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Page 1: Holt Call to Freedom Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) © Holt Call To Freedom

Holt Call to Freedom

Chapter 4:Chapter 4:

The English ColoniesThe English Colonies

(1605-1735)(1605-1735)

Chapter 4:Chapter 4:

The English ColoniesThe English Colonies

(1605-1735)(1605-1735)

© Holt Call To Freedom

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4.1 The Virginia Colony

Objectives: Explain why people in England were

interested in founding Jamestown and when the colony was established.

Analyze how the Jamestown colonists interacted with local American Indians.

Analyze how the English plantation system began.

Examine the role indentured servants and enslaved Africans played in Virginia’s economy.

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I. Settlement in Jamestown

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I. Settlement in Jamestown

A. London Company was formed in 1605 to establish a new settlement.

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B. Jamestown

1. Founded in 16072. Poor location, with settlers

unprepared to start a settlement3. Two thirds of settlers died by the first

winter4. Captain John SmithJohn Smith forced settlers to

work and build better housing.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Source: http://www.apva.org/history/jsmith.html

Page 7: Holt Call to Freedom Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) © Holt Call To Freedom

II. The Powhatan Confederacy

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A. American Indians in Virginia

1.1. Powhatan Confederacy,Powhatan Confederacy, led by Wahunsonacock

2. Assisted colonists by providing food at times

3. Unhappy when colonists took food by force

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B. A New Economy

1. Jamestown initially did not produce a profit for the London Company.

2. Colonist John RolfeJohn Rolfe introduced a new type of tobacco to Virginia.

3. Tobacco became a valuable export for the colony and allowed it to survive.

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4.2 – Competing Claims in North America

C. The English Settle at Jamestown

Burley Tobacco – Franklin County, KentuckySource: http://members.iglou.com/perkins/newkpf/2002_08/home3001.htm

Page 11: Holt Call to Freedom Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) © Holt Call To Freedom

4.2 – Competing Claims in North America

C. The English Settle at Jamestown

Burley Tobacco Flower – Franklin County, Kentucky Source: http://members.iglou.com/perkins/newkpf/2002_07/home1198.htm

Page 12: Holt Call to Freedom Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) © Holt Call To Freedom

III. War in Virginia

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III. War in Virginia

A. John Rolfe married Pocahontas,Pocahontas, daughter of Wahunsonacock.

Source: http://goodies.freeservers.com/pocahantas.html

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B. Conflict

1. Colonists no longer relied upon American Indians for food.

2. Colonists desired American Indian land for tobacco farms.

3. American Indians launched a major attack on Virginia settlers in 1622.

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B. Conflict

4. War continued for some 20 years.5. The English Crown canceled the

London Company’s charter, and Virginia became a royal colony under the king’s control.

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IV. Daily Life in Virginia

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IV. Daily Life in Virginia

A. Virginians lived on scattered farms rather than in towns.

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IV. Daily Life in Virginia

B. The headrightheadright system allowed colonists to earn 50 acres of land for every settler they brought over from England.

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V. Labor in Virginia

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A. An Early Labor System

1. Most plantation workers were indentured servants,indentured servants, or colonists who agreed to work for four to seven years in exchange for passage across the Atlantic.

2. Indentured servants endured poor living conditions.

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B. Slavery

1. First Africans, some of whom were indentured servants, arrived in 1619.

2. Over time, demand for more workers led plantersplanters – wealthy farmers with large plantations – to turn to slave labor.

3. By the late 1600s, most Africans in Virginia were kept in lifelong slavery.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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VI. Bacon’s Rebellion

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VI. Bacon’s Rebellion

A. In 1676 Nathaniel Bacon,Nathaniel Bacon, a wealthy frontier planter, led former indentured servants in an attack against peaceful American Indians to take their land.

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Source: http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAbaconN.htm

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VI. Bacon’s Rebellion

B. Angry at the governor for trying to stop them, Bacon and his followers attacked Jamestown in an uprising called Bacon’s Rebellion.Bacon’s Rebellion.

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VI. Bacon’s Rebellion

C. The rebellion failed, and fear of future rebellions led many planters to favor slaves over indentured servants.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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4.2 The Pilgrims’ Experience

Objectives: Explain why the Pilgrims came to America. Define the Mayflower Compact, and explain

why it was important. Describe life in the Plymouth colony.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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I. Puritans and Pilgrims

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http://www.rootsweb.com/~mosmd/

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A. Religious Tensions

1. Protestants called PuritansPuritans wanted to purify the Church of England from anything that reminded them of the Catholic Church.

