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Colonial Society in New England and Chesapeake: Family, Society, and Slavery

This article explores the contrasting social structures and experiences in New England and Chesapeake colonies during the seventeenth century, focusing on family life, social hierarchy, and the origins of slavery. It highlights the importance of family and community in New England, while discussing the dominant planter society and the rise of slavery in Chesapeake. The article also examines the construction of African American identities in different regions.

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Colonial Society in New England and Chesapeake: Family, Society, and Slavery

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  1. 3 Putting Down Roots: Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society

  2. New England in the Seventeenth Century • All colonies developed in different ways • New England colonies settled by Puritans • Puritans believed God ordained the family and viewed family as essential to colony • Reproduced English customs and traditions mainly because of family structure • Key to growth - Huge population growth caused by long life expectancy – good health - more than high fertility

  3. Commonwealth of Families • Longevity resulted in invention of grandparents – multigenerational families strengthened social stability • Most New Englanders married neighbors with similar values • Households produced their own needs and surpluses – most farmers • New England towns were collections of interrelated households

  4. Commonwealth of Families • Church membership associated with concept of predestination - freeman status • Form of Church Government - Join church in order to vote – twice as many woman in church as men but couldn’t vote • Education provided by the family/Harvard • “Half-Way Covenant” lessened requirements for baptism and for joining Church

  5. Social Hierarchy in New England • New England social order: • Local gentry of prominent, pious families • Large population of independent yeomen landowners loyal to local community – land ownership is widespread • Small population of landless laborers, servants, poor • Moderate disparities of wealth • Apprenticeships

  6. The Challenge of theChesapeake Environment • Despite similarities in background and timing with New England, Chesapeake settlements were very different • Most important reason: high mortality rate

  7. Family Life at Risk • Normal family life impossible in Virginia – much fewer families than New England • Mostly young male indentured servants • Most immigrants soon died • In marriages, one spouse often died within seven years • Extended families common • Mortality rates so high that without immigration, population would have declined

  8. The Structure of Planter Society: The Gentry • Tobacco the basis of Chesapeake wealth • Large landowners had to have labor under their control • Great planters few but dominant • Arrived with capital to invest in workers • Amassed huge tracts of land • Gentry intermarried and become colony’s elite leaders

  9. The Structure of Planter Society • The largest class in Chesapeake society were poor • Most freed at the end of indenture period • Lived on the edge of poverty • Wide gap between rich and poor

  10. The Structure of Planter Society: Indentured Servants • Servitude a temporary status • Conditions harsh • Servants regarded their bondage as slavery

  11. The Structure of Planter Society: Post-1680s Stability • Before 1680, the rank of gentry was open to people with capital • Ownership of labor consolidated planter wealth and position • Freemen found advancement more difficult – wide gap between rich and poor • By 1680, Virginia was a plantation society, dominated by a slaveholding elite

  12. The Structure of Planter Society: A Dispersed Population • Large-scale tobacco cultivation required: • Great landholdings • Ready access to water-borne commerce • Result: population dispersed along great tidal rivers • Virginia a rural society devoid of towns • Education system was seen as unnecessary and got little attention

  13. Race and Freedom in British America • Indians decimated by disease • European indentured servant pool waned after 1660 • Enslaved Africans filled demand for labor

  14. Roots of Slavery • First Africans came to Virginia in 1619 • Status of Africans in Virginia unclear for fifty years • Early 1600s Blacks came as indentured servants and some some became planters • Bulk of slaves brought to America by British Company • Economic decision after 1670s for slaves • Life expectancy in Chesapeake improved • British started to bring slaves to Chesapeake

  15. Roots of Slavery • Rising black population in Virginia after 1672 prompted stricter slave laws • Africans defined as slaves for life • Slave status passed on to children • White masters possessed total control of slave life and labor • Mixing of races not tolerated

  16. Origins and Destinations of African Slaves, 1619–1760

  17. Constructing African American Identities: Geography’s Influence • Slave experience differed from colony to colony • 60% of South Carolina’s population black • Nearly half of Virginia’s population black • Blacks much less numerous in New England and the Middle Colonies • Blacks most able to preserve African culture in South Carolina

  18. Constructing African American Identities: African Initiatives • Older black population tended to look down on recent arrivals from Africa • All Africans participated in creating an African American culture • Required an imaginative re-shaping of African and European customs. • By 1720, African population and culture were self-sustaining

  19. Constructing African American Identities: Slave Resistance • Widespread resentment among slaves • Armed resistance such as South Carolina’s Stono Rebellion of 1739 a threat – most serious rebellion during colonial time • Black mariners linked African American communities and brought news of outside world to American slaves

  20. Rise of a Commercial Empire • English leaders ignored colonies until 1650s • Restored monarchy of Charles II recognized value of colonial trade • Navigation Acts passed to remove Dutch as a commercial competitor

