1 / 12

Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Settling of the Northern Colonies: 1619 - 1700. The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism. 1517 – Martin Luther nails the Ninety-Five Theses John Calvin felt that Luther didn’t take his protests far enough Elaborating on Luther’s protests, he founded the Calvinist church

suzannat
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 Settling of the Northern Colonies: 1619 - 1700

  2. The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism • 1517 – Martin Luther nails the Ninety-Five Theses • John Calvin felt that Luther didn’t take his protests far enough • Elaborating on Luther’s protests, he founded the Calvinist church • Called Puritans in England, Presbyterians in Scotland, Huguenots in France and communicants in the Dutch Reformed Church • Calvin’s doctrine was spelled out in Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536) • God is all-powerful, all-knowing & all-good • Humans are weak & wicked, because of the corruption of original sin • God already knew who was going to heaven and who was going to hell (predestination) • The damned could not be saved from the fires of Hell by good deeds; the saved could not count on their salvation as a given • Separatists wanted to break completely from the Church of England • The “visible saints” had to share pews with the damned • James I saw Separatists as a threat to rule & sought to drive them out of England

  3. Pilgrims End Their Pilgrimage at Plymouth • 1608 - most famous group of Separatists left England for Holland • 1620 – A group of these Separatists negotiates w/ the Virginia Company to settle in their jurisdiction • Missed their destination by several hundred miles • Mayflower arrive off the coast of New England w/ 102 settlers • Less than ½ settlers were actually Separatists • Captain Myles Standish was irreplaceable as an Indian fighter and negotiator • Did not initially land on Plymouth Rock, but selected the site after several exploratory outings • The Mayflower Compact was not a constitution, but served as a guide for future constitutions • Signed by 41 adult males, agreeing to a crude govt. led by the will of the majority • Winter 1620-21 – only 44 of 102 survived, but none returned to England, 1st Thanksgiving in fall 1621 • 1691 – Plymouth colony merged w/ Massachusetts Bay Colony

  4. The Bay Colony Bible Commonwealth • 1629 – a group of non-Separatist Puritans secured a royal charter to form the Massachusetts Bay Company • 1630 - Established a larger initial settlement than any other colony (11 well-equipped ships, nearly 1000 settlers) • Continuing turmoil in England and eventual civil war drove waves of settlers to the colonies • 70,000 left England; 20,000 settled in Massachusetts but nearly 50,000 travelled to Barbados & Jamaica • Massachusetts prospered due to fur trading, fishing & shipbuilding industries • Aided by the fact that many prosperous, educated people settled in Massachusetts Bay • John Winthrop became the colony’s 1st governor & served as governor or deputy governor for 19 years • Colony quickly became one of the biggest & most influential New England colonies • Puritans believed they were to build a holy society that would serve as a model for humanity

  5. Building the Bay Colony • Enfranchisement was given to all “freemen” • Adult males belonging to the Puritan church, known as the Congressional Church • Governor & his assistants elected annually in provincial elections • 2/5 of adult males had the right to vote in provincial elections • Town governments included all male property holders in the decision making process • Religious leaders held enormous power, but it was not absolute • Congregations hired & fired their preachers and set his salary • Clergy not allowed to hold political office • Despite legends to the contrary, Puritans believed in a life of devotion & hard work, but they also enjoyed the simple things in life • They passed laws to make sure these pleasures stayed simple • Connecticut later came to be know as the “Blue Law State”, because these sumptuary laws were printed on blue paper

  6. Trouble in the Bible Commonwealth • The Bay colony enjoyed a great deal of social harmony initially, but dissention soon came • Quakers defied Puritan authority & were persecuted in return • Anne Hutchison argued the validity of Calvin’s doctrine of salvation • Claimed since a holy life was no assurance of salvation; one need not follow the laws God or man (antinomianism) • Highly intelligent, strong willed & talkative; she was brought to trial for heresy • 1638 – she confounded her inquisitors for days, until she claimed to have received her revelations from God • She was banished; she and her family settled in New York • She and all but one of her children were killed by Indians • John Winthrop claimed to see “God’s hand” in her fate • Roger Williams, an extreme Separatist minister, was ordered exiled to England but he escaped to Rhode Island in 1636

