1 / 20

Chapter 4: American Life in the 17 th Century 1607-1692

Chapter 4: American Life in the 17 th Century 1607-1692. Erin Thompson B2 A.P.U.S.H. Pd. 2. The Unhealthy Chesapeake. Malaria, dysentery, and typhoid cut ten years off the life expectancy of English newcomers.

xaria
Download Presentation

Chapter 4: American Life in the 17 th Century 1607-1692

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 4: American Life in the 17th Century 1607-1692 Erin Thompson B2 A.P.U.S.H. Pd. 2

  2. The Unhealthy Chesapeake • Malaria, dysentery, and typhoid cut ten years off the life expectancy of English newcomers. • Majority of immigrants were young males who died shortly after arrival; The survivors competed for the scarce # of females • Most marriages destroyed by the death of partner; Weak families reflected in pregnancies of young unmarried girls

  3. The Unhealthy Chesapeake (cont.) • Eventually native-born inhabitants acquired immunity to diseases; by the end of the 17th century birthrate increased • Maryland had the 3rd largest population at the opening of the 18th century

  4. The Tobacco Economy • By the 1630s ships annually hauled about 1.5 million pounds of tobacco out of the Chesapeake; by the end of the century it was almost 40 million pounds • To balance the increase of product, indentured servants were shipped to the Chesapeake for labor

  5. The Tobacco Economy (cont.) • “Headright” system established, which gave masters 50 acres of land for paying the passage of servants • Some 100,000 servants were brought to the Chesapeake by 1700 • When the servants received their freedom they had to hire themselves to their former masters because of lack of land

  6. Frustrated Freeman & Bacon’s Rebellion • By the late 17th century, swelling numbers of young men began to rattle the established planters on the Chesapeake • In 1670, the Virginia assembly disfranchised most of the landless men; VA’s governor William Berkeley lamented his lot as ruler • In 1676, about a thousand Virginians broke out of control led by Nathaniel Bacon

  7. Bacon’s Rebellion (cont.) • Virginians resented Berkeley’s friendly policies toward the Indians • Before the rebellion was crushed, Indians were murdered, Berkeley was chased out of Jamestown and the capital was burned

  8. Colonial Slavery • About 10 million Africans were brought in chains to the Americas; Only 400,000 ended up in North America • By the mid-1680s black slaves outnumbered white servants • In 1698 the Royal African Co. lost monopoly on carrying slaves; Americans rush to cash in on slave trade; supply of slaves steeply rose

  9. Colonial Slavery (cont.) • By 1750, Blacks accounted for nearly half the Virginia population; South Carolina whites outnumbered 2 to 1 • Most slaves came from west coast of Africa: Senegal to Angola • Whites threatened by large number of Africans • Slave codes developed to decree the conditions of slavery

  10. Africans in America • Slave life was hostile to health and labor was life-draining • Tobacco was a less physically demanding crop than rice • Size and proximity of tobacco plantations permitted more frequent contact with friends and relatives • Black population grew through its own fertility and imports

  11. Africans in America (cont.) • Native-born African Americans contributed to growth of a slave culture: mixture of African and American elements of speech, religion, and folkways • Many African words passed into American speech: goober, gumbo, voodoo • Banjo and bongo drum and jazz contributed to American culture

  12. Southern Society

  13. The New England Family • Family remained at the center of New England life; population grew from natural reproductive increase • Women wed by their early twenties and had children every two years until menopause • Longevity contributed to family stability: up to 3 generations • New England women usually gave up their property rights

  14. Life in the New England Towns • New England evolved into a tightly knit society based around villages and farms • New towns legally chartered by colonial authorities; land distributed by proprietors • Towns with more than 50 families required to provide elementary education; majority of adults illiterate • Massachusetts established Harvard(1636); Virginia established William and Mary(1693)

  15. The Half-Way Covenant & the Salem Witch Trials • A growing New England population dampened religious zeal • Mid-17th century, a new form of sermon began: the “jeremiad” • In 1662, the “Half-Way Covenant,” offered partial memberships to people not converted

  16. The Half-Way Covenant & the Salem Witch Trials (cont.) • Distinction between the “elect” and others erased; strict religion sacrificed for large participation • A “witch-hunt” ensued leading to the lynching of 20 persons(1692); grew from superstitions and unsettled social and religious conditions

  17. The New England Way of Life • Characterized by its extreme climate and rocky soil, New England had a major impact on the rest of the nation • Repelled by the rocks New Englanders look to shipbuilding and commerce • New Englanders scattered from Ohio to Oregon and Hawaii

  18. The Early Settlers’ Days & Ways • Early American colonists lived simple, but comfortable lives • Women, men, and children performed daily tasks necessary for comfort • Most settlers came to America with modest means to enjoy wealth • An attempt to imitate English class distinctions failed with resentment against upper-class for example, Leisler’s Rebellion in NYC (1689-1691)

  19. 1619 – First Africans arrive in Virginia 1636 – Harvard College founded 1662 Half-Way Covenant for Congregational church membership established 1670 – Virginia assembly disfranchises landless freeman 1676 – Bacon’s Rebellion in Virginia 1680s – Mass expansion of slavery in the colonies Chronology

  20. 1689-1691 – Leisler’s Rebellion in New York 1692 – Salem witch trials in Massachusetts 1693 – College of William and Mary founded 1698 – Royal African Company slave trade monopoly ended 1712 – New York City slave revolt 1739 – South Carolina slave revolt Chronology (cont.)

More Related