Southern Colonies Most colonies created to make money. Maryland also created for Catholics. Georgia...
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Transcript of Southern Colonies Most colonies created to make money. Maryland also created for Catholics. Georgia...
Southern Colonies
• Most colonies created to make money. Maryland also created for Catholics. Georgia as a buffer with Spanish.• Their economy was based on the
production of cash crops:• Virginia, Maryland, and North
Carolina grew tobacco• South Carolina grew rice,
indigo, and sugar cane.
Plantations vs. Smaller Farms
• Large plantations dominate agriculture in Virginia, Maryland, and South Carolina.•Much of the land was controlled
by a few powerful families• Jefferson, Lee, and
Washington• North Carolina had smaller farms
and land was divided more evenly.
EOC Question
Which colony was established for the purpose of economic profit?a. Massachusettsb. Pennsylvaniac. Rhode Islandd. Virginia
Southern colonies settled
in the Tidewater.
This area was a swamp and full
of disease.
Most early settlers will die of diseases
like typhus and malaria.
Population growth will depend on
people arriving from Europe.
Before 1700, indentured servants are main source of labor There were few African slaves. African slaves were too expensive
and were too likely to die.
Why were large numbers of male indentured servants brought to colonial Viriginia?a. They were needed to defend the colonyb. Additional labor was needed to cultivate and harvest
tobaccoc. Early settlers sought marriageable partners for their
daughtersd. Their skills were indispensable to the growing
shipbuilding industry.
EOC Question
Population of Southern coloniesPlantation Owners
Former indentured servants
Small farmers
Government in Southern Colonies
• Colonies were controlled by a royal governor appointed by the king or proprietors.• Virginia’s House of Burgesses was the
first legislative, or law-making, body in America• It was composed of mostly large
plantation owners• It advised the royal governor
• Government was controlled by wealthy plantation owners
Bacon’s Rebellion
Most land was owned by
plantation owners
Indentured servants who finished their
service couldn’t find work or land to farm
In 1676, they rebelled against the colonial
government and burned Jamestown
This will lead to a switch to African slaves a source of
labor.
New England Colonies
• Religion unites the New England colonies• All of the colonies were
created to provide religious freedom of some sort• Rocky soil prevented
dependence on agriculture• Instead relied on timber and
shipbuilding, which led to fishing and trade
Population is made up of families
Growth was mainly due to large families with many children
Needed many children as a labor source
Cooler temperatures prevented many diseases
New England colonists live 10 years longer
Children are two inches taller
New England colonies had both indentured servants and slaves, but very few
Indentured servants preferred to work in areas that were more profitable
Rhode Island was the one exception. Thrived on trading slaves from Africa
Government in New England
• First attempt a self-government was the Mayflower Compact.• It was signed by Pilgrims in 1620
before the landed in the New World.• It was a basic agreement that
they would form a government that would decide issues based on majority rule, or what most people voted for.
•Dominated by the Puritan church•Known as the “Bible
Commonwealth”•Only members of the church could
hold offices in the colonies• Local politics were dominated by
the “town meeting”• All males in the town could speak
and vote
Government in New England
Middle ColoniesSome colonies founded for profit
• New York and New Jersey
Pennsylvania founded for religious freedom
• Considered the most religiously tolerant colony
Decent soil was perfect for growing wheat and other grains
Middle colonies were known as the “bread colonies”
There were some families
There were also indentured
servants and slaves.
Society was a mix between New
England and the Southern colonies
•England is not the only country with colonies in North America•Spain claims Mexico, Florida, and the Southwest•France claims Canada and the Mississippi River
War breaks out in Europe and Spreads to Colonies in 1754
•France, Spain, and England are fighting for more land in N. America. •More land=More Money•Known as the French and Indian War because France will join with its Native American allies to fight against England
Answer these questions on your papers . . .
1. Why did the European powers fight the French and Indian War?•To gain more territory in North America.
2. Why was it called the French and Indian War?•Because the French allied with its Native American allies to attack the English.
To help with the war, Benjamin Franklin drafted the Albany Plan of Union
He wanted to join the colonies together under a central government
It was meant to unite the Thirteen colonies against the French
Gets rejected, but it is the first attempt to unify the colonies
America’s First Political Cartoon
Ask your neighbor . . .
