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Chapter 4 - English Colonization

Elizabeth I

  • Daughter of Henry VIII + Anne Boleyn

  • Took advantage of New World discoveries

  • Became Queen of England in 1558

  • After ending conflict over religion, Elizabeth unified England + strengthened the military

  • When she refused to marry Philip II of Spain, war broke out

  • Died in 1603

Francis Drake

  • Pirate + celebrated sea captain

  • Sailed the Golden Hind to Spanish empire + plundered Spanish ports

  • Circumnavigated the globe from 1577-1580

  • Returned with a ship filled with gold + spices from West Indies

  • Defeated Spanish Armada in naval war in 1588

Sir Walter Raleigh

  • Fought Irish + Spanish

  • 1578 - Established colonies in Virginia (failed)

  • Published Discourse Concerning Western Planting, which provided rationale for English colonization of the New World

  • After attempting to attack the Spanish, he was beheaded by James I

Primogeniture

  • Property of English nobleman is passed to 1st-born son

  • Stabilized English land holdings + politics

  • Other sons didn’t have anything to do (because they had no land)

  • Huge tracts of available land in colonial America

  • Because of widespread refusal to do manual labor, Jamestown nearly collapsed

Charter

  • British gov’t permits settlement of English colonies

  • English colonists have equal rights to Englishmen to England

Joint-Stock Companies

  • 1602 - Chartered by English gov’t

  • When citizens purchase stock in companies, they receive a share in profits

    • This minimized risk to companies

  • Companies made risky decisions based on search for profit

  • Greater autonomy

Spanish Armada

  • Defeated by England in 1588

  • England earned long-time supremacy of seas

  • With greater nautical freedom, England was able to extend + defend shipping, boosting their economy

Powhatan Wars

  • Colonist encroachment into Native American territory led to war between Virginians + Native Americans led by Chief Powhatan

  • 1614 - When Pocahontas + John Rolfe married, the 1st war was ended

  • 2nd war broke out in 1644

Virginia

  • 1607 - 1st permanent English settlement

  • 1619 - John Rolfe cultivates hybrid tobacco + establishes cash-crop agriculture (which would eventually become the basis of the Southern economy)

  • Ruled by the House of Burgesses

  • African slavery

  • Became royal colony governed by William Berkeley in 1642

Lord De la Warr

  • Governor + captain of Virginia

  • 1610 - Under his powerful rule, Jamestown was saved from ruin

  • Gave private property to Virginians

  • Sowed seeds of American Dream + capitalism

House of Burgesses

  • 1619 - 1st representative assembly established in Virginia to protect property + rights

  • Burgs (villages in Virginia) + burgesses (elected representatives)

  • Declaration of Independence stated that powers of legislation are incapable of annihilation

  • Shared power w/ legislation (balance of powers)

Indentured Servitude

  • Because of a population boom + failed wool market in England, poor Englishmen looked for opportunity in America

  • Servants received a free voyage to America BUT had to provide 4-7 years of service

  • Servants often did not survive + had stingy masters

Chattel Slavery

  • Begins in Virginia in 1619

  • African-American legal status equal to cattle (“property”)

  • Removed all human rights

  • Slaves subject to cruelty

Plymouth Colony

  • 1620 - Founded in Cape Cod, Massachusetts by Separatists

  • Mayflower Compact

  • Prioritized integrity + faith

  • Eventually absorbed by Massachusetts Bay Colony

  • Governed by William Bradford

New England Wars

  • Colonists faced major conflicts with Native Americans

  • 1637 - Pequot War (Puritans in Connecticut vs. Pequots)

  • 1675 - King Philip’s War (Colonists vs. King Philip/Metacom)

Mayflower Compact

  • 1st written constitution

  • Covered laws on gov’t, civil body politic, fair laws, obedience + mutual support

  • Because the colonists weren’t governed by the English constitution, they wanted a tangible social contract, leading to the creation of the Mayflower Compact

Massachusetts Bay Colony

  • 1629 - Massachusetts Bay Company founds Puritan colony

  • The Great Migration was when Puritans came to America fleeing religious persecution

  • Formed families + church congregations

  • 1636 - Harvard University is founded to educate ministers

  • The General Court was a colonial legislature similar to House of Burgesses

Anne Hutchinson

  • Because she taught forbidden heretical doctrines, she was placed on trial for heresy

  • She believed there was no need to manifest grace through obedience + everyone receives divine revelation

  • She was banished in 1638 + lived in Rhode Island

  • American religious liberty

Roger Williams

  • Advocated separation of church and state

  • 1643 - Founded Rhode Island (which gave complete religious tolerance to all citizens)

  • Father of Baptist churches

Maryland

  • Founded by Lord Baltimore in 1632

  • Refuge for Roman Catholics

  • 1649 - Act of Toleration is passed to give all Christians freedom of worship

  • Thriving shipping center + strong economy

John Locke

  • Believed that gov’t is required to provide life, liberty, property + balance of powers

