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  • The American Pageant

    Chapter 2:

    The Planting of English

    America 1500-1733

    Cover Slide

  • Armada Portrait of Elizabeth I

    Queen Elizabeth I used her charm and intelligence to turn England into a major

    world power. This portrait, painted around 1588 when Elizabeth was 55 years old,

    shows the queen at the peak of her power, a fact depicted by the artist in the scenes

    visible through the windows in the background. Through the left window, we can see

    Elizabeth's naval fleet; through the right one, we witness the Spanish Armada sinking

    in the stormy Atlantic. (By kind permission of the Marquess of Tavistock and

    Trustees of the Bedford Estate)

    Armada Portrait of

    Elizabeth I

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Bartholomew Gosnold Trading with Indians at Martha's Vineyard by Theodor

    de Bry, 1634

    This picture shows one interpretation of a trading session between the English and

    Native Americans. Theodor de Bry was one of the first to include such drawings in

    his accounts of the New World. Previous works on the subject contained either no

    illustrations or very crude ones. (Library of Congress)

    Bartholomew Gosnold Trading with Indians at Martha's Vineyard by Theodor de

    Bry, 1634

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Depiction of Racial Mixtures by

    Miguel Cabrera

    One of the few extant depictions of a

    mixed-race family in eighteenth-century

    North America, by the Mexican artist

    Miguel Cabrera, 1763. The Spanish

    father and Indian mother have produced

    a mestiza daughter. Families such as this

    would have been frequently seen in New

    Mexico as well. (Private Collection )

    Depiction of Racial Mixtures by Miguel Cabrera

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Jamestown skeleton

    In 1996, archeologists working at

    Jamestown uncovered this skeleton of a

    young man they nicknamed "JR." JR

    was a European male, 5' 6" tall, between

    the ages of 19 and 22. We know that he

    bled to death from a bullet wound in his

    leg, but we don't know the circumstances

    of his death. Was he a gentleman, shot

    for treason? Was he a soldier? Was he

    perhaps a co-conspirator with Captain

    John Smith in Smith's mutiny attempt at

    sea? The answer remains a mystery, but

    JR's discovery illustrates how much

    early American historians have come to

    rely upon archeologists for help in

    reconstructing the colonial past.

    (Kenneth K. Lyons/Newport News Daily

    Press)

    Jamestown skeleton

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • John White's drawings of Indians

    fishing

    John White, an artist with Raleigh's 1585

    expedition (and later the governor of the

    ill-fated 1587 colony), illustrated three

    different fishing techniques used by

    Carolina Indians: to the left, the

    construction of weirs and traps; in the

    background, spearfishing in shallow

    water; and in the foreground, fishing

    from dugout canoes. The fish are

    accurately drawn and can be identified

    today. (Trustees of the British Museum)

    John White's

    drawings of

    Indians fishing

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Nathaniel Bacon

    Nathaniel Bacon came to Virginia as a

    gentleman in the 1670s, but his

    resentment of the economic and political

    domination of the colony by a small

    group of planters transformed him into a

    backwoods rebel. In 1676, Bacon led an

    army of discontented farmers, servants,

    and slaves against the powerful coastal

    planters--and almost won. In this stained

    glass window, discovered and restored in

    the twentieth century, Bacon's social

    class and his commanding presence are

    both evident. (The Association for the

    Preservation of Virginia Antiquities at

    Bacon's Castle, Library of Virginia)

    Nathaniel Bacon

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Native American Planting Maize, from Folio 121 from Histoire Naturelles Des Indes

    Maize (corn), which was genetically engineered by Native Americans in what is now Mexico

    some 7,000 years ago, became one of the staple food sources for many Indian groups in North

    America. This sixteenth-century illustration depicts traditional Native American agricultural

    practices and typical foods including corn, squashes, and gourds. (The Pierpont Morogan

    Library/Art Resource, New York)

    Native American Planting Maize,

    from Folio 121 from Histoire

    Naturelles Des Indes

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • Native American Women Planting Crops in Florida by Jacques Le Moyne

