1 / 17

Social Studies Unit 2

Social Studies Unit 2. Exploration to Early Statehood. What Are We Going to Learn?. Why did Europeans come to North America? How was New Jersey colony divided and settled? Why did the colonies want independence from Britain? Why and how was the new Constitution written?

Download Presentation

Social Studies Unit 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Social Studies Unit 2 Exploration to Early Statehood

  2. What Are We Going to Learn? • Why did Europeans come to North America? • How was New Jersey colony divided and settled? • Why did the colonies want independence from Britain? • Why and how was the new Constitution written? • How did new forms of transportation change New Jersey?

  3. Lesson 5 Vocabulary • immigrant- • A person who comes from another place to live in a country • invention- • Something that has been made for the first time

  4. Lesson 5 Vocabulary • transportation- • Ways to move people and goods from place to place • turnpike- • A road that cost money to use

  5. Lesson 5-New Inventions and Growth • How did new forms of transportation change New Jersey?

  6. Slow Travel • People and good passed through New Jersey everyday on their way to Philadelphia and New York City. • New Jersey had poor transportation though. The roads were poor and there were few bridge, so travel was slow. • A trip across New Jersey could take 3 days!

  7. New Jersey’s Inventors • New inventions (things created for the first time) changed how people, goods, and ideas travel. • 1804- John Stevens, from Hoboken, built a steamboat. • Alfred Veil- helped develop the telegraph. It could send messages instantly!

  8. Question Time! • How did the steamboat change travel? • The steamboat allowed people and good to travel much faster.

  9. New Transportation • To improve land and water routes, NJ built bridges across the Raritan, Passaic, and Hackensack Rivers. • 1801- NJ’s first turnpike connected Morristown with Elizabeth. Turnpikes cost money to use (toll)

  10. Canals • End of 1830’s NJ had two canals. • Morris Canal- provided a water route between the upper Delaware River and the Hudson River. • Delaware & Raritan Canal- linked Trenton and New Brunswick. • Boats on the canals carried coal to factories. • Boats also transported goods and iron ore to Philadelphia and New York City.

  11. Railroads • 1820s John Stevens built a steam-powered train. • 1830s the Camden and Amboy Railroad was running between the towns of Camden and Perth Amboy. • Now it took hours instead of days for people to travel. • Within 30 years, New Jersey had more than 500 miles of railroad track.

  12. Growth of Cities • New factories opened near railroads and canals. • Cities such as Newark and Paterson became centers for manufacturing. • Immigrants from Europe sought jobs in New Jersey. • Many worked in factories, railroads, and canals • As cities became crowded, people moved into towns in the country. • By 1830, there were more than 320,000 people living in New Jersey.

  13. Question Time! • Why did New Jersey’s cities grow? • New Jersey’s cities grew because of improved transportation and increased manufacturing.

  14. Vocabulary Review • Immigrant • Invention • Transportation • turnpike

  15. Lesson Review

  16. Important People John Stevens Alfted Veil

  17. How to Read a Timeline Why it matters: • A Timeline shows the order in which events took place. It also shows the amount of time between events. Seeing events in the order in which they occurred can help you understand how events are connected. • Let’s practice! Turn to page 90

More Related