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Fearless: 13 Colonies (1607-1754)

Taylor Swift Connection:

Like Taylor in the Fearless Era trying to grow and find herself as a person and wanting a fairytale life, the colonizers are determining who they are as a colony and want a perfect land and freedom. Anne Hutchison is also Fearless

Southern Colonies

Virginia, Carolinas, Maryland, Georgia

Virginia: 1607

1607: Jamestown

  • First Permanent British Colony

    • Charter Colony: Virginia Company

  • Goal: Find Gold

  • Settlement:

    • Attacked by Native Americans in Chesapeake Bay and settled in nearby swamp

      • Mosquitos spread disease

      • No fresh water

      • Cannot farm

  • Typical Settler: Young Men in 20’s

    • Lazy gentlemen not used to working

    • Spent time looking for gold and not provisions

  • John Smith: Jamestown’s first leader

    • Institute Military Rule: No Work? Can’t Eat

    • Injured and returns to England—>things get bad again

  • 1609-1610:Starving Time

    • People eat dogs, cats, mice, and corpses

    • 60 out of 838 people survive

    • Virginia becomes Royal Colony: colony under King’s Control

*Powhatan Confederacy: loosely affiliated tribes under Native American leader Powhatan—>Fails

1617: House of Burgesses

  • Colonial Assembly/Representative Democracy that ran Virginia

  • Controlled Power of the Purse —> Money

1676: Bacon’s Rebellion

  • Fight against William Berkeley over land

  • Impact: Nothing but shows class struggle in South

  • Governor William Berkeley

    • Crown Appointed Governor of Virginia

    • Upperclass Aristocrat

  • Nathanial Bacon

    • Leader of poor indentured servants

    • Wanted to fight with Native Americans to gain land-Berkeley said No

Headright System: 50 acres offered to any settler who comes to America

John Rolfe

  • Discovers new sweet Tobacco—>British Demand

  • Tobacco is labor intensive—>New Labor source needed

    • Indentured Servants replaced by Slave System (1619)

      • Mingling not allowed-Ridged class system

  • Plantation owners: Upperclass Aristocrats that run the South

Maryland: 1634

  • Founder: Lord Baltimore

    • granted land by King

  • Religious Tolerance however Catholics couldn’t vote

  • Good relationship with Native Americans

Carolinas: 1663 and 1665

  • Founder: Multiple people given land by King but Anthony Ashley Cooper encouraged settlement

  • Economy: Trade and Agriculture

    • Hardest Slave System in the Colonies-Barbados Slave Import

      • 1739: Stono Uprising

        • Slave Rebellion in South Carolina

        • Failure: Led to worse treatment of slaves

Georgia: 1733

  • Founder: James Oglethorpe

  • Why:

    • Colony for Debtors: “Haven for Poor People”

    • Buffer Colony between Spanish and British Territory

Middle Colonies

New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware

  • Fertile Soil—>Bread Colonies

  • Rivers: Expanded trade and travel to frontier

  • Seaports

  • “Town Meeting”/Landowner Government Mixture

  • Newspapers: John Peter Zenger Trail (1790’s)

    • Freedom of Press

New York: 1623/1624

  • Dutch Colony: New Netherland

  • Company Town: Fur Trade

  • Church Calvinists: Led by Aristocrats

  • Renamed New York by British

Pennsylvania: 1681

  • Founder: William Penn

    • “Holy Experiment”

  • Quakers:

    • Religious Freedom but Jewish and Catholic settlers can’t vote

    • Peaceful: Anti-War/Slavery

  • Government: Landowner democratic assembly

Northern Colonies aka New England

Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode IslanD, and Connecticut

Religion: Puritans

Settlements:

1620: Plymouth, Massachusetts

  • Pilgrims: Left England because they didn’t like Church of England

  • Mayflower Compact: Direct Democracy

  • Governor William Bradford: only Puritans in Plymouth

1630’s: Massachusetts Bay Colony:

  • Governor William Bradford: “City on a Hill”

Beliefs:

  1. Bible is #1

  2. God controls all

  3. Salvation only requires faith in Jesus

  4. Follow the Bible exactly

Protestant Work Ethic-Very Important

External Problems:

New Immigration to America: Not Puritans

Enlightenment: People have free will and can live how they want

  • John Lock

    • Human Rights:

      • Life

      • Liberty

      • Property

Deism: New Religion

  • Idea: God made the world but isn’t involved anymore

  • Followers: Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin

Internal Problems:

  • Dissenters: Church Members go against Leadership

    • Rodger Williams: Separation of Church and State

    • Anne Hutchison: Antinomianism

  • Materialistic: Work Ethic turned them successful and they became more materialistic

    • “Coffins to Coffers”

  • Change of Generation: Change in Values-Pilgrim Values less important over time

  • Halfway Covenant: change in Baptism Rules- Descendants of Puritans can be Baptized

    • Aimed to increase Church numbers-Didn’t work

  • Salem Witch Trials: 1692

    • Town killed woman accused of witchcraft

    • Puritans look crazy

    • Loss of Community

  • First Great Awakening: 1730’s

    • Puritan Revival: Johnathan Edwards

    • Backfires: People start to listen to “rouge” preachers who speak of enlightenment

Government:

  • Gave out land based on family need: Care for Community

  • Town = Center of Life

  • “Colonial Assembly”:Direct Democracy

    • Only members of Church can vote

Economy: Diverse

Fur Trade

Lumber

Town Jobs

Ship Building

Fishing

Small Farms

V

Fearless: 13 Colonies (1607-1754)