    Jacques Le Moyne, an artist accompanying the French settlement in Florida in the 1560s,

    produced some of the first European images of North American peoples. His depiction of

    native agricultural practices shows the sexual division of labor: men breaking up the ground

    with fish-bone hoes before women drop seeds into the holes. But Le Moyne's version of the

    scene cannot be accepted uncritically: unable to abandon a European view of proper farming

    methods, he erroneously drew plowed furrows in the soil.(John Carter Brown Library at Brown

    University)

    Native American Women Planting

    Crops in Florida by Jacques Le

    Moyne

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • New Amsterdam

    Unlike Amsterdam, its parent city, this small colonial port had only a few homes

    crowding the tip of the island during the early 1600s. However, New Amsterdam

    became an important strategic location for Dutch trading. A few of the mother country's

    largest ships brought colonists much-needed goods each year, while colonial merchants

    waited anxiously to exchange furs and timber. (Library of Congress)

    New Amsterdam

    Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

  • English Protestant Reformation

    Started with Henry VIII-1530s

    Henry wants to remarry

    Pope refuses divorce

    Henry starts new church

    English Protestant Reformation

    Catholics battled Protestants for decades

    Ireland

    sea power

    Desire for new land

    Elizabeth I

    Power shifted to Protestantism

  • Ireland

    Had been under English rule since 1200s

    Remained Catholic

    British troops under Elizabeth crushed the Irish

    Regarded native population as savages

    Became attitude of British as they settled the New World

  • British Sea Dogs / Newfoundland

    Sea Dogs

    British Privateers

    A.k.a. pirates

    Permission from

    Elizabeth I

    Captured Spanish

    ships cargo

    Francis Drakemost famous

    Newfoundland, 1583

    Sir Humphrey Gilbert

    tries to colonize

    Ship sinks offshore

  • Sir Walter Raleigh/Sir Francis Drake

  • Roanoke / Spanish Armada Sir Walter Raleigh

    Favorite of the Queen

    Roanoke Island, 1585 Attempts to settle

    Off of South Carolina

    John White, governor Sent back UK to get

    aid

    Returns in 1587 Entire group of 119

    settlers are lost

    Spanish Armada Led by Philip II

    130 ships sailed against England Conflict over religion

    British had smaller, swifter ships

    Devastating storm Protestant wind

    sunk 1/3 of the fleet

  • English NationalismReasons for Colonization

    Victory over Spanish Armada

    Nationalistic, restless, adventurous, and optimistic

    Rapid population growth spurt

    Enclosure movement

    Wool was making a huge profit

    Establish areas for the grazing of sheep

    Rid the land of small tenant (renting) farmers

    Surplus population

  • England Primogeniture

    British law that only the oldest son would inherit the land

    Younger sons were forced to seek fortunes elsewhere

    Joint-Stock Companies

    Allowed several investors to pool their capital ($)

    Surplus people (Enclosure Movement) + Joint-Stock Co. ($) = money and manpower for colonization