2. One sect,sect, or religious group, wanted to separate from the Church of England.

3. English leaders punished these SeparatistsSeparatists for forming their own churches.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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http://www.modjourn.brown.edu/Image/Bundy/Bundy.htm

Painting of Puritans by Edgar Bundy

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B. The Pilgrims

1. One group of Separatists became known as the Pilgrims.Pilgrims.

2. They were immigrants immigrants – people who come to a new country after leaving the land of their birth – who left England for the Netherlands in 1608.

3. Decided to leave the Netherlands to establish a colony in Virginia

© Holt Call To Freedom

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II. The Founding of Plymouth

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A. The Voyage

1. Pilgrims and others left England on the Mayflower in 1620.

2. Pilgrims such as William BradfordWilliam Bradford led the group.

3. Arrived way north of Virginia (@ Plymouth Rock in Massachusetts), because of a storm, after two months at sea

© Holt Call To Freedom

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http://www.enchantedlearning.com/history/us/pilgrim/mayflowerquiz.shtml

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http://www.pilgrimhall.org/leaders.htm

Statue of William Bradford done by Cyrus E. Dallin

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B. Creating a Colony

1. Male passengers on the ship signed the Mayflower Compact,Mayflower Compact, an agreement to have fair laws to protect the general good.

2. Landed in Massachusetts in late 1620 3. Half the Pilgrims died from cold and

sickness during the first winter.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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IN THE name of God, Amen.We whose names are underwritten, the loyal subjects of our dread sovereign

Lord, King James, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland king, defender of the faith, etc., having undertaken, for the glory of God, and advancement of the Christian faith, and honor of our king and country, a voyage to plant the first colony in the Northern parts of Virginia, do by these presents solemnly and mutually in the presence of God, and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation and furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by virtue hereof to enact, constitute, and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions, and offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the colony, unto which we promise all due submission and obedience.

In witness whereof we have hereunder subscribed our names at Cape-Cod the 11 of November, in the year of the reign of our sovereign lord, King James, of England, France, and Ireland the eighteenth, and of Scotland the fifty-fourth. Anno Domine 1620.

http://www.nationalcenter.org/MayflowerCompact.html

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III. Pilgrims and American Indians

© Holt Call To Freedom

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III. Pilgrims and American Indians

A. American Indians in the area had already suffered from European diseases brought by traders.

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B. Relations between colonists and American Indians

1.1. Squanto,Squanto, an American Indian who had learned English from fishing boat crews, met the Pilgrims.

2. Helped colonists plant corn and establish relations with Wampanoag Indians

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B. Relations between colonists and American Indians

3. American Indians and Pilgrims held a feast now known as the first Thanksgiving.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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IV. The Pilgrim Community

© Holt Call To Freedom

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A. Problems

1. Farmland around the settlement was poor.

2. Fishing and hunting conditions were also poor, so little wealth was gained from the fur trade.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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B. Family Life

1. Families common in the Pilgrim settlement

2. Center of religious life, health care, and community well-being

3. Families worked together to survive.4. Women had more legal rights than

they did in England.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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4.3 The New England Colonies

Objectives: Explain the Great Migration and why it

occurred. Analyze the role that religion and church

played in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Describe how the Puritans responded to

dissenters.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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I. The Massachusetts Bay Colony

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A. Crisis in England

1. About 1620, England experienced an economic downturn.

2. King Charles raised taxes even as jobs disappeared.

3. Church of England punished Puritans as dissentersdissenters – people who disagree with official opinions.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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A. Crisis in England

4. Economic, political, and religious problems led to the Great MigrationGreat Migration – tens of thousands of people leaving England.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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B. A Puritan Colony

1. In 1629 Charles I granted the Puritans a charter to create a colony—The Massachusetts Bay Colony.

2.2. John WinthropJohn Winthrop governed the new colony and later founded Boston.

© Holt Call To Freedom

Source: http://www.etsu.edu/cas/history/resources/StudentTo1877/SChapter3.htm

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Source: http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page76.asp

Charles I in three positions - multiple

portrait by Sir Anthony Van Dyck (1599-1641)

The Royal Collection © 2005, Her Majesty Queen

Elizabeth II

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B. A Puritan Colony

3. Puritans believed they had a covenant,covenant, or sacred agreement with God, to build an ideal Christian community.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Source: http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/winthrop.cfm

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II. Church and State in New England

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A. The Charter

1. Placed colony under English laws but allowed for some independence

2. Created a General Court to run the colony

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B. Politics and Religion

1. Closely linked in New England2. Ministers could not hold government

positions but had a great deal of authority.

