The American Colonies
13colmap
WHY?
MCj00787110000[1]
For what reasons did individuals come to America?
New England Colonies
Massachusetts (1620)
Pilgrims (Plymouth)
Separatists
wanted to separate from theAnglican Church
1st Thanksgiving
Mayflower Compact
41 men drew up theagreement to outline fair andequal laws for the colony;signed on the Mayflower
1620
SamosetPilgrims
Massachusetts (1630)
Puritans
Purify and reform Anglican Church
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Strict religious beliefs; radical
John Winthrop
“for wee must Consider that wee shall be as a Cittyupon a Hill, the eies of all people are uppon us;soe that if wee shall deale falsely with our god inthis worke wee have undertaken and soe causehim to withdrawe his present help from us”
City Upon A Hill, 1630
New Hampshire (1630)
John Mason
English and Scots-Irish settlers
Economic freedom
Settled for religious freedom
Escape for those constricted by harsh religious andeconomic rules of the Puritans
Royal Colony
Rhode Island (1636)
Roger Williams
Exiled by Puritans in Mass. settled in Providence
Religious freedom
Trade
Connecticut (1636)
Thomas Hooker
Dutch (economic freedom) and English (religiousfreedom)
Asked to leave by Mass.
Agriculture and trade
Middle Colonies
New York (1626)
Peter Minuit
Dutch (Netherlands), taken over by English
Trade and profits
Anglican
Proprietary to royal colony
New Jersey (1660)
Lord Berkley
Established by Sweden became English
Agriculture, trade and profits
Proprietary to royal colony
Delaware (1638)
Peter Minuit
Dutch, Swedish and English
Farming, trade and profits
Proprietary
Pennsylvania (1682)
William Penn
Proprietary
Home to many EuropeanImmigrants: Swedish,Dutch, English, Scots-Irishand German
Farming
Quakers
Equality and all possessed“Inner Light”
Pennsylvania
48
Southern Colonies
jsmith
Virginia (1607)
Jamestown
1st permanent settlement mostly males(indentured servants and treasure hunters)
60/900 colonists survived
Ruled by John Smith
Founded by the Virginia Company
Joint-stock company: organized to raise money byselling stocks/shares to investors
Becomes royal
House of Burgesses (1619)-22 representativescalled burgesses met to outline laws for thecolony
Maryland (1634)
George Calvert, LordBaltimore
Religious freedom forCatholics
Established for trade,finding precious metalsand to locate a waterpassage across thecontinent
Farming
Proprietary
calvert
Maryland Act of Toleration
1649
Granted freedom of worship for allCatholics
Symbolic beginning of freedom of religion
md act of toleration
North Carolina (1653)
Group of proprietors: business venture
Settlers from Virginia
Farming, trade and profit
Anglican
South Carolina (1670)
Group of proprietors
Settlers from France, English, Africans and Irish
Food crops
Anglican
Proprietary to royal
Georgia (1733)
General James Oglethorpe
Spanish settlements taken by English
Debtors and convicts protect colonies from Spanish andFrench invasions
Slow economic growth farmed, harvested lumber and tradedfurs
carolina-grant
The Charter of Carolina 1663
Discrimination
African Americans
Free
Slaves
Native Americans
Pushed off land
by westward settlers
trade
Religious Tolerance
Roger Williams Providence, RI
Pennsylvania
English Quakers
German Lutherans
Scotch-Irish Presbyterians
Swiss Mennonites
New York linguistic and cultural diversity
First synagogue
Colonial Economy
Economic Diversity:
-South= Agriculture
-North = Commerce
-Towns and cities
develop along water
Colonies_1763
Commerce and Immigrants(New England)
Port cities
Boston
Immigrant population increases due toreligious freedom and economic opportunities(German, Scotch-Irish, Dutch)
More towns in North than Southern colonies
Use town meetings to govern
images
am_Shipbuilding%20yard%20mid%20C19th
New England Colonies
Shipbuilding
Fishing
Smaller farms self-sufficient
Middle Colonies’ Economy
Diverse in people and business
Less slaves
Shops, homes and farms
13cA
Middle Colonies’ Economy
Farming
Wheat, barley, rye
Commerce
Access to water
Shipping overseas
New York and
Philadelphia
51430-main_Full
58812_Full
TidewaterPlantation-736097
Southern Economy
John Rolfe and tobacco
Virginia, Maryland, NC
Plantations develop
Need for labor
Indentured servants
Agree to work for landowner
4-7 years
slavery
Southern Plantation Systems
Exported cash crops to make money
Creates:
    (1) Large farms around rivers
 (2) Need for lots of labor
 (3) Wealthy class of plantation owners
plantation
trade route
Slave Trade
First slaves were captured NativeAmericans
African slave trade flourished by 1700s
Slaves endured a harsh voyage: MiddlePassage
Widespread use in Southern colonies
slave trade