How could the Albany Plan of Union have affected American Revolution?• It will suggest that the colonies could unite together under a central government. Ben Franklin predicted that if it would have worked, there may have never been a revolution.
England is losing the war at first.
•William Pitt takes control of the English forces.•He forces colonists to serve in the English army
against their will.•He will take supplies for the army from the colonists.•He makes the colonists house and feed English
soldiers in their home; this is called “quartering” the soldiers.•Pitts policies turn the war in favor of England.
England wins the French and Indian War
Signs Treaty of Paris (1763) that throws France out of N. America
•England issues the Proclamation of 1763, prevents settling further west into the territory taken from the French.•Slows westward expansion
Answer these questions on your paper . . .
1. What effect do you think the Proclamation of 1763 had on the relationship between the colonists and England?•Colonists are angry because they can’t get access to
more land.2. What about the relationship between the Native
Americans and England?•Only slows expansion, doesn’t stop it. Also France
and Spain continue to encourage Native Americans to attack the colonies.
Impact of the War
•First attempt to unite the colonies under the Albany Plan•England spends a lot of money on the war and expects the colonies to help pay it back•Pitt’s policies and the Proclamation of 1763 strain the relationship between England and Colonies.
In order to help pay for the French and Indian wars, England (Great Britain) passed laws to make the American colonists help pay for the war.
• Sugar Act of 1764 – Taxed sugar from non-English sources.• Stamp Act of 1765 – Certain paper items were required to have a
government stamp• Quartering Act of 1765 – American colonists must provide supplies for
English soldiers stationed in America. (Had the same policy in England)• Townshend Acts of 1767 – Taxed goods imported from England.• Tea Act of 1773 – American colonists could only purchase tea from
England.
Boston Tea Party
• Colonists resisted the Tea Act by throwing 92,000 pounds of English tea into Boston Harbor.
• Furious English officials enacted four harsh laws, known as the Intolerable Acts, to punish Massachusetts and set an example for other colonies.
• These acts closed Boston Harbor, banned town meetings, increased the power of the royal governor, and allowed the English military to take over Boston.
The Enlightenment
• It was the belief that reason and logic could improve government and society.• John Locke believed that the role of government was
to protect the “natural rights” of its citizens, who give up some of their rights for this protection. This is known as a “social contract”.•Montesquieu argued that government power should
be separated to keep one branch from dominating.
The Enlightenment and American Society
• It started in Europe with the upper class, but eventually made its way to the American colonies. • Locke greatly influenced Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin
Franklin.• The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution will
contain ideas borrowed from Paine.• He wrote “Common Sense”, which openly encouraged the
American Colonies to separate from England.
The Great Awakening
• The Enlightenment caused some of the American colonists to question their religious beliefs.• Some American colonists strayed from or abandoned
their religion.•Church leaders feared that American colonists had
become preoccupied with making and spending money.
The Great Awakening
• In 1730, ministers like Johnathan Edwards began the Great Awakening with sermons like “Sinners at the Hand of an Angry God”• Jonathan Edwards was a Puritan minister who
believed that the American colonists had strayed from the church. •He used sermons about Hell to scare people back to
the church.
The Great Awakening
The Great Awakening
•This was a major religious revival in the colonies.•It made church accessible to people and church membership grew.•This helped to further separate the American colonists from England.
The Boston Massacre
•Boston was most affected by the Intolerable Acts.•Citizens in the city protested
English laws and oppression frequently.•One of these protests ended
in the English opening fire on protestors, killing five.•Greatly angered American
colonists, convincing many that rebellion was the only answer.
First Continental Congress
• In 1774, representatives from 12 colonies met to discuss growing problems with England.• They agreed to issue a
Declaration of Rights to protest English actions in America.• They created a militia to
defend American colonists should war break out with England. Known as “minutemen”.
“Shot Heard Round the World”
• Hearing about the Continental Congress, the English generals decided to capture the colonial leaders and part of the gunpowder that the militia had been storing.• Paul Revere and others managed to warn everyone.• They fired on some minutemen who had gathered to stop
them at Lexington, Massachusetts. They killed eight.• The English then fought the minutemen at Concord,
Massachusetts and retreated back to Boston.• This is the beginning of the Revolutionary War.