1 / 47

Chapter 3

Chapter 3. England and Its Colonies. The Scots and Scotch-Irish. Great Britain was formed in 1707: England, Wales, Scotland . This meant some Scots became colonial officials and royal governors. 3 Streams of Immigration Highlands Lowlands Ulster, Northern Ireland with mixed peoples

pjoey
Download Presentation

Chapter 3

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. Chapter 3 England and Its Colonies

  2. The Scots and Scotch-Irish • Great Britain was formed in 1707: England, Wales, Scotland. • This meant some Scots became colonial officials and royal governors. • 3 Streams of Immigration • Highlands • Lowlands • Ulster, Northern Irelandwith mixed peoples • 250,000 arrived in the 1700’s

  3. The Germans • 100,000 immigrants • Protestant • Came from the Rhine Valley in SW Germany and Northern Switzerland • They came to escape war, taxes, and religious persecution. • 1682, William Pennrecruited Germans to help settle an area of Pennsylvania. • An immigrant in PA could obtain a farm 6 times larger than a typical peasant in Germany.

  4. Africans Transported To America • Growing colonies= growing crops= need for labor • Early 1600’s, Africans were mostly treated as indentured servants. • Freed blacks could own land, vote, even buy enslaved Africans on their own. • Mid 1600’s, most colonies began to pass laws that supported the permanent enslavement. • “All servants imported…who were not Christians in their native Country…shall be accounted and be slaves.” • Children of slaves were also considered slaves. • Change in legal status promoted a racist idea that people of African origin were inferior to whites.

  5. Transatlantic Slave Trade • Once established, slavery expanded rapidly. • During the 1700’s, the British colonies imported approximately 1.5 millionslaves from Africa. • The majority went to the West Indies, but at least 250,000 came to America. • Africans were kidnappedor taken in wars and sold • 3 part voyage= Triangular Trade • Traders sailed from Europeto Africawhere they traded manufactured goods for Africans. • Then, in the Middle Passage, shippers carried the Africans across the Atlantic to the colonies. • After selling the slaves for colonial goods, the traders returned to their home countries to repeat the process.

  6. Slavery in the North and South • In New England most slaves were farmhands, dockworkers, and house servants. • In the Southern colonies most worked in fields on plantations growing tobacco, rice, indigo, sugar. • Most adopted Christianityfrom their masters, blending it with some of their own religious traditions.

  7. Rebels and Runaways • Stono Rebellion in South Carolina • 100 slavestried to escape and killed 20 white peoples before being caught and executed. • Some fled to Indian villages, mostly in Floridawhere the Spanish welcomed them with food, land, and freedom. • They did this because they thought it would weaken the British colonies and strengthen their own militia. • Other forms of rebellion: • Working slowly • Faking illness • Pretending ignorance • Breaking tools

  8. Magna Carta • Document English nobles forced King John to accept in 1215. • It protected the nobles by limiting the king’s ability to tax them and by guaranteeing due process, or the right to a trial. • Before instating a tax, the king needed permission from the nobles. • These nobles gained power and evolved into Parliament. • House ofLords (inherited mostly through rank and blood line) • House ofCommons(elected commoners)

  9. Why does England have such an interest in the colonies? • Economic wealth • Exporting of raw materials and importing British made goods • The colonies were being used to provide the materials England lacked • Mercantilism-nations seek to increase wealth and power by acquiring gold and silver through a balanced trade.

  10. Change in Policy • Colonists were shipping goods to other countries including England. • Spain, France, Holland • They were making money • England viewed this as a threat. • Parliament, or England’s legislative body, passed the NavigationActs.

  11. Navigation Acts Colonies could only export certain products to England. All trade between the Colonies and Europe must go through an English port. • The Acts restricted colonial trade: Navigation Acts Crew members And Captains had to be ¾ English. Trade permitted on English or Colonial ships.

