period 2 1607 - 1763

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Europeans and American Indians maneuvered and fought for dominance, control, and security in North America, and distinctive colonial and native societies emerged PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

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PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763. Europeans and American Indians maneuvered and fought for dominance, control, and security in North America, and distinctive colonial and native societies emerged. KC 2.1. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

Europeans and American Indians maneuvered and fought for dominance, control, and security in North America,

and distinctive colonial and native societies emerged

PERIOD 21607 - 1763

Page 2: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

KC 2.1Differences in imperial goals, cultures, and the

North American environments that different empires confronted led Europeans to develop

diverse patterns to colonization• Spain

• France

• The Netherlands

• Great Britain

Page 3: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

Explain the diverse patterns of European colonization in the New World by Spain,

France, and England.

Page 4: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Convert & Exploit• Gold, SilverSpanish

• Trade alliances, intermarriage• Furs, products for export

French/Dutch

• Colonies based on AG• Large #s of people to populate

settlements• Hostile towards NAs

British

Page 5: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

SPANISH COLONIES

• Spanish arrive take over preexisting tribute/labor systems overthrow native rulers implementation of Spanish institutions (legal code, Catholic Church)

• Encomiendas, mita system

• Gold, silver

• Society

• 2/3 male

• Racial mixture: mestizo (NA +SP), mulatto (AF + SP), Zambo (NA + AF)

• sistema de castas

Page 6: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Control of empire to protect crown’s holdings

• Spaniards out of cities large estates (haciendas)

• NAs left in communities = authority of native rulers, speaking native language

• Priests transform religion to fit NA culture

Page 7: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

CULT OF SAINTS: LATIN AMERICA

• Illiterate use of iconography to tell stories, often replaced reading from Bible

• Veneration of Saints from Old World transfers to New

• Inspiration from Creoles, mulattos, etc.

Page 8: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Our Lady of Guadalupe

• Woman appeared to poor Indian man outside of Mexico City (1531)

• Place previously dedicated to Aztec goddess (was still worshipped there)

• Image seen was brown-skinned Mary, shown as pre-Columbian woman- spoke native language

• Priest told he needed sign that it was Mary

• Juan Diego- 3 miracles

• Adopted as symbol of Mexican nationalism represents faith, hope, compassion. Embraces cause of the poor, ignored, voiceless, oppressed

Page 9: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

RELIGIOUS BACKGROUND- PROTESTANT CHALLENGE TO SPANISH EMPIRE• 1492- Euro = Catholic power

• 1517- Luther & Protestant Reformation = end of unity through church, start of civil wars, social change desire to seize property from Catholic Church

• Protestant groups

• John Calvin (The Institutes of the Christian Religion, 1536)

• Puritans, Huguenots

• All damned by Adam’s original sin

• Christ sacrifice redemption

• BUT. . . Only for “elected” (predetermined to be saved)

• Meaning? STRICT MORALITY, hard work

• Values appeal to growing middle class

Page 10: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• England- Cath v. Prot.

• QE1- Anglican = Protestant

• English Book of Common Prayer, marriage for clergy, leeway for doctrine

• Calvinist groups want more separation from Catholic Church

• Desire to “purify” church from influence of CC, religious revival = Puritans

• Those who broke w/ CofE = Separatists

Page 11: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763
Page 12: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

THREAT TO SPANISH MONOPOLY ON NEW WORLD

• Holdings hard to defend in Caribbean, rivalries revived, economy falls

• Expensive wars, abundance of gold/silver, high tax on AG, high need of military service ( migration to America)

• France

• Jacques Cartier (1530s- St. Lawrence, NY, Canada)

• Break until Samuel de Champlain after 1600

• Dutch

• Provinces pass through inheritance to Spanish king

• Were Protestant rebellion vs. Spain (1648 = Dutch republic)

• Dutch “Sea Beggars” plunder Spanish ships, illegal trade w/ Sp. colonies,

Page 13: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• English

• QE1: “Sea Dogges” = John Hawkins, Francis Drake

• Smuggling, piracy

• Drake- raid Spanish towns, treasure ships (1570s)

• 1588- Defeat of Spanish Armada = Protestant victory, God’s will for Protestantism, no fear of Spanish interference for American bound ships from England

• Several exploration attempts, but. . .

• QE1 death in 1603- NO British

colonists in New World

Page 14: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Population increase during 16th c. economic stimulation, expansion of commerce, manufacturing

• Textile industry = beginning of capitalism, industrialism

• Cottage industry (wood: estates merchants peasant workers weave into cloth merchants foreign markets

• Mercantilism – goal to REDUCE IMPORTS, INCREASE EXPORTS

• balance of trade, flow of gold/silver into England economic expansion

• large merchant fleet, much wealth, trade w/ Turkey, India = foundation for colonization

Page 15: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

ENGLISH EXPLORATION

• Sir Humphrey Gilbert & Sir Walter Raleigh

• Royal patent to possess “heathen and barbarous landes countries and territories not actually possessed of any Christian prince or people.”