3. Male church members were the only colonists who could vote.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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C. Connecticut

1. Minister Thomas Hooker and followers founded Connecticut in 1636.

2. In 1639 the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut allowed men who were not church members to vote.

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III. Daily Life and Customs

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III. Daily Life and Customs

A. New England communities were more stable than those in Virginia.

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B. Economy

1. Farmers grew food for their own use rather than for sale.

2. Family members performed farm labor.

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III. Daily Life and Customs

C. Education was highly valued in New England.

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IV. Dissent in Massachusetts

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A. Rhode Island

1.1. Roger WilliamsRoger Williams disagreed with the leaders of Massachusetts.

2. In 1644 he received a charter to establish a settlement later known as Rhode Island.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Source: http://www.cyberhymnal.org/bio/w/i/l/williams_roger.htm

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Source: http://iangoddard.net/roger.htm

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IV. Dissent in Massachusetts

B.B. Anne HutchinsonAnne Hutchinson was forced out of Massachusetts for disagreeing with Puritan religious leaders.

© Holt Call To Freedom

Source: http://pbskids.org/wayback/civilrights/features_hutchison.html

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V. The Salem Witch Trials

A. Girls in Salem accused people of casting spells on them.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Dungeon of the Witch Museum

Salem, MA

Many cells were so small that the captive could not

lay down

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V. The Salem Witch Trials

B. Trials led to 19 people being put to death.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Reenactment of the trial of beggar woman Sarah Good told from the

original 1692 transcript

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V. The Salem Witch Trials

C. Officials later apologized for the witch trials.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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4.4 The Southern and Middle Colonies

Objectives: Discuss the role religion played in the

founding and development of Maryland. Explain how the Carolinas were established

and how their economies developed. Describe how the middle colonies were

founded.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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I. Tolerant Maryland

© Holt Call To Freedom

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A. Catholics in England

1. Could not worship freely

2. In 1632 Cecilius CalvertCecilius Calvert obtained a charter to establish a colony that he hoped would be a refuge for Catholics.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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Source: http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/speccol/sc3500/sc3520/000100/000191/html/msa00191.html

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B. The Colony

1. As a proprietary colony, proprietors,proprietors, or owners, controlled the government.

2. Many colonists in Maryland turned to growing tobacco.

3. An increasing number of Protestants moved to Maryland in the 1640s.

4. The Toleration Act of 1649Toleration Act of 1649 made restricting religious rights of Christians a crime.

© Holt Call To Freedom

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4.2 – Competing Claims in North America

C. The English Settle at Jamestown

Burley Tobacco – Franklin County, KentuckySource: http://members.iglou.com/perkins/newkpf/2002_08/home3001.htm

Page 77: Holt Call to Freedom Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) Chapter 4: The English Colonies (1605-1735) (1605-1735) © Holt Call To Freedom

4.2 – Competing Claims in North America

C. The English Settle at Jamestown

Burley Tobacco Flower – Franklin County, Kentucky Source: http://members.iglou.com/perkins/newkpf/2002_07/home1198.htm

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II. The Carolinas

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II. The Carolinas

A. Considered a single colony from 1663 to 1712

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II. The Carolinas

B. North Carolina had no towns and few churches until the 1700s.

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C. South Carolina

1. First colonists arrived in the area in 1670.

2. Colonists turned to rice production, which requires many laborers.

3. Demand for laborers led to large number of slaves, who outnumbered white colonists by 1730.

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II. The Carolinas

D. Both colonies became royal colonies in the early 1700s.

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III. Diversity in New York and New Jersey

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A. New Netherland

1. New Amsterdam became an important fur-trading center.

2. Known for its religious tolerance

3. In 1647 Peter StuyvesantPeter Stuyvesant took command of the colony.

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Source: http://www.peterstuyvesant.org/

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B. English Rule

1. English took control of New Amsterdam in 1664, renaming it New York.

2. Proprietors established New Jersey in 1664.

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IV. The Pennsylvania Experiment

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A. The Society of Friends

1. Known as the QuakersQuakers

2. Rejected formal religious practices and preached tolerance

3. Persecuted in England

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Source: http://www.ushistory.org/brandywine/kids/coloringno.htm

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B. Penn’s Colony

1. Quaker William PennWilliam Penn received a charter to start a colony that he hoped would provide a home for Quakers.

2. Known as Pennsylvania, the colony offered religious freedom for Christians.

3. Became a key example of representative self-government

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Source: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/PENN/pnintro.html

Source: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/PENN/pnhome.html

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V. The Ideal of Georgia

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V. The Ideal of Georgia

A. In 1732 James OglethorpeJames Oglethorpe granted charter to found a colony, founded Georgia in 1733

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Source: http://www.ourgeorgiahistory.com/people/oglethorpe.html

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V. The Ideal of Georgia

B. Hoped it would be a land of small farms without slavery

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V. The Ideal of Georgia

C. Colonists wanted large farms and slaves, and Georgia became a royal colony in 1752.

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