US AP History

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US AP HISTORY Bell Work: 1. What is a Utopic society? 2.What were some of the English motivations for settling in the New World? 3.How did the distance across the Atlantic help lead to a rather hands off approach to the growth of the new colonies?

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US AP History. Bell Work: 1. What is a Utopic society? 2.What were some of the English motivations for settling in the New World? 3.How did the distance across the Atlantic help lead to a rather hands off approach to the growth of the new colonies?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of US AP History

Page 1: US AP History

US AP HISTORY

• Bell Work:• 1. What is a Utopic society?• 2.What were some of the English motivations for

settling in the New World?• 3.How did the distance across the Atlantic help

lead to a rather hands off approach to the growth of the new colonies?

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A NEW HOME IN A NEW LANDENGLISH COLONIZATION 1603-89

Overview: •New World as a homeland•Motives – Economic and Religious•Free English Institutions

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UTOPIA - 1516 Ideal Society Sir Thomas Moore

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Sir Walter Raleigh

Croatoan

ROANOKE ISLAND - 1587

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JOINT STOCK COMPANY

• Pool of investors to stake claims in the new world utilizing stock• Two joint stock companies formed and granted

land grants by James I.• Virginia Company- Southern Virginia (Jamestown)• Plymouth Company- Northern Virginia (Mass. Bay

Colony)

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• Captain John Smith• Powhatan Indians

(Tobacco)• John Rolfe • Pocahontas

1607 – JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA

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JAMESTOWN CONTINUED

• Hardships- water, lack of discipline, “starving time”• Edwin Sandys (sands)- private ownership and

representative government• House of Burgesses • Headrights (trip paid- 50 acres) vs. indentured

servitude… • Leads to stratified society- poor vs. rich• Defense issues- attacks by the Powhatans

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An 1873 lithograph depicting the expedition against Nemasket led by Standish and guided by Hobbamock

Pilgrim Separatists Mayflower Compact 1st Written

Constitution (Civil, Body, Politics)

Miles Standish (Military Support)

1620 - PLYMOUTH

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John Winthrope

o Puritans – John Winthrop

o “The Great Migration” (20,000 people within 10 years)

1630 – MASSACHUSETTS BAY

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1636 – RHODE ISLAND

• Roger Williams: banished for religious beliefs-” land purchase from Indians, no punishment for religious beliefs

• Anne Hutchinson : Ideas reinterpreted and must leave to Rhode Island (Antinomianism)

• Personal relationship with God

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1636 - CONNECTICUT

THOMAS HOOKER

FUNDAMENTAL ORDERS OF CONNECT ICUT (CONST ITUT ION) - BLUE PR INT FOR C IV I L GOVERNMENT (SOME MEN COULD VOTE)

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• Lord Baltimore & Catholics

• Protestants’ Toleration an is overwhelmed

• Oyster War (Virginia from Maryland shoreline to the north)

1634 - MARYLAND

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MARYLAND’S CATHOLIC COLONY

• Sir George Calvert (Lord Baltimore)… friends with James I• Openly Catholic- sponsors a Catholic colony- his

son creates the colony but must appease Protestants to survive.• English Civil War almost divides the colony but

the “Act concerning Religion” pushed religious tolerance

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1663 – NORTH CAROLINA & SOUTH CAROLINA

Anthony Cooper… with support from John LockeEstablishes an aristocracy and

stratified society.NoblesSerfs – Slaves for LifeDivisions between the North and

South will lead to dividing the colony.

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James, Duke of York Seized from the

Dutch New Institutes Navigation Act 1663

1664 – NEW YORK

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William Penn (converted Quaker) Quakers

“Asylum for all” Proprietary Colony

Some challenge to Penn’s power- agrees to Charter of liberty

Freest Natural Place

1681 - PENNSYLVANIA

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• James Oglethorpe• Prison, debtors

colony.• Buffer zone against

the Spanish

1732 - GEORGIA

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ECONOMIC MERCANTILIST