Unit II 1607-1763 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Unit II 1607-1763

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Title: Unit II 1607-1763


1
Unit II1607-1763
  • Part 3

2
Three Regions
  • Southern
  • Middle
  • New England

3
Southern
  • One crop farming rice, tobacco, indigo, cotton
    after 1793
  • Plantation System need for cheap labor
  • Indentured Servitude
  • Slavery after Bacons Rebellion
  • Piedmont area small farms, poor, far from water
  • Navigable rivers

4
Middle
  • Large family farms estates
  • Produced grain, livestock
  • Navigable rivers no need for towns

5
New England
  • Crumby land, climate
  • Lumbering, ship building, fishing
  • Small family farms
  • Religious issues set New England apart

6
Colonial Society Much Social Mobility
  • The Upper Crust Large landowners in south mid
    section, NE merchants, ship owners, clergy
  • Puritan work ethicGod and material gain
  • Lowest class Indentured Servants often traded
    passage for years of service BUT no stigma
  • In 1660 13 of the 28 members of the House of
    Burgesses had been indentured servants

7
Slavery
  • First here in 1619brought by a Dutch ship to
    Jamestown but no one interested
  • Not commonplace until after Bacons Rebellion
  • Most slaves were used in MINING
  • Came to America via the Middle Passage
  • Savage treatment
  • 30 died on the way
  • 11 million totalforced migration

8
Slavery
  • Slaves not protected by tradition, law or the
    Church
  • 1663 in Maryland All African slaves were slaves
    for life
  • Citizens could not free slaves if they wanted to
  • Children of slaves same status
  • Families were split up
  • Marriages not considered legally binding

9
Slaves
  • Slavery was considered absolutely necessary for
    the southern economy
  • Education of slaves was forbidden in most of the
    South
  • BUT slaves were not cheap. As valuable property,
    they were treated fairly well (considering)

10
Slaves
  • By 1672, the British had taken over the slave
    trade (asiento) from the Spanish
  • Monopoly was given to the Royal African Co. by
    the crown
  • Many northerners were morally opposed to slavery
    (Quakers)
  • Before cotton was king, more slaves were used in
    the mining industry than on tobacco plantations
  • By the Revolution, Slavery was legal in ALL
    colonies

11
Native Americans
  • 1600 100,000 Native Americans in NE
  • 1675 10,000 leftmostly smallpox
  • English policy was extermination EXCEPT for the
    Iroquois
  • View Natives did not have permanent dwellings
    so no crime in taking their land
  • Puritans believed natives were children of the
    Devil

12
Native Americans
  • Introduced colonists to corn and planting,
    girdling trees, fertilizing, dog issues
  • Natives were more skillful in battle but could
    not organize themselves
  • Were undone by smallpox and rum

13
The English and the Native Americans
  • First major conflict 1637 The Pequot War in
    Conn.
  • 1675 King Philips War in Mass. (Chief Metacomet
    of the Wanpanoaga tribe)
  • The English won in both cases

14
Culture and Education
  • Not much leisure time for the arts
  • Puritans thought most of it was vanity
  • Music, theater were immoral
  • Practical arts OK furniture, baskets, quilting
    BUT not fancyplain and useful
  • Portraits were OK too

15
Noteworthy portrait Painters
  • John Copley
  • Benjamin West
  • By 18th C. architecture was Georgian Style

16
Literature
  • Sermons like Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
    by preacher Jonathan Edwards
  • Histories like A History of the Plymouth
    Plantation by Bradford
  • Diaries, Almanacs, etc
  • Poetry by Anne Bradstreet

17
The Scarlet Letter
  • By Hawthorn
  • Written LATER
  • BUT was a commentary on Puritan New England

18
Education
  • Most important in New England
  • Puritan belief All (even girls) should be able
    to read the Bible
  • 1636 Harvard established to train ministers
  • 1647 Mass. General School Act communities
    taxed to provide for free public schools

19
Education
  • Middle Colonies some schools most through
    religious groups
  • BUT Middle colonies had the widest variety of
    religious denominations
  • South few schools. Farms too spread out. Not
    practical BUT wealthy had governesses and tutors