  12. + Positive Effects • More jobs for English dock workers • Import taxes on goods = more money for English Treasury • Ship-building industry in the colonies - Negative Effects • Colonial merchants did not like trade restrictions • They smuggledgoods • England punished colonists for smuggling

  13. Massachusetts gets its charter revoked • Northern colonies are combined to make one colony • The Dominion of New England • KingJames II • King James chose Sir Edmund Andros to be governor • He was highly disliked • Questioned the lawfulness of Puritan beliefs • Strictly enforced Navigation Acts • Outlawed local assemblies and levied taxes without consent from local leaders

  14. Glorious Revolution • King James was a Catholic • Most of England and the colonies were Protestant • James had a son who would eventually become heir to the throne and rule as a Catholic • England did not want another Catholic monarch • Parliament decided to do something about the situation James II

  15. Glorious Revolution • Williamand Mary • Mary was James’ daughter and she was married to William • Mary was Protestant • Parliament voted out James II and put William and Mary onto the throne • This ensured the continuation of a Protestant England William and Mary

  16. When the colonies found out about the Glorious Revolution they arrested Andros • Parliament did away with the Dominion of New England and restored the colonies to what they were before. • Salutary Neglect- Englandrelaxedits enforcement of most regulations in return for the continued economicloyaltyof the colonies. • The King appointed a governor for each colony. • Colonists paid his salary. • Governor appointed an advisory council a local assembly. • Colonists were developing a taste for self-government.

  17. Objectives • Identify the major religious denominations of the 18th C. colonies, and indicate their role in early American society. • Describe the origins and development of education, culture, and journalism in the colonies. • Describe the basic features of colonial politics, including the role of various official and informal political institutions. • Indicate the key qualities of daily existence in 18th C. colonial America, including forms of socialization and recreation.

  18. Workaday America • Agriculture= leading industry • Involved 90% of population • Increase in grain/wheat production • Mostly in middle “bread” colonies • Grown in soil depleted from tobacco cultivation • New York exported 80,000 barrels of flour per year. • Fishing-pursued in all colonies to some degree • Mostly New England • Cod • Supplied predominantly Catholic countries • Stimulated ship-building industry. • Yankee seamen-skilled mariners and traders • Provided Caribbean sugar islands with food • Hauled Spanish and Portuguese gold, wine, and oranges to London in exchange for industrial goods, which were then sold to colonists.

  19. Workaday America • Agriculture= leading industry • Involved 90% of population • Increase in grain/wheat production • Mostly in middle “bread” colonies • Grown in soil depleted from tobacco cultivation • New York exported 80,000 barrels of flour per year. • Fishing-pursued in all colonies to some degree • Mostly New England • Cod • Supplied predominantly Catholic countries • Stimulated ship-building industry. • Yankee seamen-skilled mariners and traders • Provided Caribbean sugar islands with food • Hauled Spanish and Portuguese gold, wine, and oranges to London in exchange for industrial goods, which were then sold to colonists.

  20. Workaday America

  21. Workaday America • Colonial trade with non-British countries • Tobacco used all over Europe • British re-exporters were making additional money off colonial tobacco • West Indies • Purchases timber and food • Provided colonists with money so they could then purchase manufactured goods from GB • 1733-Parliament passed Molasses Act • Aimed at squelching colonial trade with the French in the West Indies • Struck a blow to the colonial international trade and ultimately the colonists’ standard of living • Merchants responded by smuggling and bribing • Foreshadowing future rebellion of laws and acts • Headstrong Americans would revolt rather than submit to the dictates of the far-off Parliament, whom they say as bent on destroying their very livelihood.

  22. Workaday America • Molasses Act of 1733, an act passed by the British Parliament. It placed prohibitive duties on sugar, rum, and molasses imported from non-British West Indian islands to the North American colonies. The act would have damaged the economy of New England, but it was never seriously enforced. It was repealed by the Sugar Act of 1764, which outraged the colonists by restricting trade more severely.

  23. Horsepower and Sailpower • Colonists had a difficult time getting their goods anywhere • Not until 1700 did roads connect even the major cities and towns • Ben Franklin need 9 days to travel from Boston to Philadelphia in 1720 with combo of rowboat and foot • News of the D of I reached Charleston, SC from Philadelphia in 29 days later • Dangers of travel • Dusty roads in summer • Muddy in winter • Tree-strewn roads • Rickety bridges • Carriage overturns • Runaway horses • No surprise people tended to cluster near the banks of navigable waterways and rivers Quicker, cheaper but mostly in good weather

  24. Horsepower and Sailpower • Taverns sprang up along main routes of travel and cities • Bowling alleys, pool tables, gambling • A place to rest and get warm • All social classes would mingle • Another cradle for democracy? • Gossips in taverns provided information and misinformation, impassioned political talk • Green Dragon Tavern • Located in Boston, Samuel Adams • Intercolonial postal system • Established by mid-1700’s • Service was slow and infrequent • Secrecy was problematic.