  • Richard Hakluyt

    English writer &

    Oxford clergyman

    Promoted the

    colonization of the

    New World

    New markets

    Get rid of surplus

    population

  • Virginia Company

    A Joint-Stock

    Company

    Charter

    granted by

    James I

    Settled

    Jamestown

  • Jamestown Rights of Englishmen

    Charter guaranteed

    rights of settlers would

    be same as back in

    England

    Landed May 24, 1607

    100 men

    Chose a swampy

    location

    Settlers died of

    disease, malnutrition &

    starvation

    1608 Captain John

    Smith saved the colony

    Orders: He who shall not work shall not eat

    Diplomacy with

    natives

    Powhatan chief orders

    John Smiths death

    Pocahontas saves him

  • Jamestown

    The starving time 1609-1610

    Only 60 of 500 settlers made it through the winter

    Leaving to return to England

    Lord De La Warr, 1610 New governor

    Ordered settlers back Also started a war with the Indians

    John Rolfe Saved colony economically Developed a method of curing

    tobacco so it was not so harsh

    Peace with Indians when Pocahontas married him in 1614

  • Native Americans

    Powhatan Indian uprisings 1622

    Killed 347Jamestown settlers

    1644 Led to the defeat of

    the Indians

    Indians by 1669 Only 2,000 left, or

    About 10%

    Indians by 1685 Powhatans extinct

    Disease, Disorganization & Disposability

    Smallpox and measles were killers

    Lacked unity to attack

    Indians offered nothing to the British except land

  • Indians

    Foreshadowing Powhatan fate=fate

    of the rest of the American Indians

    Demographic and cultural transformation

    Horses

    Disease small pox -

    Trade

    Barter and exchange gave way to European commerce

    Firearms etc.

    Atlantic Seaboard Indians felt the greatest impact

    Interior Indians had time and space to prepare

  • Virginia Tobacco

    Single cash crop (like a gold rush)

    Depleted the soil

    Labor-intensive crop

    Prices fluctuated

    20 Black slaves, 1619

    Indentures servants

    House of Burgesses, 1619

    An elected assembly to pass laws for the region

    Becomes Royal Colony in 1624

  • Maryland 1634, Lord Baltimore Purpose:

    To make a profit To establish a Catholic Haven

    Huge Estates given to Catholic Relatives

    Headright System 100 acres of land granted to

    immigrants, or Those who paid for passage of

    others Major portion of immigrants:

    indentured servants Maryland Act of

    Toleration,1649 Religious freedom to Christians

  • Indentured Servants

    A form of debt bondage worker

    Usually three to seven years

    Received:

    Transportation, food, drink, clothing, lodging &other necessities

    Tobacco

    The labor-intensive cash crop

    Grown in south

    indentured laborers

  • British West Indies West Indian Islands

    Jamaica

    Mid-1600sclaimed by England

    Sugar Rich mans crop

    Large plantations

    Labor-intensive and elaborate processing

    Led to the importation of large #s of African Slaves

    Barbados Slave Code of 1661 Perpetual slavery

    No rights

    Owner has all power

    South Carolina became a trading partner Slave codes

    transferred to SC

  • Stuart Restoration

    English Civil War

    1649, King Charles I beheaded

    Opposition led by Puritans

    Oliver Cromwell put in as "protector" of England

    Ruled for 9 years

    1660 Charles II assumes the throne (Stuart Restoration)

  • South Carolina

    1670, named for Charles II He granted vast land tracts to

    his court favorites

    Planned to attract settlers from other colonies

    The main exports was rice, indigo and Indian slaves Eventually many African slaves

    Economic ties with West Indies

    1707, conflict with the natives Leads to near annihilation of

    Indians

  • North Carolina

    Settled by poor squatters from Virginia, 1719

    Most democratic region Showed tension

    between small farmers

    & aristocratic planters

    Broke away from South Carolina in 1729

    King divided the region

  • Native Americans in the South

    Tuscarora Indians

    Attacked N. Carolina

    settlement in 1711

    Whites retaliated

    Forced the tribe to move north

    Eventually became

    the 6th Nation of the

    Iroquois Confederacy

    Yamasee Indians

    Attacked by S.C. in

    1715

    Dispersed the

    Yamasee Nation

    Cleared southern

    coast region of Native

    Americans

  • Georgia

    Settled in 1733 James Oglethorpe-- Military

    leader

    Designed to be a buffer colony From the Spanish on the south and

    French on the West

    It was also to be a haven for the poor

    Not many took advantage of this option as the land was populated by artisans

    Landholdings were limited in size Savannah became a melting pot

    community

    All Christian religions--except Catholics--are allowed to worship

  • Plantation Colonies

    Southern colonies all shared the same features: Exporting of

    agricultural products

    Single-crop economy Tobacco and rice

    Slavery All colonies relied on it

    by 1750

    Plantations or large estates Led to an aristocracy

    Plantations on rivers slowed growth of large cities

    No public schools

    Church of England

    Tax-supported

    Expansionary

    Tobacco depleted the soil