Taylor Swift Connection:

Like Taylor in the Fearless Era trying to grow and find herself as a person and wanting a fairytale life, the colonizers are determining who they are as a colony and want a perfect land and freedom. Anne Hutchison is also Fearless

Southern Colonies

Virginia, Carolinas, Maryland, Georgia

Virginia: 1607

1607: Jamestown

  • First Permanent British Colony

    • Charter Colony: Virginia Company

  • Goal: Find Gold

  • Settlement:

    • Attacked by Native Americans in Chesapeake Bay and settled in nearby swamp

      • Mosquitos spread disease

      • No fresh water

      • Cannot farm

  • Typical Settler: Young Men in 20’s

    • Lazy gentlemen not used to working

    • Spent time looking for gold and not provisions

  • John Smith: Jamestown’s first leader

    • Institute Military Rule: No Work? Can’t Eat

    • Injured and returns to England—>things get bad again

  • 1609-1610:Starving Time

    • People eat dogs, cats, mice, and corpses

    • 60 out of 838 people survive

    • Virginia becomes Royal Colony: colony under King’s Control

*Powhatan Confederacy: loosely affiliated tribes under Native American leader Powhatan—>Fails

1617: House of Burgesses

  • Colonial Assembly/Representative Democracy that ran Virginia

  • Controlled Power of the Purse —> Money

1676: Bacon’s Rebellion

  • Fight against William Berkeley over land

  • Impact: Nothing but shows class struggle in South

  • Governor William Berkeley

    • Crown Appointed Governor of Virginia

    • Upperclass Aristocrat

  • Nathanial Bacon

    • Leader of poor indentured servants

    • Wanted to fight with Native Americans to gain land-Berkeley said No

Headright System: 50 acres offered to any settler who comes to America

John Rolfe

  • Discovers new sweet Tobacco—>British Demand

  • Tobacco is labor intensive—>New Labor source needed

    • Indentured Servants replaced by Slave System (1619)

      • Mingling not allowed-Ridged class system

  • Plantation owners: Upperclass Aristocrats that run the South

Maryland: 1634

  • Founder: Lord Baltimore

    • granted land by King

  • Religious Tolerance however Catholics couldn’t vote

  • Good relationship with Native Americans

Carolinas: 1663 and 1665

  • Founder: Multiple people given land by King but Anthony Ashley Cooper encouraged settlement

  • Economy: Trade and Agriculture

    • Hardest Slave System in the Colonies-Barbados Slave Import

      • 1739: Stono Uprising

        • Slave Rebellion in South Carolina

        • Failure: Led to worse treatment of slaves

Georgia: 1733

  • Founder: James Oglethorpe

  • Why:

    • Colony for Debtors: “Haven for Poor People”

    • Buffer Colony between Spanish and British Territory

Middle Colonies

New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware

  • Fertile Soil—>Bread Colonies

  • Rivers: Expanded trade and travel to frontier

  • Seaports

  • “Town Meeting”/Landowner Government Mixture

  • Newspapers: John Peter Zenger Trail (1790’s)

    • Freedom of Press

New York: 1623/1624

  • Dutch Colony: New Netherland

  • Company Town: Fur Trade

  • Church Calvinists: Led by Aristocrats

  • Renamed New York by British

Pennsylvania: 1681

  • Founder: William Penn

    • “Holy Experiment”

  • Quakers:

    • Religious Freedom but Jewish and Catholic settlers can’t vote

    • Peaceful: Anti-War/Slavery

  • Government: Landowner democratic assembly

Northern Colonies aka New England

Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode IslanD, and Connecticut

Religion: Puritans

Settlements:

1620: Plymouth, Massachusetts

  • Pilgrims: Left England because they didn’t like Church of England

  • Mayflower Compact: Direct Democracy

  • Governor William Bradford: only Puritans in Plymouth

1630’s: Massachusetts Bay Colony:

  • Governor William Bradford: “City on a Hill”

Beliefs:

  1. Bible is #1

  2. God controls all

  3. Salvation only requires faith in Jesus

  4. Follow the Bible exactly

Protestant Work Ethic-Very Important

External Problems:

New Immigration to America: Not Puritans

Enlightenment: People have free will and can live how they want

  • John Lock

    • Human Rights:

      • Life

      • Liberty

      • Property

Deism: New Religion

  • Idea: God made the world but isn’t involved anymore

  • Followers: Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin

Internal Problems:

  • Dissenters: Church Members go against Leadership

    • Rodger Williams: Separation of Church and State

    • Anne Hutchison: Antinomianism

  • Materialistic: Work Ethic turned them successful and they became more materialistic

    • “Coffins to Coffers”

  • Change of Generation: Change in Values-Pilgrim Values less important over time

  • Halfway Covenant: change in Baptism Rules- Descendants of Puritans can be Baptized

    • Aimed to increase Church numbers-Didn’t work

  • Salem Witch Trials: 1692

    • Town killed woman accused of witchcraft

    • Puritans look crazy

    • Loss of Community

  • First Great Awakening: 1730’s

    • Puritan Revival: Johnathan Edwards

    • Backfires: People start to listen to “rouge” preachers who speak of enlightenment

Government:

  • Gave out land based on family need: Care for Community

  • Town = Center of Life

  • “Colonial Assembly”:Direct Democracy

    • Only members of Church can vote

Economy: Diverse

Fur Trade

Lumber

Town Jobs

Ship Building

Fishing

Small Farms