  25. Dominant Denominations • Anglican (C of E) and Congregational churches • Both “established” or tax-supported • Anglican • Official faith in GA, NC, SC, VA, MD, and part of NY • Served as a major prop of kingly authority. • Considered more worldly than Puritanism • Sermons were shorter, hell was not as feared • Did not have a resident bishop, which would have helped ordain younger ministers • They had to travel to England to be ordained. • College of William and Mary • Founded in 1693 to train a better class of clerics • Congregational • Grown out of the Puritan church • Formally established in all the New England colonies, except RI • MA taxed all residents to support it at first • Presbyterianism, closely associated, but never made official in colonies.

  26. Dominant Denominations

  27. Schools and Colleges • Education • Often seen as a blessing reserved to the aristocracy. • Education should be for leadership, not citizenship • Males only • Puritan New England more interested than other two regions • Stressed the need for the ability to read the Bible • Cambridge in England is considered the Puritan intellectual center • Established primary and secondary schools based on population • Instruction and length of school year varied • Middle colonies schools were adequate • Some schools were tax-supported, while others privately operated • Southern schools were hampered by geography • Spread out • Private tutors

  28. Schools and Colleges • Academics • Religion • Languages; Latin and Greek • Focus not on experiment and reason, but on doctrine • Independent thinking was discouraged • Discipline was severe- “birched” • Indenture-servants were used as teachers occasionally

  29. Schools and Colleges • College Education • New England • Geared toward preparing men for the ministry • South • Many well-to-do families would send their sons abroad for a “real” education in elite English institutions • More refined and philosophical • Harvard • Instruction was poor by present-day standards • A few boys as young as 11 were admitted • Heavily loaded with theology and “dead” languages • 1750- movement toward more modern curriculum • University of Pennsylvania • Ben Franklin played a major role in launching college • First American college free from denomination control

  30. A Provincial Culture • Artists would have to travel abroad for artistic education • Trumbull- “Connecticut is not Athens” • Architecture • Imported style from Old World and modified • Log cabin- Sweden • Red-bricked Georgian style- introduced in 1720 in South • Colonial literature • Phillis Wheatley-slave brought to Boston at age 8 and never formally educated. • Taken to England at age 20 where she was educated and published poems. • Ben Franklin- “first civilized American” • Poor Richard’s Almanac • Homespun virtues on thrift, industry, morality and common sense

  31. A Provincial Culture • Science • Ben Franklin- kite flying proving lightening was a form of electricity, bifocal spectacles, Franklin stove • His lightening rod was condemned by some clergymen who felt it was “presuming on God” by attempting to control the “artillery of the heavens”

  32. Pioneer Presses • Most American colonists were too poor to buy quantities of books and too busy to read them • Mostly members of the clergy held fair-sized libraries • Ben Franklin established the first privately supported circulating library • By 1776, there were about 50 public libraries and collections • Printing presses-mostly hand operated • Used to print pamphlets, leaflets, and journals • By the eve of revolution, there were about 40 colonial newspapers • Newspapers proved to be a powerful agency for airing colonial grievances and rallying opposition to British control • Zenger Trial- John Peter Zenger, newspaper printer • He was charged with seditious libel and hauled into court • Defended by former indentured servant turned lawyer

  33. The Great Game of Politics • By 1775, 8 of the colonies had royal governors, who were appointed by the king • 3 of those 8, were under proprietors who then also chose governors • CT and RI elected their own under self-governing charters • Practically every colony utilized a two-house legislature • Upper house, or council, was normally appointed by the crown in the royal colonies and by the proprietor in the proprietary colonies, chose by the voters in the self-governing colonies • Lower house was elected by the people (men, white, mostly land owning, and in some cases, church members) • Most backcountry folk were underrepresented leading to hate for the ruling clique, perhaps more than kingly authority. • Legislatures voted on taxes as they chose for the necessary expenses of colonial gov’t • Self-taxation due to local representation

