Title: APUSH Unit 1 Notes
1APUSH Unit 1 Notes
2Early European Exploration, Colonization,
European Economic Influence on Slavery in the
Americas
3Characteristics of early exploration and
settlements in the New World
- New England
- Puritans seeking religious freedom (Europe)
- covenant community based on the principles of
the Mayflower Compact - sought economic opportunity and practiced a form
of direct democracy through town meetings.
4Which 2 of the following cultures do you THINK
will have more characteristics in common?
- Native Americans
- Europeans
- Africans
5Native Americans
- Economy
- Political Organization
- Belief System
- Available Technology
- Culture/Lifestyle
6Europeans
- Economy
- Political Organization
- Belief System
- Available Technology
- Culture/Lifestyle
7Africans
- Economy
- Political Organization
- Belief System
- Available Technology
- Culture/Lifestyle
8Which of the following cultural issues is most
likely to cause problems when these 3 cultures
collide and why?
- Trade problems/wealth/money
- Religious beliefs
- Control of technology
- Concept of land ownership
- Status of women
9- The discovery of the Americas by Europeans
resulted in an exchange of products and resources
between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres - Columbian Exchange
- What things came FROM Europe?
- What things came FROM the New World?
- Triangular trade
- Precious Metals
10Columbian Exchange
- Western Hemisphere agricultural products such as
corn, potatoes, and tobacco changed European
lifestyles. - European horses and cattle changed the lifestyles
of Native Americans - European diseases like smallpox killed many
natives
11 12Items
- Potatoes
- Horses
- Tobacco
- Smallpox
- Tomato
- Zucchini
- Pumpkin
- Squash
- Chili/paprika
- Corn
- Cattle
- Sheep
- Sweet potato
- Coffee
- Sugar cane
- Vanilla bean
- Cocoa beans
- Oranges
- Apples
13Columbian Exchange
- This term refers to the complex exchange of food,
animals, and diseases that happened as a result
of contact between vastly different people when
Europeans came to the Americas.
14Christopher Columbus Columbian Exchange
15Impact of the Columbian Exchange
- Shortage of labor to grow cash crops led to the
use of African slaves. - Slavery was based on race.
- European plantation system in the Caribbean and
the Americas destroyed indigenous economics and
damaged the environment. - The triangular trade linked Europe, Africa, and
the Americas. Slaves, sugar, and rum were
traded.
16Export of precious metals
- Gold and silver (exported to Europe and Asia)
- Impact on indigenous empires of the Americas
- Impact on Spain and international trade
17European Colonization Patterns
SPANISH COLONIZATION PATTERN
18European Colonization Patterns
FRENCH COLONIAL INFLUENCE
19European Colonization Patterns
DUTCH EMPIRE
20European Colonization Patterns
BRITISH EMPIRE
21Close up British Colonies in North America
http//www.socialstudiesforkids.com/graphics/13map
new.htm
If the Hyperlink works, you can click on each
colony and learn more about it!
22COLONY NAME YEAR FOUNDED FOUNDED BY BECAME ROYAL COLONY
Virginia 1607 London Company 1624
Massachusetts 1620 Puritans 1691
New Hampshire 1623 John Wheelwright 1679
Maryland 1634 Lord Baltimore N/A
Connecticut c. 1635 Thomas Hooker N/A
Rhode Island 1636 Roger Williams N/A
Delaware 1638 Peter Minuit and New Sweden Company N/A
North Carolina 1653 Virginians 1729
South Carolina 1663 Eight Nobles with a Royal Charter from Charles II 1729
New Jersey 1664 Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret 1702
New York 1664 Duke of York 1685
Pennsylvania 1682 William Penn N/A
Georgia 1732 James Edward Oglethorpe 1752
23(No Transcript)
24Native American Tribal Locations East Coast
25Native American Tribal Locations to know from p.
9 in Am Pag
- Nez Perce
- Navajo
- Hopi
- Pueblo
- Apache
- Comanche
- Choctaw
- Chickasaw
- Creek
- Cherokee
- Powhatan
- Huron
- Narragansett
- Iroquois
26Native American Tribal Locations Great Plains to
Pacific (see page 9 in AmPAg)
27Characteristics of early exploration and
settlements in the New World
- The Middle Colonies
- settled chiefly by English, Dutch, and
German-speaking immigrants seeking religious
freedom and economic opportunity.
28Characteristics of early exploration and
settlements in the New World
- Virginia and the other Southern colonies
- settled by people seeking economic opportunities
The early Virginia cavaliers were English
nobility who received large land grants in
eastern Virginia from the King of England. - Poor English immigrants --small farmers or
artisans and settled in the Shenandoah Valley or
western Virginia, or as indentured servants
(tobacco plantations)
29Characteristics of early exploration and
settlements in the New World
- Jamestown, established in 1607 by the Virginia
Company of London as a business venture, was the
first permanent English settlement in North
America. - The Virginia House of Burgesses, 1619, was the
first elected assembly in the New World. It is
now known as the General Assembly of Virginia.
30Interactions among Europeans, Africans and
American Indians (First Americans)
- The explorations and settlements often led to
violent conflicts with the American Indians - The Indians lost their traditional territories
and fell victim to diseases carried from Europe.