  21. Response to Economic Competition • “Mercantilism” • One country’s gain is another country’s loss • Countries gain by control of world’s scarce resources (gold and silver) • One country controls trade of another – favorable balance of trade (one nation’s success is another nation’s loss) • English trade regulations more ad hoc responses to particular problems than coherent mercantilist policy

  22. Response to Economic Competition • Varieties of motivation • Crown wanted money and to monopolize trade with colonies • English merchants wanted to exclude Dutch • Parliament wanted stronger navy— encouraged domestic shipbuilding industry • Most people preferred more exports, less imports (favorable balance of trade)

  23. Regulating Colonial Trade: The Navigation Act of 1660 • Ships engaged in English colonial trade • Must be made in England (or America) • Must carry a crew at least 75% English • Enumerated goods only to English ports • 1660 list included tobacco, sugar, cotton, indigo, dyes, ginger • 1704–1705 molasses, rice, naval stores also

  24. Regulating Colonial Trade: The Navigation Act of 1663 • The Staple Act • Goods shipped to English colonies must pass through England • Increased price paid by colonial consumers

  25. Regulating Colonial Trade:Implementing the Acts • Navigation Acts aimed at removing Dutch role in English commerce • Planters hurt by Navigation Acts • New England merchants skirted laws – most flagrant violation from New England • English revisions tightened loopholes

  26. Colonial Factions Spark Political Revolt, 1676–1691 • English colonies experienced unrest at the end of the seventeenth century • Unrest not social revolution but a contest between gentry “ins” and “outs” • Winners gained legitimacy for their rule

  27. Civil War in Virginia: Bacon’s Rebellion • Discontent with Governor Berkeley’s rule • Green Spring faction controlled lucrative economic activity • Frontier population felt that Berkeley did not protect them from Native Americans • Nathaniel Bacon united this discontent into rebellion in 1676 • Rebellion allowed small farmers, blacks and women to join, demand reforms

  28. Civil War in Virginia: Bacon’s Rebellion—Outcome • Rebels burned capital, caused great disorder • Governor William Berkeley regained control, but was recalled to England • Rebellion collapsed after Bacon’s death • Gentry recovered positions and united over next decades to oppose royal governors

  29. The Glorious Revolution in the Bay Colony: King Philip’s War • Massachusetts divided by increased non-puritan population from England and merchants with close contacts in England • Political crisis in colony between puritans who want little contact with England and Non-Puritans and merchants wanting close ties with England • Navigation Acts inflict direct royal presence • Midst of crisis, war develops with Indians

  30. The Glorious Revolution in the Bay Colony: King Philip’s War • 1675, Metacomet united Indians in alliance against colonists – King Philip’s War • Main issue – fight over land • Colonists struggled to unite and to defeat Indians • Deaths totaled over 1000 Indians and colonists • Colonists won but paid high price

  31. The Glorious Revolution in the Bay Colony: The Dominion of New England • 1684—King James II established “Dominion of New England” • Colonial charters annulled • Colonies from Maine to New Jersey united • Edmund Andros appointed governor, ruled tyrannically • 1689—news of James II’s overthrow (Glorious Revolution) sparked rebellion in Massachusetts

  32. The Glorious Revolution in the Bay Colony: Outcomes • Andros deposed when word of revolution in England reached New England • Dominion of New England split up in 1691 • William III and Mary II gave Massachusetts a new charter • Incorporated Plymouth • Voting rights based on property and wealth, not church membership

  33. Contagion of Witchcraft • Charges of witchcraft common • Accused witches thought to have made a compact with the devil • Salem panic of 1691 much larger in scope than previous accusations • Twenty victims dead before trials halted in late summer of 1692 – 19 victims hung

  34. Contagion of Witchcraft • Ministers outside Salem condemned practice of using “Spectral Evidence” in trials • Increase Mather and other leading ministers urged caution and restraint • Speculation on causes but no one knows for sure what caused this – still a debate among historians

  35. The Glorious Revolutionin New York • Underlying tension between older Dutch elite and newly wealthy Anglo-Dutch merchants • 1689—news of James II’s overthrow prompts crisis of authority in New York • Jacob Leisler aligned with Dutch elite seized control causing much bloodshed

  36. The Glorious Revolutionin New York • Maintained position through 1690 • March 1691— New King William and Mary sent Governor Henry Sloughter to arrest and execute Leisler

  37. The Glorious Revolutionin Maryland • 1689—news prompted John Coode to lead revolt against Catholic governor • Coode’s rebellion approved by King William • Coode’s rebellion successful

  38. The Glorious Revolutionin Maryland • Maryland as Royal colony • Maryland taken from Calvert control • Anglican official church; Catholics barred from office • 1715—proprietorship restored to the Protestant fourth Lord Baltimore

  39. Local Aspirations within an Atlantic Empire • By 1700, England’s attitude toward the colonies had changed dramatically • Sectional differences within the colonies were profound • They were all part of Great Britain but had little to do with each other

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