well - Grande Paix (1698)
- It was signed by the English, the French, and 39
Indian chiefs - Iroquois would act as a buffer between the
English and the French - Iroquois would have to stop raiding and allow
refugee tribes to return to the area
104 105New Netherland
- Henry Hudson first explored the Hudson River
valley in 1609 - He did this with the Dutch East India Company
- Land patent was granted to the New Netherland
Company in 1614 - The Dutch settled significant regions of the
mid-Atlantic coast of North America - Governors Island was the first Dutch settlement
in 1624 - Fort Amsterdam was built in 1625
- They then expanded north to the Connecticut River
valley and south and east to the Delaware River
valley
106New Netherland
- New Netherland was small, profitable, and
multicultural - Dutch established lucrative fur trade and got
along with Iroquois - The members of the Protestant Dutch Reformed
Church believed in conversion through example
rather than force - Dutch government required that the colony
followed the homeland law of religious plurality - This allowed members of other churches (i.e.
Quakers, Catholics, and Jews) to settle there - Dutch settlers were few in number
- Never more than 10,000 at its peak
- This is compared to the 50,000 each in Chesapeake
and New England in 1650 - Their commercial and naval powers were impressive
107England Challenges the Dutch
- England and the Netherlands became bitter
commercial rivals in mid-1600s in Europe - Dutch owned 16,000 of Europes 20,000 merchant
ships - Dutch had amassed vast business ventures spread
around the world - Peter Stuyvesant, the Director-General of the
colony, approached the English Bay Colony to
negotiate new borders with them - Treaty of Hartford (1650)
- Between the Dutch and English
- Dutch gave up most of Connecticut to have Long
Island - Dutch West India company refused to recognize the
treaty
108England Challenges the Dutch
- Starting in 1650, the English were ready to
challenge the Dutchs maritime supremacy - First Anglo-Dutch War (1652-1654)
- This was fought entirely at sea
- The English gained control of the seas around
England - They forced the Dutch to accept Cromwells
Navigation Act of 1651 which prevented trade with
the Dutch - On August 27, 1664 the English take New Amsterdam
- They met no resistance
- Dutch there had received no help from the Dutch
West India Company against Indian attacks - Part of the transfer deal included that the Dutch
settlers would retain their freedom of religion
109England Challenges the Dutch
- The Dutch continued to trade to English colonies
while the English wanted to stop the Dutch trade
powerhouse - In 1665, the English began having financial
problems - Great Plague of London and the Great Fire of
London (1665-1666) financially strained the
government - Sailors had to be paid with debt certificates,
not money - English financed their navy with goods and
supplies captured from Dutch ships - Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665-1667)
- In June 1667, the Dutch attacked the English
fleet in port at Medway, England - What was left of the English fleet was either
destroyed or taken by the Dutch
110England Challenges the Dutch
- Treaty of Breda (July 31, 1667)
- English were able to keep New Netherland
- Dutch kept the sugar plantations in Suriname and
their nutmeg monopoly in the East Indies - Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672-1674)
- In August 1673, the Dutch recaptured New
Amsterdam with 21 ships - New Amsterdam was renamed New Orange
- This time the English were aligned with the
French and the German bishops of Munster and
Cologne