Early British Colonies

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Transcription:

Early British Colonies

1607: Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in North America Funded by Joint-stock companies Joint-stock companies allowed several investors to pool their wealth in support of a colony that they hoped would yield a profit Jamestown

Economics of settlement: Tobacco becomes a highly profitable crop in Virginia Indentured servants become the supply of labor to harvest crops Colonists coming from Europe who could not afford the voyage costs would agree to a limited term of servitude in exchange for passage, food, and shelter

Early Representative Government: Virginia House of Burgesses served as the first representative body in colonial America Mayflower Compact was crafted by the pilgrims as they sailed to North America in 1620; created a civil government and pledged loyalty to the king Fundamental Orders of Connecticut in 1639, extended voting rights to a greater number of white males in the colony The Mayflower Compact, a painting by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris which was widely reproduced through much of the 20th century

Puritans: Created a New England After the Church of England was formed, the Puritans believed that the church had kept too many Catholic rituals The Puritans wanted to purify, or reform the church by eliminating The Westminster Assembly in a Victorian history painting by John Rogers Herbert.

Puritans Continued Some Puritans, called separatists, wanted to separate from the English church In 1620, a small group of these separatist Puritan families founded the Plymouth Colony. This became the second permanent English colony in North America These separatists, or pilgrims were also responsible for creating the Mayflower Compact

Massachusetts Bay Colony: Other Puritans who were not separatists began to feel the burdens of increasing religious persecution, political repression, and dismal economic conditions In 1630, a group of Puritans established the Massachusetts Bay Colony and founded Boston as their capital The Puritans believed they had a special covenant, or agreement, with God. They felt it was their duty to create a moral society

Quakers: A Protestant sect that held services without formal ministers, allowing any person to speak as the spirit moved him or her They dressed plainly, refused to defer to persons of rank, opposed war, and refused to serve in the military Quakers settle Pennsylvania and are led by William Penn Penn wanted to establish a good and fair society

England and its Colonies prosper: Thirteen Coloniesthroughout the 1600 and 1700 s more British colonies were founded Some leaders of these colonies received charters, or a document issued by a monarch or other authority creating a public or private corporation The 1606 grants by James I to the London and Plymouth companies. The overlapping area (yellow) was granted to both companies on the stipulation that neither found a settlement within 100 miles (160 km) of each other.

England s Colonies continued The colonies exported a rich variety of raw materials, such as lumber and furs, and in return they imported the manufactured goods that England produced Together, the colonies represented a rich variety of people, skills, motives, industries, resources, and agricultural products

The Thirteen Colonies: New England Colonies: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island (Economic activities: shipbuilding, lumber, mining, fishing) Middle Colonies: New York, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania (Economic activities: furs, shipbuilding, rum, beer, agriculture) Southern Colonies: Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia (Economic activities: tobacco, lumber, agriculture)

Mercantilism Mercantilism is a theory that states, a nation can increase its wealth in two ways: by obtaining as much gold and silver as possible and by establishing a favorable balance of trade, in which it sold more goods than it bought The key to Mercantilism was the establishment of the colonies An imaginary seaport with a transposed Villa Medici, painted by Claude Lorrain around 1637, at the height of mercantilism

Navigation Acts: Navigation Acts were passed to tighten colonial trade, these acts enforced the following rules: No country could trade with the colonies unless the goods were shipped in either colonial or English ships All vessels had to be operated by crews that were at least three quarters English or colonial The colonies could export certain products, including tobacco and sugar-and later rice, molasses, and furs- only to England Almost all goods traded between the colonies and Europe first had to pass through an English port The Navigation Acts obviously benefited England

Growing Spirit of Self- Determination The colonies were developing a taste for self-government that would ultimately create the conditions for rebellion Colonial governments were chartered with a governor appointed by the crown, advisory council, and local assembly elected by landowning white males Northern and Southern colonies were developing distinct societies, based on sharply contrasting economic systems