  • Influenced many Founding Fathers

  • 1670 - Wrote Fundamental Constitution for Carolina (set standards of utopian planning)

  • Ideas on distribution of land + easy citizenship standards + religious freedom

William Penn

  • 1677 - Founded 1st colony in West Jersey

  • Quakerism

  • Humanitarian + libertarian principles

  • Believed in peaceful relations w/ Native Americans

  • Pennsylvania’s thriving economy embodied the “American legacy”

Blue Laws

  • Pennsylvania

  • Restrictions against vice

  • No theater, gambling, revelry

  • Enforced Sabbath + prohibition

Pennsylvania

  • 1681 - William Penn receives separate charter

  • Diverse society + large colonial city (Philadelphia)

  • Its diversified economy included grain farming, basic manufacturing, shipping

  • The Mason-Dixon Line was a symbolic border b/w North + South

  • Western expansion led to clashes b/w colonists + Native Americans

  • Because they refused to support violence, the Penn family lost control of colony

BIG PICTURE

  • Started w/ disorganization + failure BUT great societal vitality

  • Near disaster → Stable economy + self-gov’t

  • English colonies contributed legacies

  • Labor shortage → Indentured servitude + chattel slavery

  • Defeat of Spanish Armada (1588) + viable colonies (1607) - England can create world empire

  • New Amsterdam

    • Established trade + thriving merchant class

    • Difficult to attract permanent settlers → Welcoming environment

  • Jesuits

    • Established by Ignatius Loyola during Counter-Reformation

    • Wanted to convert Native Americans in New France to Roman Catholicism

  • Sir Walter Raleigh

    • Founded + named area of exploration “Virginia” (The Virgin Queen)

    • Settlement on Roanoke Island failed (disappeared without a trace) but paved way for settlement of Jamestown

  • Mississippi River

    • Provided water, soil, trade routes → Encouraged expansion across continent

  • Hudson Bay Company

    • Lucrative fur trade for British

    • De facto gov’t structure

  • Why did the Treaty of Tordesillas become obsolete?

    • Waning power of Spain and Portugal

    • Increasing power + exploration of Britain + France

  • What encouraged European exploration in the 15th century?

    • Age of Nationalism + emergence of powerful monarchs

    • Could only stay powerful w/ wealthy economies

  • Why did British exploration lag behind Spain’s?

    • Britain was consumed in religious warfare

    • British victory against Spanish Armada began British exploration

JQ

Chapter 4 - English Colonization

Elizabeth I

  • Daughter of Henry VIII + Anne Boleyn

  • Took advantage of New World discoveries

  • Became Queen of England in 1558

  • After ending conflict over religion, Elizabeth unified England + strengthened the military

  • When she refused to marry Philip II of Spain, war broke out

  • Died in 1603

Francis Drake

  • Pirate + celebrated sea captain

  • Sailed the Golden Hind to Spanish empire + plundered Spanish ports

  • Circumnavigated the globe from 1577-1580

  • Returned with a ship filled with gold + spices from West Indies

  • Defeated Spanish Armada in naval war in 1588

Sir Walter Raleigh

  • Fought Irish + Spanish

  • 1578 - Established colonies in Virginia (failed)

  • Published Discourse Concerning Western Planting, which provided rationale for English colonization of the New World

  • After attempting to attack the Spanish, he was beheaded by James I

Primogeniture

  • Property of English nobleman is passed to 1st-born son

  • Stabilized English land holdings + politics

  • Other sons didn’t have anything to do (because they had no land)

  • Huge tracts of available land in colonial America

  • Because of widespread refusal to do manual labor, Jamestown nearly collapsed

Charter

  • British gov’t permits settlement of English colonies

  • English colonists have equal rights to Englishmen to England

Joint-Stock Companies

  • 1602 - Chartered by English gov’t

  • When citizens purchase stock in companies, they receive a share in profits

    • This minimized risk to companies

  • Companies made risky decisions based on search for profit

  • Greater autonomy

Spanish Armada

  • Defeated by England in 1588

  • England earned long-time supremacy of seas

  • With greater nautical freedom, England was able to extend + defend shipping, boosting their economy

Powhatan Wars

  • Colonist encroachment into Native American territory led to war between Virginians + Native Americans led by Chief Powhatan

  • 1614 - When Pocahontas + John Rolfe married, the 1st war was ended

  • 2nd war broke out in 1644

Virginia

  • 1607 - 1st permanent English settlement

  • 1619 - John Rolfe cultivates hybrid tobacco + establishes cash-crop agriculture (which would eventually become the basis of the Southern economy)

  • Ruled by the House of Burgesses

  • African slavery

  • Became royal colony governed by William Berkeley in 1642

Lord De la Warr

  • Governor + captain of Virginia

  • 1610 - Under his powerful rule, Jamestown was saved from ruin

  • Gave private property to Virginians

  • Sowed seeds of American Dream + capitalism

House of Burgesses

  • 1619 - 1st representative assembly established in Virginia to protect property + rights