• Settlers & descendents have rights/privileges of Englishmen “in suche like ample manner and fourme as if they were borne and personally residaunte within our sed Realme of England.”

• Laws had to be “agreable to the forme of the lawes and pollicies of England.”

• Gilbert- 1583, Newfoundland (Canada)- vanished during return home

• Raleigh- 1587, OBX (NC)- 100 colonists under Gov. John White

• White return to England for supplies

• Return 1590- Roanoke abandoned, pillaged

Page 16: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

ENGLAND’S TOBACCO COLONIES: JAMESTOWN

• Plantation colonies develop

• Brazil, Jamestown, Maryland, Caribbean

• Demand for sugar, tobacco + influx of colonists

• 1606- K. James I land grant to VA Co.

• All land from NC – southern NY = Virginia

• 1607- all-male VA Co. group to America

• No women, no farmers, no ministers

• Who were they?

• “unruly Sparks, packed off by their Friends to escape worse destinies at home.”

• Survival based on extracting tribute from NA, search out commodities (pearls, gold)

Page 17: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763
Page 18: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

JAMESTOWN PROBLEMS

• Goal?

• “dig gold, refine gold, load gold”

• Problem?

• No gold

• Settle in swampy area of peninsula- Jamestown (KJ1)

• Little fresh water, refusal to plant crops DEATH (68%)

• 1611- 1,200 colonists sent . . . Death persists (50%+)

"he who works not, eats not.” –John Smith

Page 19: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Native American Interaction

• Powhatan sees as potential allies

• BUT tribute must go both ways

• Corn for “hatchets . . . Bells, beads, and copper. . . And two great guns”

• Viewed Jamestown as dependent community w/in chiefdom

• 10 years of uneasy relations war

• Who pays whom?

Page 20: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Tobacco

• Native to Americas as medicine, stimulant

• Rolfe cultivate crop for VA soil high $$ in GB, migration of settlers

• GB demand increase for “vile Weed” (KJ1)

• Taxes increase royal treasury

• Powhatan view English as enemies- “not to trade but to invade my people and possess my country.”

• 1618- VA Co. grant 100 acres to every resident

• = Headright system

• 50 acres of land/new immigrant passage

paid

Page 21: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

THE VIRGINIA HOUSE OF BURGESSES

• VA Co. create system of rep. gov. = VA House of Burgesses (1619)

• Make laws, levy taxes

• Gov. of VA and/or company council in GB had veto power

• 1622 in VA- land-ownership, self-government, judicial system

• All based on “lawes of the realme of England”

• 4,500 more colonists

• VA transition to SETTLER colony

• VA Co. also recruit “Maides young and uncorrupt to make wifes to the Inhabitants”

Page 22: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

How did the proximity of the Powhatan Chiefdom

affect developments in early Virginia?

Page 23: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

THE INDIAN WAR OF 1622• Increase in colonists conflict w/ NAs

• Led by Opechancanough- successor to Powhatan

• 1607- attack on first “invaders”

• Later, resistance to proposals from English for NA kids into English schools, conversion to Xnty

• 1621 = Paramount Chief

• “Before the end of two moons, there should not be an Englishman in all their Countries.” to Potomack NA group

• 1622- surprise attack

• 12 chiefdoms

• 137 English settlers killed (1/3)

• English seize fields, foods of the “naked, tanned, deformed Savages”

• Enslave captured NAs , take control of land

• “perpetual war without peace or truce” through 1632

Page 24: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Result of fighting?

• KJ1 revoke VA Co. charter

• VA Royal colony = king, ministers appoint gov., advisory council (king’s Privy Council)

• HofB remains, BUT legislation must be ratified by PC

• Church of England into colony

• Colonists pay taxes to support clergy

• = model for royal colonies

• Appointed gov., elected assembly, formal legal system, Anglican Church

Page 25: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763
Page 26: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

What factors impacted the political, social, and economic development of the colonial regions (New England, Middle, and

Southern/Chesapeake colonies)?

How did this create regional identities?

Page 27: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

MIDDLE/CHESAPEAKE COLONIES

• NY, PA, NJ, RI/VA, MD

• Diverse

• Religion, ethnicity, demography

• Export economy

• Middle = cereal crops (wheat), animal husbandry (leather, dairy, candles, meat, butter, cheese)

• Chesapeake = tobacco

• Labor intensive

• White indentured servants, African slaves

Page 28: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

MARYLAND

• King James King Charles I

• Secretly sympathetic to Catholics

• 1632- land on Chesapeake granted to Lord Baltimore (Cecilius Calvert)

• MD = refuge for Catholics

• 1634- 20 gentlemen (Cath) + 200 craftsmen/artisans/laborers (Prots) est. St. Mary’s City (Potomac)

• Conflict resolution = “no scandall nor offence to be given to any of the Protestants” and to “cause All Acts of Romane Catholicque Religion to be done as privately as may be.”

