1 / 29

THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES

THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES. 1607-1760. Motivations for Colonization. Jamestown Economic prosperity Single men hoped to make fortunes in Virginia and return to England Previous explorers brought home tales of vast amounts of gold and other valuable resources English patriotism

neron
Download Presentation

THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES 1607-1760

  2. Motivations for Colonization • Jamestown • Economic prosperity • Single men hoped to make fortunes in Virginia and return to England • Previous explorers brought home tales of vast amounts of gold and other valuable resources • English patriotism • Adventurers wanted to stake English claim to prevent Spanish from taking over all of North America

  3. Motivations for Colonization • Plymouth • Religious freedom • Puritans (Separatists) persecuted for rebelling against Church of England • Felt church had not completed the work of the Reformation – was too close to Roman Catholosism

  4. Founding of Colony • Jamestown 1607 • Funded by London Company, a private enterprise • Granted charter by King James, but no funding • Company recruited people by promising that gold could be found by anyone who made the trip • King predetermined government of colony

  5. Founding of Colony • Plymouth 1620 • Received funding from London Company • Treasurer of London C. was friends with one of the settlers • Separatists granted land in Virginia, but chose instead to settle in Plymouth – Some say this was a navigation mistake, however most historians feel this was on purpose • Signed Mayflower Compact to appease non-Separatists on board who were rumored to be uneasy about settling somewhere other than specified land grant

  6. Initial Difficulties • Jamestown • Laziness of colonists • Did not expect to do manual labor • Depended on natives for food • Disease and starvation killed 80% of the colonists in the first year • Failed attempts to befriend Indians let to multiple skirmishes

  7. Initial Difficulties • Plymouth • Mayflower landed on December 21, many Pilgrims (name given to them MUCH later) died in harsh first winter • Attempts at agriculture initially failed

  8. Factors Contributing to Success • Jamestown • Captain John Smith took control of government • instituted "no work, no eat" policy • firm leadership helped colony survive first few difficult years • ability to grow tobacco made land valuable • population grew as a result

  9. Factors Contributing to Success • Plymouth • Strength of Mayflower Compact – this is more of a myth. The REAL fruit of their success was the fact that most of the natives had died from disease from early contact and colonists moved into already cleared land! • able leaders like William Bradford and Miles Standish • English-speaking Squanto, a survivor from previous explorations, taught Pilgrims to grow corn

  10. Factors Contributing to Success • Plymouth • this cooperation led to the first Thanksgiving symbolized friendly relations between Pilgrims and Indians – Another myth. “Thanksgiving” is basically fall harvest festival and the natives had a tradition of this. The “pilgrims” were invited to eat with the Indians, not the other way around. Ask me where our Thanksgiving holiday actually derived from. Extra credit if you already know! • How many of you participated in a Thanksgiving play in elementary school? None of that actually happened!! Do you feel lied to?

  11. THE AMERICAN COLONIES

  12. Colonies Grow and Develop Differently • There are 13 colonies. • They are along the Atlantic coast. • They were divided into three groups • New England • Middle • Southern • The ways of life were different.

  13. Ways of Life • Climate differed • Government & Economy • Religion & Society

  14. The New England Colonies • The Puritans and the Pilgrims united and formed the colony of Massachusetts • The colony of Connecticut was founded by Thomas Hooker • Tomas Hooker was a Puritan minister. He believed that the leaders where becoming to powerful in Massachusetts. • Rhode Island was found by Roger Williams

  15. Life in Colonial England • Most New Englanders were: • Farmers • Trade • Sailing and by the sea • They used ships called schooners were used to catch cod • They also were known for whaling • They used the whales for oil • Boston was the largest city in the New England colonies.

  16. Life in Colonial New England • Schooling was very important to New Englanders. • They believed that children should be able to read so they can read the Bible. • Massachusetts past a law about public education in 1647. • The law said every town with 50 families or more must have a school.

  17. The Middle Colonies • The middle colonies unlike the other colonies had settlers from all different countries: • Europe • Germany • Holland • Sweden • Henry Hudson explored the waterway called the Hudson River. • The Dutch built a settlement called New Amsterdam. • New Amsterdam then became New York when it was attacked by the English. • The English also took New Sweden from the Dutch and called it New Jersey.

  18. The Middle Colony Of Pennsylvania • William Penn a Quaker discovered Pennsylvania. • The Quakers had limited rights. • They did not belong to the Church of England. • They were peace loving people. • They believed in NO WAR. • Penn was given land by King Charles II and Penn said this land would be used as a “FREE COLONY”.

  19. The Middle Colony Of Pennsylvania • Founded in 1682 by Penn • Became a special place of freedom • People earned a trial by jury • All people had the same rights in Pennsylvania

  20. Life in the Middle Colonies • People lived on large farms far apart from each other. • Families home schooled their children. • The farms produced grains such as corn and wheat. • They were known as the “Breadbasket of America”. • Beaver fur was common for trade.

  21. The Southern Colonies • Lord Baltimore founded the colony of Maryland. • Maryland was the first colony to pass a law granting religious freedom. • It was called the Act of Toleration • Georgia was not a colony of religious freedom. • Georgia was used as a refuge for prisoners. • The prisoners were poor people who could not afford to pay their debt. • Georgia then became a colony where people could work of their debt and gain a new start.

  22. The Southern Colonies • The Carolinas were discovered and divided in the North and South because of large settlement populations. • They came for religious freedom • They came for a chance to prosper.

  23. Farms and Plantations in the Southern Colonies • The farms produced large plantations of rice, indigo and tobacco. • The big plantations were started along rivers on the coast.

More Related