31Interactions among Europeans, Africans and
American Indians (First Americans)
- French exploration of Canada did not lead to
large-scale immigration from France, and
relations with native peoples were often more
cooperative. - large landholdings in the Southern colonies and
in the Caribbean (agricultural economy) led to
the introduction of slavery in the New World. - The first Africans were brought against their
will to Jamestown in 1619 to work on tobacco
plantations.
32Economic characteristics of the Colonial Period
- The New England colonies developed an economy
based on shipbuilding, fishing, lumbering,
small-scale subsistence farming, and eventually,
manufacturing. - The colonies prospered, reflecting the Puritans
strong belief in the values of hard work and
thrift.
33Economic characteristics of the Colonial Period
- The middle colonies of New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, and Delaware developed economies
based on shipbuilding, small-scale farming, and
trading. - Cities such as New York, Philadelphia, and
Baltimore began to grow as seaports and
commercial centers.
34Economic characteristics of the Colonial Period
- Virginia and the other Southern colonies (for
APwe are saying and MARYLAND) developed
economies in the eastern coastal lowlands based
on large plantations that grew cash crops such
as tobacco, rice, and indigo for export to
Europe. Farther inland, however, in the mountains
and valleys of the Appalachian foothills, the
economy was based on small-scale subsistence
farming, hunting, and trading.
35Economic characteristics of the Colonial Period
- A strong belief in private owner-ship of property
and free enterprise characterized colonial life
36Social characteristics of the colonies
- New Englands colonial society was based on
religious standing. The Puritans grew
increasingly intolerant of dissenters who
challenged the Puritans belief in the connection
between religion and government. - Rhode Island was founded by dissenters fleeing
persecution by Puritans in Massachusetts
RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE
37Social characteristics of the colonies
- The middle colonies were home to multiple
religious groups, including Quakers in
Pennsylvania and Catholics in Maryland, who
generally believed in religious tolerance. - These colonies had more flexible social
structures and began to develop a middle class of
skilled artisans, entrepreneurs (business
owners), and small farmers.
38Social characteristics of the colonies
- Virginia and the Southern colonies social
structure based on family status and the
ownership of land (aristocractic) - Large landowners (eastern lowlands) dominated
colonial government (maintained an allegiance
to England longer than in the other colonies) - In the mountains and valleys further inland--
(subsistence farmers, hunters and traders
of Scotch-Irish and English descent)
39Social characteristics of the colonies
- The Great Awakening was a religious movement
that swept both Europe and the colonies during
the mid-1700s. - It led to the rapid growth of evangelical
religions such as the Methodists and Baptists and
challenged the established religious and
governmental order. - It laid one of the social foundations for the
American Revolution.
40The development of indentured servitude and
slavery
- The growth of a plantation-based agricultural
economy in the hot, humid coastal lowlands of the
Southern colonies required cheap labor on a large
scale. - Some of the labor needs, especially in Virginia,
were met by indentured servants, who were often
poor persons from England, Scotland, or Ireland
who agreed to work on plantations for a period of
time in return for their passage.
41The development of indentured servitude and
slavery
- Most plantation labor needs eventually filled by
the forcible transfer of African slaves - involuntary migration
- some Africans worked as indentured servants,
earned their freedom, and lived as free citizens
during the Colonial Era - over time larger numbers of enslaved Africans
were brought to the Southern colonies via the
Middle Passage
42Labor was Necessary to Make Colonies Profitable
- Forced Labor
- Native Americans
- Africans
- Indentured Servitude
- work off your passage
- 7 years, then you get some land, tools, and seed
to start your own farm.
43Indentured Servitude
- debt bondage
- 3-7 years of service in exchange for passage to
America (or wherever) - Over ½ of all white immigrants to the 13
Britsh-American colonies came as indentured
servants - Legal contract enforced by the courts
44Indentured Servitude
- Legal action against masters was rare (violence,
rape, general abuse) - Terms of service would lengthen for women who
became pregnant - Many suicides
- freedom dues were sometimes paid at the end of
service when they became regular free members of
society
45(No Transcript)
46From Indentured Servitude to Racial Slavery
- All servants imported and brought into the
Country. . . who were not Christians in their
native Country. . . shall be accounted and be
slaves. All Negro, mulatto and Indian slaves
within this dominion. . . shall be held to be
real estate. If any slave resists his master. . .
correcting such slave, and shall happen to be
killed in such correction. . . the master shall
be free of all punishment. . . as if such
accident never happened. - - Virginia General Assembly declaration, 1705
47Slavery/Middle Passage
48Is not the slave trade entirely at war with the
heart of man? And surely that which is begun by
breaking down the barriers of virtue, involves in
its continuance destruction to every principle,
and buries all sentiments in ruin! When you make
men slaves, you... compel them to live with you
in a state of war. ------- Olaudah Equiano,
former slave
49"A people without the knowledge of their past
history, origin and culture is like a tree
without roots!" - Marcus Garvey "Education
is our passport to the future, for tomorrow
belongs to the people who prepare for it
today." - Malcolm X
50The development of indentured servitude and
slavery
- The development of a slavery-based agricultural
economy in the Southern colonies would lead to
eventual conflict between the North and South and
the American Civil War.