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CHAPTER THREE: THE AMERICAN COLONIES U.S. History to 1877

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Page 1: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

CHAPTER THREE:THE AMERICAN COLONIES

U.S. History to 1877

Page 2: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Alabama Course of Study

1. Contrast the effects of European explorations.

2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies.

Page 3: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Chapter Three:The American Colonies

3.1 Britain and the Colonies 3.2 Colonial Expansion and Revival 3.3 African Americans in the Colonies 3.4 Life in the Colonies

Page 4: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Britain and its Colonies

English Civil War Mercantilism Navigation Acts Glorious Revolution Salutary Neglect

Page 5: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

English Civil War

King Charles I tried to limit the powers of Parliament.

A civil war broke out between those loyal to the king and those loyal to Parliament.

King Charles I

Page 6: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

English Civil War

Parliament won and executed King Charles I in January 1649.

Oliver Cromwell governed England until his death.

Parliament restored the monarchy to Charles II.

Oliver Cromwell

Page 7: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Mercantilism This new economic theory stated that a

country must acquire as much gold and silver as possible in order to be powerful and wealthy.

It also stated that a country should be self-sufficient in raw materials.

A country should establish colonies to supply the raw materials.

A country should have more exports than imports.

This concept is called balance of trade.

Page 8: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Navigation Acts

In accordance with mercantilism, the government tried to promote exports and restrict imports.

The Navigation Act required the colonies to sell certain goods only to England.

Page 9: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Navigation Acts

This gave England more control over its colonies.

If colonists wanted to sell goods to other nations, they had to pay a duty, or tax, on it.

Page 10: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Navigation Acts

The Staple Act required everything the colonies imported to come through England.This was very profitable for

England.It was very costly for the colonies.

Page 11: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution

King James II succeeded Charles II to the throne.

Catholic King James II had a Protestant daughter and a newborn son who would be raised Catholic.

Parliament intervened to prevent a Catholic dynasty. King James II

Page 12: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution It appointed King

James II’s daughter Mary and her husband William to the monarchy.

No blood was shed during this “Glorious Revolution.”

William and Mary allowed more self-rule in the colonies.

William and Mary

Page 13: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution

WILLIAM III MARY II

Page 14: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution

Parliament tried to prevent the new monarchs from becoming too powerful.

It established the English Bill of Rights, granting basic legal rights to English citizens.

Page 15: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution The Glorious Revolution

showed that there are justified reasons to overthrow a government. John Locke wrote Two

Treatises of Government. He argued that citizens

were born with certain natural rights (particularly the rights to life, liberty, and property).

Page 16: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Glorious Revolution

He also argued that a monarch’s right to rule came from the people.

The people had a right to overthrow a government if it violated the people’s rights.

Page 17: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Salutary Neglect

Britain allowed its colonies more freedom to govern themselves than other European nations did.

“The British realized that the most salutary, or beneficial, policy was to neglect their colonies.” -73.

“In the early 1700s, Great Britain rarely enforced its trade route regulations…because neglect served British economic interests better than strict enforcement.” -73.

Page 18: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

3.2 Colonial Expansion and Revival

Expansion Great Awakening

Page 19: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Alabama Course of Study

1. Contrast the effects of European explorations.

2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies.

Page 20: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Expansion

Colonists were more financially stable.

They were able to support bigger families.

Immigration to the colonies resulted in a population surge in the mid-1700s.

Gentry in Colonial Williamsburg

Page 21: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Expansion

With a growing population, the colonies needed more land.

The British colonies expanded westward into Native American and French territories.

Page 22: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Expansion

Some Native Americans moved further west into other Native American tribes’ territories creating conflict.

Other Native Americans stirred up conflict between the British and the French.

Page 23: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening Morality among the

colonists began to decline.

Ministers began preaching messages of repentance and revival.

The First Great Awakening refers to a Christian revival that began in the early 1700s.

Jonathan Edwards

Page 24: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

These revivals were designed to renew commitment among the colonists.

The most popular ministers during the Great Awakening were Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.

George Whitefield

Page 25: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

Jonathan Edwards Was a Massachusetts

minister. is believed to have

started the Great Awakening.

preached the famous sermon: “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” p92

Page 26: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

“Sinners in the Hands of An Angry God”

O sinner! Consider the fearful danger you are in.

It is a great furnace of wrath, a wide and bottomless pit, full of the fire of wrath, that you are held over in the hand of that God, whose wrath is provoked and incensed as much against you, as against many of the damned in hell.

Page 27: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

“Sinners in the Hands of An Angry God”

You hang by a slender thread, with the flames of divine wrath flashing about it, and ready every moment to singe it, and burn it asunder.

Page 28: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

George Whitefield Was an evangelist who

toured the colonies seven times between 1738 and 1770.

Preached in churches when he was invited.

Preached in fields or barns to thousands of people when not invited by the local pastor.

George Whitefield

Page 29: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

These ministers preached that any Christian could have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.

