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THE SEVENTEENTH AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES

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THE SEVENTEENTH AND EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES

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NATIVE AMERICANS IN PRE-COLUMBIAN NORTH AMERICA

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Between 1 million and 5 million Native Americans lived in modern Canada and the United States

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Tribes were independent of each other and often competed for the same natural resources

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Difficult to unite against Europeans

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THE EARLY COLONIAL ERA: SPAIN COLONIZES THE NEW WORLD

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Columbus returned to Spain and reported the existence of a rich New World with easy-to-subjugate natives

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During the next century, Spain was the colonial power

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Advanced weaponry and incredible ruthlessness of the conquistadors

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Spanish Armada made it difficult for other countries to send their own expeditions.

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conquistadors enslaved the natives and attempted to erase their culture and supplant it with Catholicism

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Europeans were "carriers" of small pox

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THE ENGLISH ARRIVE

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The “Lost Colony”

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Sir Walter Raleigh sponsored a settlement on Roanoke Island

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By 1590 the colony had disappeared

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In 1607 they settled Jamestown

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joint-stock company: a group of investors who bought the right to establish New World plantations from the king

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company was called the Virginia Company

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English gentlemen, were ill-suited to the many adjustments life in the New World required

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Captain John Smith imposed harsh martial law

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"He who will not work shall not eat."

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During the starving time of 1609 and 1610, some resorted to cannibalism

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Powhatan Confederacy taught the English what crops to plant and how to plant them

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1614, Pocahontas, the daughter of the chief, married planter John Rolfe

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English forgot their debt to the Powhatan as soon as they needed more land

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Powhatan Confederacy was destroyed by English in 1644.

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John Rolfe introduced the cash crop of tobacco

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Indians showed him how

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Tobacco’s success largely determined the fate of the Virginia region

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Area came to be known as the Chesapeake (named after the bay)

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Why emigrate?

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Overpopulation in England had led to widespread famine, disease, and poverty

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Opportunity provided by indentured servitude

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Indentured servants received a small piece of property with their freedom, thus enabling them (1) to survive, and (2) to vote

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In 1619 Virginia established the House of Burgesses, in which any property-holding, white male could vote

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THE PILGRIMS AND THE MASSACHUSETTS BAY COMPANY

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Protestant movement called Puritanism arose in England

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Wanted to purify the corrupt Anglican Church

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One Puritan group called Separatists left England and went to Holland

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In 1620 they set sail for Virginia

Mayflower, went off course and they landed in modern-day Massachusetts

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Mayflower Compact

created a legal authority and an assembly. It asserted that the government's power derives from the consent of the governed

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Pilgrims received life-saving assistance from local Native Americans

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1629: a larger and more powerful colony called Massachusetts Bay was established by Congregationalists (Puritans who wanted to reform the Anglican church from within )

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Separatists and the Congregationalists did not tolerate religious freedom in their colonies, even though both had experienced and fled religious persecution.

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Roger Williams, a teacher in the Salem Bay settlement, taught that church and state should be separate

Puritans banished Williams

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He moved to modern-day Rhode Island and founded a new colony

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Anne Hutchinson was a prominent proponent of antinomianism

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antinomianismfaith and God's grace suffice to earn one a place among the "elect."

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She was tried for heresy, convicted, and banished

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The death of Cromwell (1658)

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English settlers in New England and the Chesapeake differed considerably

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New Englanders were definitely more religious

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OTHER EARLY COLONIES

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Connecticut Valley, a fertile region with lots of access to the sea

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Pequots attacked a settlement in Wakefield and killed nine colonists

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Massachusetts Bay Colony retaliated by burning the main Pequot village, killing 400, many of them women and children

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This was the “Pequot War”

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Proprietorships: owned by one person, who usually received the land as a gift from the king

Connecticut was one such colony

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Maryland was another, granted to Cecilius Calvert, Lord Baltimore

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Maryland became a haven of religious tolerance for all Christians, and it became the first major Catholic enclave in the New World

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New York was also a royal gift

Some of the area was a Dutch settlement called New Netherland

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The Quakers received their own colony. William Penn, a Quaker, was a close friend of King Charles II, and Charles granted Penn what became Pennsylvania

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Carolina was also a proprietary colony, which ultimately split in two

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North Carolina, which was settled by Virginians, developed into a Virginia-like colony

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South Carolina was settled by the descendants of Englishmen who had colonized Barbados

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Their arrival truly marked the beginning of the slave era in the colonies.

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Triangular trade routesSlaves to sugar plantations, sugar to distillers in colonies, rum and such to Europe

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Eventually, most of the proprietary colonies were converted to royal colonies (owned by the crown)

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THE AGE OF SALUTARY NEGLECT (1650 TO 1750)

Also “Benign Neglect”

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British too busy with other problems to keep close rein on colonies

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ENGLISH REGULATION OF COLONIAL TRADE Mercantilists believed that economic power was rooted in a favorable balance of trade. American colonies were seen primarily as markets for British and West Indian goods.

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Navigation Acts required the colonists to buy goods only from England and prohibited the colonies from manufacturing a number of goods that England already produced

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MAJOR EVENTS OF THE PERIOD Consult your “laundry list”

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LIFE IN THE COLONIES

Population in 1700 was 250,000; by 1750, that number was 1,250,000

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Over 90 percent-lived in rural areas

Children and women were completely subordinate to men! (Great Idea!!)

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Children's education had to be fit in around their work schedules

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Married women were not allowed to vote, own property, draft a will, or testify in court.

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Slaves often developed extended-kinship ties and strong communal bonds to cope with the misery of servitude and the possibility that their nuclear families might be separated by sale

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New England society centered on trade. Boston was the colonies' major port city

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The middle colonies-New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey-had more fertile land and so focused primarily on farming

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The lower South (the Carolinas) concentrated on such cash crops as tobacco and rice

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Majority of Southerners were subsistence farmers who had no slaves

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Colonies on the Chesapeake combined features of the middle colonies and the lower South

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Colonies were hardly a unified whole as they approached the events that led them to rebel

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