  34. The Great Game of Politics • Governors appointed by the King • Mixture of competency and corruption • Lord Cornbury- 1st cousin to Queen Anne, was made governor of NY and NJ in 1702 • He was a drunk and spendthrift, embezzler, religious bigot, vain, foolish, and accused of dressing like a woman • Royal governors had trouble with colonial legislatures because they embodied a bothersome transatlantic authority nearly 3,000 miles away • Assemblies asserted their authority and independence by withholding a governor’s salary unless he gave in to their demands • England was guilty of poor administration for letting legislatures control governors’ salaries

  35. The Great Game of Politics • South- country government remained the rule for plantation owners • New England- town-meeting government dominated • Open voting, direct democracy • Middle- a mixture of the two above • Religious and property qualifications for voting, even more so for office-holding • Only about ½ of the white men were voters • Of those that could vote, this did not guarantee they would • By 1775, America was not a true democracy but it was far more democratic then England and the European continent • More willing to give free rein to the democratic ideals of tolerance, educational advantages, equality of economic opportunity, freedoms of speech, press, and assembly

  36. Colonial Folkways • Food was plentiful but monotonous • Ate more than Europeans, especially meat • Churches were not heated, inefficient fireplaces in homes, no running water, no indoor plumbing • Candles, whale-oil lamps provided faint and flickering illumination • Garbage disposal was primitive-hogs roamed many towns consuming refuse, while buzzards (protected by law) took care of the rest

  37. Colonial Folkways

  38. Colonial Folkways • Amusement • Militia assemble periodically for “musters”; days of drill practices • House-raisings • “Quilting bees” • Apple parings • Funerals and weddings • North • Winter sports • South • Card playing, horse racing, fox hunting, dancing • All 3 regions • Lottery, stage plays

  39. Colonial Folkways • Similarities among the 3 regions • Social mobility • Self-government • Communication was increasing as well as transportation

  40. The Enlightenment andGreat Awakening

  41. Enlightenment • Philosophers in Europe began using reason and the scientific method to gain more knowledge of the world around them. • Scientists looked beyond religious doctrines to investigate how the world worked. • Who did this influence? • Sir Isaac Newton • Galileo Galilei • Nicolaus Copernicus • They soon determined the Earth revolved around the sun and not vice versa. • They also concluded the world is governed not by chance or miracles, but by fixed mathematical laws.

  42. Enlightenment • These ideas traveled across Europe and eventually to the colonies. • People read about this in books and pamphlets. • Literacy was high in New England. Puritans supported education so that people could read the Bible. • Benjamin Franklin was the colonist who embraced this movement the most. • He thought he could obtain truth through experimentation and reasoning. • Franklin believed human beings could use their intellect to improve their lives. • How did Franklin’s intellect better his life and ours? • Lightening Rod • Bifocals • Franklin Stove- heating system

  43. Enlightenment • Had profound effect on politics • Colonial leaders such as Thomas Jefferson used reason to conclude that individuals have natural rights, which governments must respect. • These principles led to colonists questioning authority of the British monarchy.

  44. Great Awakening • The Puritan church had lost its grip on society, and church membership was in decline. • People were more focused on their current world and not as worried about the next stage of life. • Jonathan Edwards was from Northampton, Massachusetts and a member of the clergy. • He wanted to revive the intensity and commitment of the original Puritan visions and beliefs. • He preached that church attendance was not enough for salvation • People needed to acknowledge their sinfulness and feel God’s love for them • Gave the famous sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” • Described God’s mercy • Other preachers traveled to multiple villages stirring people to rededicate themselves to God.

  45. Great Awakening • More colonists, Native Americans, African Americans were now into more organized religions. • Some colonists abandoned their old Puritan or Anglican congregations and sought different denominations • Baptists, Methodists • Led to an increase in higher education • Different colleges: Princeton, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth to train ministers.

  46. Similarities • Both caused colonists to question traditional authority. • Stressed the importance of the individual • Colonists questioned Britain’s authority over their lives.

More Related