Page 29: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763
Page 30: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• MD = high growth

• Land to wealthy

• Opportunity for artisans

• Political conflict

• Against LB, settlers elect representative body

• Desire to initiate legislation

• LB gives OK

• Anti-Catholic agitation increased LB influence on assembly for Toleration Act (1649)

• = all Xns have right to follow own beliefs, hold church services

• Tobacco = $$

Page 31: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

NEW ENGLAND COLONIES

• MA, NH, RI, CT

• Founded by Puritans

• Desire community of like-minded believers

• Close-knit, homogenous

• AG + Commerce

• Limited AG- poor soil

• Local Ag for local consumption

• Focus on commercial/market activity growing cities

• Natural resources = commodities

• Lumber (naval stores), fish/whale, furs,

• Financial, entrepreneurial activity

Page 32: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

NEW ENGLAND

• 1620- 102 Pilgrims arrive @ Plymouth Colony

• 50% death rate

• Strong work ethic, little danger from Wampanoags, religious toleration

• 1630- Massachusetts Bay Colony chartered as joint-stock co.

• Puritan exodus led by John Winthrop (1st Gov. of MBC)

• “We must consider that we shall be as a City upon a Hill…The eyes of all people are upon us.”

• Boston

• joint-stock representative political system (gov., council, assembly)

• Rule by godly

• Must be church member to vote, hold office

• NO religious toleration! Puritanism = state=sponsored religion, Bible is legal guide

Page 33: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Who?

• Family groups to form communities based on Protestant principles

• Land distribution, balanced sex ratio, organized community society of independent farmers

• MBC = “moral commonwealth”

Page 34: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763
Page 35: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

PURITANS 101• Pilgrims = separatists

• KJ1 threatened to drive “out of the land, or else do worse” America

• William Bradford, Mayflower Compact, MBC

• No royal charter to bind together

• MC = alliance “together into a civill body politick”

• Based on Puritan idea of self-governing religious congregations

• Puritans = those wanting to “purify” COE of ceremony, hierarchy (Cath)

• KC1 vs. idea of grace in salvation = “popery” to Prots

• Purge of ministers who went against KC1 outflow of Puritans

• In MBC- want reformed Xn society, “authority in magistrates, liberty in people, purity in the church.” – John Cotton

Page 36: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• NE Puritans look for simplicity

• Power lie w/ congregation

• (Congregationalist churches)

• John Calvin = inspiration

• Idea of predestination

• Only a few are saved

• Life of anxiety- fear that person was not part of “elect”

• Hope for conversion experience

• Reliance on “preparation” & confidence in salvation (spiritual guidance from minsters)

• Saved if obey laws

Page 37: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

DISSIDENTS IN MBC

• Roger Williams

• Target during purge of religious dissidents

• RW = minister in Salem: religious toleration, separation of church & state, wrong to take NA land banishment in 1636

• Settled in Providence, others into Portsmouth, Newport

• 1644- corporate charter granted by Parliament Rhode Island

• Rule selves

Page 38: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Anne Hutchinson

• Preach “covenant of grace” vs. “works,” too much emphasis on “good behavior,” God revealed directly to individuals (heretical)

• Puritans- little gender equality. Women = inferior

• “Thy desires shall bee subject ot they husband, and he shall rule over thee.”

• 1637 banishment on basis of heretical views RI

• Others:

• 1630s- outward movement of “dissidents”

• CT, New Haven, Saybrook combine into CT- 1665

• 1639- Hartford, Fundamental Orders of CT

• = 1st constitution (rep. assembly, vote in Gov)

• Legally established church, elected gov., assembly

• Voting rights to property-owning men

• Vs. church members like in MBC

Page 39: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

THE YEOMAN SOCIETY: 1630-1700• NE Puritans from middle class England

• No desire to be tenants of wealthy or be taxed by distant gov.

• desire for close knit, self-governing communities

• MBC & CT give land to groups of settlers, then distributed to male heads of family

• Most own land, BUT no equality of wealth/status

• “God had ordained different degrees and orders of men, some to be Masters and Commanders, others to be Subjects, and to be commanded.” – John Saffin, Boston merchant

• Most land granted by proprietors to high social class

• All receive some land

• Most adult men have vote in TOWN MEETING (institution for local gov.)