  • Burgs (villages in Virginia) + burgesses (elected representatives)

  • Declaration of Independence stated that powers of legislation are incapable of annihilation

  • Shared power w/ legislation (balance of powers)

Indentured Servitude

  • Because of a population boom + failed wool market in England, poor Englishmen looked for opportunity in America

  • Servants received a free voyage to America BUT had to provide 4-7 years of service

  • Servants often did not survive + had stingy masters

Chattel Slavery

  • Begins in Virginia in 1619

  • African-American legal status equal to cattle (“property”)

  • Removed all human rights

  • Slaves subject to cruelty

Plymouth Colony

  • 1620 - Founded in Cape Cod, Massachusetts by Separatists

  • Mayflower Compact

  • Prioritized integrity + faith

  • Eventually absorbed by Massachusetts Bay Colony

  • Governed by William Bradford

New England Wars

  • Colonists faced major conflicts with Native Americans

  • 1637 - Pequot War (Puritans in Connecticut vs. Pequots)

  • 1675 - King Philip’s War (Colonists vs. King Philip/Metacom)

Mayflower Compact

  • 1st written constitution

  • Covered laws on gov’t, civil body politic, fair laws, obedience + mutual support

  • Because the colonists weren’t governed by the English constitution, they wanted a tangible social contract, leading to the creation of the Mayflower Compact

Massachusetts Bay Colony

  • 1629 - Massachusetts Bay Company founds Puritan colony

  • The Great Migration was when Puritans came to America fleeing religious persecution

  • Formed families + church congregations

  • 1636 - Harvard University is founded to educate ministers

  • The General Court was a colonial legislature similar to House of Burgesses

Anne Hutchinson

  • Because she taught forbidden heretical doctrines, she was placed on trial for heresy

  • She believed there was no need to manifest grace through obedience + everyone receives divine revelation

  • She was banished in 1638 + lived in Rhode Island

  • American religious liberty

Roger Williams

  • Advocated separation of church and state

  • 1643 - Founded Rhode Island (which gave complete religious tolerance to all citizens)

  • Father of Baptist churches

Maryland

  • Founded by Lord Baltimore in 1632

  • Refuge for Roman Catholics

  • 1649 - Act of Toleration is passed to give all Christians freedom of worship

  • Thriving shipping center + strong economy

John Locke

  • Believed that gov’t is required to provide life, liberty, property + balance of powers

  • Influenced many Founding Fathers

  • 1670 - Wrote Fundamental Constitution for Carolina (set standards of utopian planning)

  • Ideas on distribution of land + easy citizenship standards + religious freedom

William Penn

  • 1677 - Founded 1st colony in West Jersey

  • Quakerism

  • Humanitarian + libertarian principles

  • Believed in peaceful relations w/ Native Americans

  • Pennsylvania’s thriving economy embodied the “American legacy”

Blue Laws

  • Pennsylvania

  • Restrictions against vice

  • No theater, gambling, revelry

  • Enforced Sabbath + prohibition

Pennsylvania

  • 1681 - William Penn receives separate charter

  • Diverse society + large colonial city (Philadelphia)

  • Its diversified economy included grain farming, basic manufacturing, shipping

  • The Mason-Dixon Line was a symbolic border b/w North + South

  • Western expansion led to clashes b/w colonists + Native Americans

  • Because they refused to support violence, the Penn family lost control of colony

BIG PICTURE

  • Started w/ disorganization + failure BUT great societal vitality

  • Near disaster → Stable economy + self-gov’t

  • English colonies contributed legacies

  • Labor shortage → Indentured servitude + chattel slavery

  • Defeat of Spanish Armada (1588) + viable colonies (1607) - England can create world empire

  • New Amsterdam

    • Established trade + thriving merchant class

    • Difficult to attract permanent settlers → Welcoming environment

  • Jesuits

    • Established by Ignatius Loyola during Counter-Reformation

    • Wanted to convert Native Americans in New France to Roman Catholicism

  • Sir Walter Raleigh

    • Founded + named area of exploration “Virginia” (The Virgin Queen)

    • Settlement on Roanoke Island failed (disappeared without a trace) but paved way for settlement of Jamestown

  • Mississippi River

    • Provided water, soil, trade routes → Encouraged expansion across continent

  • Hudson Bay Company

    • Lucrative fur trade for British

    • De facto gov’t structure

  • Why did the Treaty of Tordesillas become obsolete?

    • Waning power of Spain and Portugal

    • Increasing power + exploration of Britain + France

  • What encouraged European exploration in the 15th century?

    • Age of Nationalism + emergence of powerful monarchs

    • Could only stay powerful w/ wealthy economies

  • Why did British exploration lag behind Spain’s?

    • Britain was consumed in religious warfare

    • British victory against Spanish Armada began British exploration