20
Education
  • All colonial schools were primitive few books,
    worked around the growing season
  • BUT higher proportion of literacy in the colonies
    in America than anywhere else on earth
  • At first universities only to train ministers
  • Later (18th C.) a growing interest in science

21
Universities
  • The Enlightenment caused folks to demand
    university courses in science and universities
    responded
  • Colleges brought men together and served to break
    down local loyalties

22
Religion
  • Greatest variety in the Middle colonies
  • NE Congregationalists and other Protestant
    groups
  • South Anglican and others
  • All religions NOT equal before the law even after
    the Glorious Revolution

23
The First Great Awakening 1730-1744
  • A colony-wide religious revival
  • Salvation through the grace of God
  • Message away from doctrine
  • Preached Hellfire and brimstone
  • J. Edwards and Sinners in the Hands
  • Gilbert Tenant (Presbyterian) in Middle colonies
  • George Whitefield (Methodist) but preached in
    many colonies. He had impressed Benjamin
    Franklin who was a Deist.

24
The First Great Awakening
  • Reduced the sharpness of the differences between
    the colonies
  • People confessed their sins openly
  • Sermons scared them to death
  • By 1744 it was over
  • People joined Anglican church. They were
    embarrassed by their emotional excesses

25
The Enlightenment(The Age of Reason)
  • Emphasized reliance on reason rational thinking
  • Newtons Natural Laws of the universe
  • Adam Smith Supply and demand ARE natural laws of
    economics
  • The well-rounded man Jefferson and Franklin
    (Did they represent the typical American or were
    they exceptional?)

26
Deism
  • The rational religion
  • Accepted the existence of a creator
  • BUT once the universe was created, the Creators
    presence was not necessary as natural laws of the
    universe kept things running.
  • Jefferson, Franklin and most other real students
    of the Enlightenment embraced DeismGod as a
    watchmaker.

27
Science
  • Professorships in science were offered at Wm and
    Mary, Harvard, Kings College (now Columbia)
  • Rittenhouse built the first American Orrery
    (model of the solar system)
  • 25 Americans were elected to the Royal Society to
    Promote Scientific Knowledge

28
The Enlightenment
  • Cotton Mather (one of our foremost experts on
    witches and witchcraft) promoted inoculation
    against smallpox
  • John Bartram (an American) was appointed royal
    botanist to King George III
  • John Locke Man can gain knowledge and power
    over the universe through observation and
    experiment.

29
Newspapers and books
  • Type and paper were expensive so there were few
    subscribers to newspapers, etc, BUT many, many
    readers
  • Peter Zenger 1734 NY brought charges in the
    press against NYs Royal Governor. Was jailed,
    tried but acquitted. Not guilty since charges
    were truea landmark case for freedom of the press

30
The Calendar
  • Until 1752 Dutch, Germans, Swedes and most from
    the continent used the New Style calendar
  • The English used the Julian (old style) calendar
  • A ten-day problem with some holidays
  • The English switched over
  • Also, NE Congregationalists and Delaware Quakers
    had their own version of the Julian
    calendarstripped of pagan references

31
Crime and Punishment
  • Few incarcerationstoo costly to the community
  • Public humiliation or execution instead
  • Funerals more public and social than weddings
  • Recreation sledding, sleigh rides where there
    were horses and snow, hunting, fishing, horse
    racing, bull baiting, cock fighting

32
The Sabbath
  • Celebrated differently depending on where one was
  • Puritans Rigid. Could not grind corn, or work
    at all. The sheriff could not even arrest
    criminals
  • The Dutch taverns were open

33
Trivia
  • Bed and Board (Chairman)
  • Diets (beverages until mid 17th C not much)
  • Trenchers
  • Cutlery
  • Bathing
  • Home Heating
  • Chimney cleaning
  • To crack a smile
  • Marriage Agelower as time went on

34
The Dutch
  • New Netherlands (NY State)
  • New Amsterdam (NY city) (1609)
  • The Patroon System
  • Did not consider the colony worth fighting for
    when the English Duke of York sent soldiers
    (1660s)

35
The Others
  • The Swedes the ax, log cabin
  • The Palatine Germans The connestoga wagon
    (prairie schooner), Christmas
  • The Scots-Irish to the frontier (Penn., Va.
    Backcountry)
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