Page 40: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Society in NE- independent households, self-governing communities

• farmers having political power

• Town meetings taxes, ordinances for fencing, road building, use of common fields, chose men to manage town affairs & reps for General Court (center of political authority in colony)

• Chesapeake yeomen/Euro. Peasants have less power

Page 41: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

NEW ENGLAND CONFEDERATION

• 1640s- fear of attacks from NA, Dutch, French military alliance

• Help from England not likely

• Civil war, distance

• Confederation directed by board- 2 reps/colony

• Limited powers on boundary disputes, return of runaway servants, dealings w/ NA tribes

• 1684- end of NEC

• Colonial rivalry, renewed control by King

• Why important?

• Example of ability to unify, take action toward common purpose

Page 42: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

PURITANISM AND WITCHCRAFT

• Puritans see signs in natural world

• Good & evil

• Cotton Mather

• Lightning = supernatural sign

• Believe people tried to manipulate forces in nature (wizards, witches)

• 1647 – 1662: 14 hung for witchcraft (older women)

• Salem, 1692:

• Girls w/ strange seizures accusations of witchcraft

• Judge OKs use of “spectral” evidence

• MBC tries 175 people- 19 executed

Page 43: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Why the mass hysteria?

• Group rivalry

• Accuser often young girls from poor farming families

• Accused often older women who were wealthy, prominent church members

• Puritan effort to subordinate women

• 18/19 executed were women

• Political Instability in MBC

• And fears from NA attacks in Maine

• Some accusers parents killed

Page 44: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• = turning point for MBC, Puritans

• Salem = high number of deaths

• gov. officials limiting legal prosecutions for witchcraft

• Beginning of Enlightenment thought (1675)

• Rational, scientific view of world

• Strange happenings have “natural causes”

Page 45: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

NEW YORK• KCII attempt to consolidate holdings along Atlantic

• Close gap b/t NE & Chesapeake colonies

• Issue? DUTCH

• New Amsterdam on Manhattan Is./Hudson R.

• 1664- land b/t CT and DE Bay granted to Duke of York (KCII brother James)

• navy sent across Atlantic, takes control of colony from Gov. Peter Stuyvesant

• Renamed New York

• Orders to treat Dutch well, give freedom of worship, speak own language

• Also- new taxes, duties, rents.

• No representative assembly opposition of Puritans from NE in NY

• 1683- James OKs NY Gov. to start rep. assembly

• d

Page 46: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

NEW JERSEY

• 1664- NY too large to administer James divide it

• NJ area to Lord Berkely & Sir Carteret

• 1674- split into W. NJ, E. NJ

• Both give land offers to new settlers, religious freedom, representative assembly

• Later, sold proprietary interest to groups of Quakers

• Issues? Land titles change hands often bad property lines, confusion

• 1702- combination of two Jerseys = New Jersey

Page 47: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

WILLIAM PENN & PENNSYLVANIA

• 1681- KCII grant PA (incl. today’s DE) to Penn

• = payment on debt to Penn’s father

• WP a Quaker- simple Xnty (gender equality, nonviolence, resistance to military service)

• Grew up wealthy, then join Religious Society of Friends

• Religious authority in own self, not Bible or preacher persecution, jail

• “The Holy Experiment”

• PA = religious refuge

• Frame of Gov. (1682-1683)- rep. assembly elected by landowners, written constitution, Charter of Liberties (1701- freedom of worship, unrestricted immigration)

• WP govern from Philadelphia, PA, not England

• Treated NA fairly, purchased land fairly from them

• 1702- WP give lower 3 counties of PA own assembly = DE

Page 48: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

SOUTHERN COLONIES

• SC, NC, GA

• AG economy

• Staple crops, long growing season, slave labor

• Tobacco, rice, indigo, sugar (W. Indies)

• High investment (land, slaves, equipment) high return

Page 49: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

• Carolinas- KCII give land to 8 nobles (= proprietors in 1663)

• 1729- SC & NC formed from land grant by KCII

• 1670- colonists from England, planters from Barbados Charlestown

• Econ- fur/trade to West Indies (food) RICE ($$$)

• NC- farmers from VA, New England

• Small, self-sufficient tobacco farms

• Few plantations (why? Few harbors, poor transportation)

• Georgia = Last Colony

• 1732- defensive buffer from Sp. FL & relief for overcrowded debtor jails

• James Oglethorpe (Gov.)- Savannah (1733)

• No rum, no slaves, but. . . Little prosperity

• 1752- GB takes over, restrictions lifted, plantation system adopted

Page 50: PERIOD 2 1607 - 1763

COLONIAL BREAKDOWN

• New England

• Middle

• Chesapeake/Southern

• Restoration Colonies

• Late 17th c.

• Restoration of power to monarch, KCII, after Puritan rule (Oliver Cromwell)

• Want to tighten control, gain back power from “big men” (Puritan magistrates, tobacco planters) who came to power during “lax” rule

• Carolinas, Pennsylvania (DE), NY (NJ)