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England's Colonies and Mercantilism: Economic Enrichment and Trade Restrictions in American Colonies

This chapter explores how England sought to enrich itself through its American colonies, using them as a source of raw materials and a market for British goods. It discusses trade restrictions imposed through the Navigation Acts and the tensions that arose as a result. It also covers the establishment of a royal colony in Massachusetts, the Glorious Revolution, the concept of salutary neglect, and the agricultural economies of the South and the diversified economies of the North. The chapter also touches on the emergence of new ideas during the Enlightenment and the Great Awakening, and the impact of the French and Indian War on the rivalry between France and Britain.

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England's Colonies and Mercantilism: Economic Enrichment and Trade Restrictions in American Colonies

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  1. Chapter 3 American Colonies 1607-1785

  2. England and Its Colonies Mercantilism- A country’s goal is self-sufficiency. All countries are in a competition to get the most gold and silver. • Purpose of the colonies is to enrich England • Colonies provide a market for British goods and source of raw materials Colonists traded with other nations (illegal). Parliament attempts to stop this. • Navigation Acts –series of laws restricting colonial trade

  3. Tensions • Merchants resent trade restrictions. For years England didn’t enforce them. • Crackdown in Massachusetts=charter revoked by King Charles, becomes a royal colony • King James seeking to make colonial govt. more obedient placed Northern colonies under control of 1 royal governor. Andros, “you have no more privileges left you, than not to be sold for slaves.”

  4. Glorious Revolution in England, a new king comes to pwr. when James is chased out. Colonists hear about it and arrest Governor Andros. • Mass. Charter restored • King to appt. the governor • More religious toleration

  5. England Loosens the reigns • Salutary neglect-England relaxed enforcement of most regulations in return for colonial economic loyalty • Raw materials go to England and colonists buy finished product • Seeds of self-government=Royal Governors with a local assembly. Local assembly paid the Gov. (king did not pay salary) • Colonists still considered themselves loyal subjects throughout the first ½ of the 1700’s.

  6. The Agricultural South • Plantation Economy Arises=fertile soil form the Chesapeake region to Georgia • Cash crops=crops grown to sale, not for the farmer’s use • Tobacco=Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina • Rice and Indigo= South Carolina and Georgia

  7. Life in Southern Society • Diverse population because of immigration • Small farmers formed the majority of the population, the planters controlled most of the economy • By the mid 1700’s life fairly prosperous • Exceptions • Women 2nd class citizens with few legal or social rights • Indentured servants trade a life of prison or poverty in Europe for a limited term of servitude, few rights while in bondage • Fewer indentured servants coming, labor needs met by slaves

  8. Slavery becomes entrenched • Slaves meet labor needs (N.A. leave, Indentured Servants too expensive) • 17th Century, Africans became part of the triangular trade, • trade network=Europe,Africa,New World • Middle Passage=voyage of slaves from Africa to New World. 20% died (cruelty, sickness, suicide) • Slavery =most common in the South. 80-90% worked in fields. Cruel conditions (Virginia courts didn’t consider it murder to kill a slave during punishment)

  9. The Commercial North • Diversified Economy • Farms in New England small (cold winters, rocky soil) • New York and Penn=variety of crops and livestock • Industry (Especially in New England) fish, lumber, ship building • Large cities=New York, Boston, Philadelphia

  10. Northern Society is Diverse • Attracts a variety of immigrants-arrive in family groups. English colonists dealt with influx of non-English speakers. Paving way for diverse American society • Crops not as labor intensive, less incentive to use slaves • Extensive use of slaves in Middle colonies • Racial prejudice common throughout colonies

  11. New Ideas • Salem Witch trials cause people to question • Enlightenment=Ideas spread from Europe to colonies, especially in the north. • Science Ben Franklin-question and experiment, • Political Thoughts= Thomas Jefferson-natural rights

  12. New Ideas Continued • Great Awakening-Puritan church loses its grip by the early 1700s. • Church attendance down. Pur. businessmen liked the worldly goods, didn’t pay as much attention to spiritual • Religious revival • Jonathan Edwards=Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, others preach too • Brings colonists into organized churches, some new ones • Increases interest in education • Both Enlightenment and Great Awakening caused people to question traditional authority

  13. The French and Indian War • Rivals for an empire • France was Britain’s biggest rival in the struggle to build a world empire. One area of contention was the Ohio River Valley • Colonists favored Britain because the considered themselves British and they wanted to expand westward

  14. France’s North American Empire • 1534- Cartier=St. Lawrence river • 1608-Champlain founded Quebec • 1682-claim entire Mississippi Valley • French colonization mainly fur traders and Catholic priests (trade and convert)

  15. French territory and British territory expands, they collide . • French build Fort Duquesne (where Pittsburg is) • British had previously granted that land (and more) to a group of wealthy planters • Send out militia led by young George Washington to build a competing stronghold-Fort Necessity. • Washington’s militia attacks a French one, French counterattacks and French and Indian war begins

  16. Early French victories, used guerilla warfare, British fought in orderly lines • Eventually British turn the tide. • 1759 British and some NA allies take Quebec • War over in 1763 with the Treaty of Paris • Great Britain claim all of NA east of the Mississippi • France out of virtually all of NA. Only Spain and Britain Left.

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