1 / 19

Economics, Trade, and Rebellion

Economics, Trade, and Rebellion. Mr. McLaughlin Chapter 1 Section 4. Plantation Economy. Southern Society. Social Classes 1)Wealthy Planters 2) Small farmers 3) Enslaved Africans Economy Based on Tobacco First Successful Cash Crop Grown in Maryland and Virginia

joyce
Download Presentation

Economics, Trade, and Rebellion

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. Economics, Trade, and Rebellion Mr. McLaughlin Chapter 1 Section 4

  2. Plantation Economy

  3. Southern Society • Social Classes • 1)Wealthy Planters • 2) Small farmers • 3) Enslaved Africans • Economy Based on Tobacco • First Successful Cash Crop • Grown in Maryland and Virginia • Indentured servants produced a large amount of Tobacco • South Carolina and Georgia • Rice was a major cash crop • Indigo also became a cash crop

  4. Tenant Farmers

  5. Disparities in Wealth • Plantation Owners – few in numbers • Enormous economic and political influence • Judges, commanded militias, governed councils • Plantations were self sufficient communities • Small farmers – were the majority • Small plots of land and lived in tiny houses • Subsistence farming • Landless Tenant Farmers • Rented land and farming materials from others farmers – limited profits

  6. Bacon’s Rebellion

  7. Bacon’s Rebellion • Gov. Berkeley restricted voting to those who land and antagonized small farmers buy not protecting from Indian attacks • Nathaniel Bacon led a Rebellion against Berkeley’s Gov. • Resented control of wealthy plantation owners • 1676 led series of raids against Indian villages and burned Jamestown settlement • Did win voting rights for non-landowners • Convinced gov. to protect farmers moving westward

  8. Slavery Statistics

  9. The Rise of Slavery • Bacon’s Rebellion spurred the rise of slavery • Fewer Englishmen were willing to become indentured servants • (British) Royal African Company began exporting enslaved Africans making it cheaper for colonists to purchase • Enslaved Africans were often used as collateral for loans

  10. New England Society • Economy • Practiced Subsistence Farming • Crops – Wheat, grain, veggies, apples, cattle, sheep, and pigs • Fishing and Whaling • Lumber and Sawmills – Shipbuilding was cheap • Most English ships were built in colonies • Social Life • Centered in Towns • Groups were united by a church

  11. New England Society Cont… • Local Government • Town Meetings • Landowners could vote and pass laws • Set the Stage for American Rev. • Puritan Society • Strict rules regulating daily life • Gambling banned, no mixed dancing • Valued education – instituted elementary and secondary schools

  12. Trade and Rise of Cities • Triangular Trade made many New England merchants rich • Trade caused Northern ports to become cities • Philadelphia, Boston, and New York • Charlestown became a city in the South • Urban Hierarchy • Wealthy Merchants • Skilled artisans, innkeepers, and retailers • Laborers • Servants • Indentured servants and enslaved Africans (10-20% of pop.)

  13. Life in Middle Colonies • Middle Colonies – New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware • Wheat – important cash crop • Price more than doubled b/t 1720 and 1770 • Much was shipped to Europe • Susquehanna, Hudson, and Delaware made it easier for farmers to ship to the coast • Wealthy Capitalists immerged from flour industry

  14. Imperial System • Mercantilism • Economic theory about the world economy • Believe a country must acquire gold and silver to become wealthy • This is achieved by selling more goods to other countries than one buys from them • More gold and silver would flow in than out of country • A country should also be self sufficient in raw materials • To be self sufficient a country needed colonies to get raw materials • Buy raw materials from home county and sell manufactured goods back • In New England created some problems • Could only trade with England • If home country did not want goods, no profits

  15. Triangular Trade

  16. Navigation Acts (King Charles II) • All goods shipped to and from colonies on English ships • Listed specific products that could only be sold to England or other English colonies • Many colonists did not like acts and broke them • Began smuggling goods to Europe, Caribbean, and Africa in large quantities • King James II tried to end smuggling and created the Dominion of New England • Governor Andros was appointed to rule New England, limited self rule • Levied new taxes and enforced Navigation Acts • Outlawed marriage outside Anglican Church • Angered New Englanders

  17. Navigation Acts

  18. William and Mary

  19. Glorious Revolution • Catholic King James II also angered Englishmen • Parliament invited his protestant daughter (Mary) and Dutch husband James to rule • James Fled and thus the bloodless “Glorious Revolution” • William and Mary had to accept “English Bill of Rights” • Could not suspend Parliament, freedom of speech in Parliament • Influenced American Bill of Rights • Colonists ousted Governor Andros • RI, and CT self gov. • MA, ME new royal colony of Massachusetts • Headed by governor

More Related