They preached the Gospel (literally “good news”) about Jesus’ resurrection.

Page 30: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

They preached that wealth and education was not necessary to become a Christian.

They stressed that faith and sincerity were the major requirements needed to become a Christian.

Page 31: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Great Awakening

Ephesians 2:8-10 KJV 2:8 For by grace are ye saved through

faith, and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:

2:9 Not of works, lest any man should boast.

2:10 For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works,

which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.

Page 32: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

3.3 African Americans in the Colonies

Slave Trade Slavery Free Blacks Laws Rebellions

Page 33: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Alabama Course of Study

1. Contrast the effects of European explorations.

2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies.

Page 34: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Slave Trade

Middle Passage The Middle Passage was one route of the

triangular trade between the Americas, Europe, and Africa.

This term also refers to the slave trade from Africa to the Americas.

Slaves faced terrible conditions: a month or longer journey overcrowded ships lack of nutrition disease from lack of sanitation

Page 35: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies
Page 36: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies
Page 37: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Slave Trade

Olaudah EquianoHe was captured by Africans when he was 10 years old.

He was eventually sold and sent to the colonies.

He endured the Middle Passage.

Olaudah Equiano

Page 38: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies
Page 39: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Slave Trade

He was educated and traveled a lot with his British slaveholder.

He later purchased his freedom and wrote an autobiography.

Olaudah Equiano

Page 40: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies
Page 41: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Slavery In the early colonial period,

many slaves were treated like indentured servants.

In the early 1600s, many English settlers supported the slavery of Africans based on religion rather than race.

Purchasing slaves was very costly.

Some slaveholders encouraged slaves to create families to save money.

African American actor in Colonial

Williamsburg

Page 42: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Slavery Slaves performed a variety

of tasks:FarmingHouseworkCookingSkilled labor depending

on where they lived. The South became more

dependent on slave labor because of its agricultural economy.

The North relied less on slave labor due to its commercial economy.

Cotton

Page 43: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Free Blacks A small number of blacks came to America

as indentured servants. In some colonies, slaves were allowed to

work outside of the plantation to earn money as skilled laborers.

They could possibly purchase their freedom if they saved enough money.

Page 44: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Free Blacks

Free blacks did the same kind of work as slaves.

Free blacks faced worse economical and social discrimination than slaves.

Free blacks had limited rights.

They could not vote or testify in court.

A Campaign Slogan for the Abolitionist Movement later

Page 45: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Laws The colonies created laws to regulate the

daily lives of slaves. Virginia created the slave code in 1705

by combining all of its laws concerning slavery.

Examples of the slave codes include: Slaves could not get on ships or ferries or leave the

town limits without a written pass. Slaves could be convicted of crimes like owning

hogs, carrying canes, or hitting a white person. Punishments included whipping, banishment to the

West Indies, and death.

Page 46: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Rebellions Slaves tried a

variety of ways to resist slavery.They would break

tools.They would

purposefully slow down the work.

They would even fake sickness.

Page 47: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Rebellions Several dozen slaves

organized a revolt in 1739 called the Stono Rebellion.

They killed more than 20 whites in South Carolina.

The slaves were captured and executed for the rebellion.

Page 48: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

3.4 Life in the Colonies

Social Classes Men and

Women Education

Page 49: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Alabama Course of Study

1. Contrast the effects of European explorations.

2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies.

Page 50: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Social Classes Gentry (“gentle folk” )

were wealthy citizens of the colonies.

could hire others to work for them.

wore wigs, silk stockings, and lace cuffs.

were landowners (usually white men).

dominated politics. were educated. Gentry in Colonial

Williamsburg

Page 51: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Social Classes

Ordinary Peopledressed plainly.were usually skilled in a

particular trade.

Page 52: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Men and Women

Young boys became apprentices, individuals who would train for a certain skilled position.

Men farmed or produced goods like shoes, guns, and candles.

Men had authority over their wives.

Husbands were allowed to beat their wives. (“rule of thumb”)

Page 53: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Men and Women

Women’s rights were limited.

Women could not Own property Vote Hold office Serve on a jury

Women were responsible for Cooking Cleaning Washing Sewing Weaving cloth Gardening Assisting other

women in childbirth Training daughters to

do all of the above

Page 54: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Education

School was not mandatory. Puritans believed citizens should be educated

so they could read the Bible. The New England Colonies became the first to

support public education.

Page 55: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Education

Wealthy citizens in the South would sometimes hire tutors to teach their children.

The wealthy were usually the only ones who went to college.

Page 56: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Education

Those who went to college trained to be lawyers or ministers.

Until the 1740s, the only three colleges in the colonies were Harvard (1636) Yale (1701) William and Mary

(1693).

Above: Harvard SealBelow: Yale Charter

Page 57: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

Yale Campus

Page 58: U.S. History to 1877. 1. Contrast the effects of European explorations. 2. Compare various early English settlements and colonies

William and Mary College