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Georgia and the American Experience

Georgia and the American Experience. Chapter 4: 1477-1752 Settlement of the Thirteenth Colony Part 1 Study Presentation. Georgia and the American Experience. Section 1: An Age of Exploration Section 2: English Settlement in the New World. Section 1: An Age of Exploration.

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Georgia and the American Experience

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  1. Georgia and the American Experience Chapter 4: 1477-1752 Settlement of the Thirteenth Colony Part 1 Study Presentation

  2. Georgia and the American Experience Section 1: An Age of Exploration Section 2: English Settlement in the New World

  3. Section 1: An Age of Exploration • ESSENTIAL QUESTION • What were the effects of the interactions of Europeans and Native Americans?

  4. Section 1: An Age of Exploration • What words do I need to know? • middleman • monarch • colony

  5. Section 1: An Age of Exploration • What people do I need to know? • Christopher Columbus • Hernando De Soto

  6. Section 1: An Age of Exploration • What places do I need to know? • St. Augustine • Guale

  7. Spain and the Age of Exploration • Columbus discovered San Salvador Island (part of today’s Bahamas) in 1492. • Columbus later explored the coasts of Central and South America and other Caribbean islands. • Amerigo Vespucci sailed along the South American coast in 1499; a mapmaker named the new land “America.”

  8. Hernando De Soto Searches Georgia for Gold • In 1540, Spanish explorer Hernando De Soto, with hundreds of men, marched north from Tampa, Florida into southwest Georgia (near today’s Albany). • De Soto’s weapons, plated armor, and horses overwhelmed the Native Americans; thousands of American Indians in Georgia died, many from disease brought by the Spaniards. • The Spaniards marched across Georgia into South Carolina, but never found the gold they sought.

  9. Spain’s Early Missions in Georgia • In 1566, Spain established missions on Georgia’s Cumberland Island and St. Catherine’s Island, called Santa Catalina. During the same century, posts were established at Sapelo and St. Simon’s Island. • The Spanish missionaries called the region Guale (pronounced “Wallie”) after the Guale Indians. Click to return to the Table of Contents

  10. Section 2: English Settlement of the New World • ESSENTIAL QUESTION • What caused a rivalry between England and Spain in the New World?

  11. Section 2: English Settlement of the New World • What words do I need to know? • mercantilism • indentured servant • slave • garrison

  12. Section 2: English Settlement of the New World • What places do I need to know? • Jamestown, Virginia • Fort King George

  13. English Settlements in the New World • The English established colonies on North America’s Atlantic coast throughout the 1600s. The goals of the colonists varied, from religious mission, gaining wealth to bettering their lives. • Great Britain wanted raw materials from the New World’s colonies, which it would manufacture into finished goods and sell to other countries. This was mercantilism. • By 1686, as the English colonies reached as far south as South Carolina, the Spanish retreated from Guale to St. Augustine, Florida. Great Britain wanted a “buffer” colony to protect the English colonists from Spanish Florida.

  14. The English Influence in the Georgia Colony • The French began colonizing the Gulf coast and parts of Alabama. England began worrying about the French and Spanish threats to its colonial claims. • In 1721, the English established Fort King George at the mouth of the Altamaha River, near today’s Darien. The fort was a “warning point” for invaders from Spanish Florida. The fort was abandoned after six years. • Although Great Britain claimed Georgia in 1663, it didn’t begin making plans to settle the territory until 1717. Click to return to the Table of Contents

  15. Click to return to Table of Contents

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