  7. The Rhode Island “Sewer” • Roger Williams built a Baptist church in Providence & established complete religious freedom • Even Jews, Catholics, & Quakers • Religious tolerance made Rhode Island the most liberal of the English colonies • Adult male suffrage was later limited only by property restrictions • Called “Rouges’ Island” & “that sewer” by Puritans elsewhere • Initially settled by squatters that were exiles or malcontents • 1644 – received official charter from Parliament New England Spreads Out • 1635 – Hartford established in Connecticut R. valley • 1639 – Fundamental Orders drafted, effectively a modern constitution; later used by Connecticut in its colonial charter & state constitution • 1662 – Connecticut colony chartered, absorbing New Haven • 1677 – Maine purchased and absorbed by Mass. Bay colony • 1679 – Charles II separated New Hampshire from Mass. & made it a royal colony

  8. Puritans vs. Indians (p 51) • Squanto, Massasoit & Pilgrims • Metacom (King Philip) and his war on the Puritans & its effects Seeds of Colonial Unity and Independence • 1643 – Four colonies banded together to create the New England Confederation • Bay colony, Plymouth, New Haven & Connecticut • Came together to provide defense against Indians, French & Dutch threats • Previous kings’ indifferference led to a sense of defiance in neglected colonists • 1660 – Charles II re-established as king • Puritan Massachusetts Bay stung by the new kings actions • 1662 – Connecticut officially chartered • 1663 – Rhode Island receives royal charter • 1684 – the Bay colony’s charter was revoked by Charles II

  9. Andros Promotes the First American Revolution (p53-55) • Dominion of New England v. New England Confederation • Sir Edmund Andros’s rule in NE & the Glorious Revolution • English views of colonies & Colonists’ views of England Old Netherlanders at New Netherland • 17th cent. was an golden age in Dutch history • Dutch Republic became a colonial power during this time • Dutch East India Co. virtually a state within a state • Army of 10,000 men & a fleet of 190 ships (40 man-o-wars) • 1623-24 - New Netherland (Hudson R. Valley) planted as a permanent settlement • Established by Dutch West India Co. for potential profit in the fur trade; never taken as a serious investment by founders • Bought Manhattan Island from local Indians for pennies/acre • Harsh company-chosen governors had little interest in religious toleration, free speech or democratic ideas

  10. Friction w/ English and Swedish Neighbors • Shareholders demanded profits, regardless of outcomes • Indians massacred Dutch settlements in return for Dutch cruelties • Settlers on Manhattan Island created a defensive wall (where Wall St. gets its name) • New Englanders were hostile to Dutch expansion • New England colonies except the Bay colony favored military action • Sweden trespassed on Dutch territory and established New Sweden (1638-55) in modern Delaware • Entered the colonial game on the success of Sweden in the Thirty Years War (1618-48) • 1655 - Dutch director-general, Peter Stuyvesant led a military force into Delaware and after a bloodless siege, Swedish colonists were absorbed by New Netherlands • 1664 – Charles II gave a land grant to the Duke of York • An English force took New Amsterdam w/o a shot fired & renames the colony New York • Dutch contributions to culture : Santa Claus, Easter Eggs, waffles, bowling, golf

  11. Penn’s Holy Experiment in Pennsylvania • Quakers arose in England in the mid-1660s & deemed offensive • “quaked” when under deep religious emotion • refused to pay taxes to the Church of England • congregated w/o paid clergy • wore hats in the presence of “betters” • refused to use conventional titles (sir, madam, lord, eminence) • refused to take oaths of any kind, including “test oaths” • 1660 - William Penn became a Quaker • 1681 - wanting to create a safe haven for Quakers, Penn secured a royal land grant as repayment for a royal debt • Charles II called it Pennsylvania (Penn’s woodland) • Penn tried to get the name changes, fearing people would think he named it after himself • Best advertised of the colonies; distributed pamphlets printed in English, French, Dutch & German • Encouraged people from all walks of life to settle there

  12. Quaker Pennsylvania and Its Neighbors • Already several thousand Dutch, English, Swedish, & Welsh settlers along the Delaware River • Philadelphia (“Brotherly Love” in Greek) more carefully planned than most colonial cities • Quaker treatment of Indians more fair than other colonies, visited them unarmed and even used them as babysitters • Quaker tolerance undermined their own Indian policy • Immigrants not as tolerant to natives as Quaker settlers • No tax-supported church • No oaths of allegiance • Freedom of worship to nearly all residents • Death penalty only for treason & murder • By 1700, Pennsylvania was wealthier & more populated than all colonies except Virginia & Massachusetts • 1702 – East & West Jersey were combined & made a royal colony The Middle Way in the Middle Colonies (62-63)

More Related