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Chapter 2 The 13 Colonies and the British Empire

Chapter 2

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Chapter 2. The 13 Colonies and the British Empire. Colony Types . Corporate: Investors place money into colony in hopes of making a profit Example? Jamestown in its early years Royal: Under direct authority of King Example? Virginia *after its initial years as a corporate colony - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 2

Chapter 2The 13 Colonies and the British Empire

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Colony Types

Corporate: Investors place money into colony in hopes of making a profit Example? Jamestown in its early years

Royal: Under direct authority of King Example? Virginia *after its initial years as a

corporate colonyProprietary: governed by individuals given

authority by King Example? Maryland and Pennsylvania

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13 ColoniesThe darkest colonies are considered the NORTHERN COLONIES.

The white colonies are considered the MIDDLE COLONIES.MARYLAND and VIRGINIA are sometimes considered “Chesapeake Colonies.”

The shaded colonies are considered the SOUTHERN COLONIES.

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Maryland

Founder: Lord BaltimoreReligious Atmosphere: Initially Catholic but

quickly dominated by Protestants

Maryland Act of Toleration: Religious acceptance for all believers of Christ

Protestant Revolt: Repealed the Act of Toleration and eliminated voting rights for Catholics

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Virginia Jamestown Virginia was founded by John Rolfe, but

the colony quickly moved from “joint-stock” to royal

Virginia House of Burgess is the first “assembly of elected representatives” in the North American English colonies

Bacon’s Rebellion: Nathaniel Bacon trained a local militia to challenge taxes imposed on poor farmers. It was successful until his passing.

**LEARN MORE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueLdYi1AE-Q

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One last thing about Virginia!

Headright system: goal was to increase population in Virginia thus stimulating the economy

Under this system, any immigrant that paid for his own passage or any plantation owner that paid for an immigrant’s passage received 50 acres of land!

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Rhode Island

Founded by Roger William (kicked out of Massachusetts Bay for questioning Puritan ethic)

Champion of true religious tolerance and separation of church and state

Anne Hutchinson, also banished from Mass. Bay, settled in R.I. Antinomianism: faith alone, not deeds, is

necessary for salvation

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Connecticut

Founder: Thomas HookerThe colony was founded by unhappy Puritans

from the Massachusetts Bay ColonyThe first written constitution in the colonies

was Fundamental Orders of Connecticut

Established a limited representative government with a governor

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Restoration Colonies

Created to restore the power of the English monarch, Charles II, following a brief period of Puritan rule under Oliver Cromwell.

South Carolina: economy based on furs and providing food for the West Indies; eventually it will become filled with rice plantations maintained by African slaves

North Carolina: not as successful as SC; small tobacco farms; reputation for “democratic views”

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New YorkTaken from the Dutch to unite the New

England and Chesapeake ColoniesCharles the II instated his brother (eventual

James II) as the governor of New York Taxes were raised in the colony without

discussion with the assembly. This angered many colonists.

New Jersey: Part of the large New York colony was given to Lord Berkley—it became known as New Jersey NJ was home to many Quakers and became a

“religious tolerance” colony

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Pennsylvania

Founder: William PennHoly Experiment: refuge for Quakers and

other persecuted people, enact liberal ideas, and generate income/profit

Penn paid Natives for the land he used Penn eventually granted the lower colonies of

Pennsylvania the ability to govern themselves—this became Delaware

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Georgia

Founder: James OglethorpeLast of the British colonies to be foundedTwo main purposes: prevent Spanish Florida

from invading SC plantations AND allow English convicts a chance to start anew

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Religious Revival

Halfway Covenant: Puritans that were viewed as “not religious enough” could take an oath to practice religion in an orthodox fashion and were promised salvation Temporary fix for Church membership;

eventually the Puritan Church will once again lose momentum

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Colonial Unity

New England Confederation: Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut and New Haven unified to create a militia to ward off invading Natives, French and the Dutch

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King Philip’s War

The Confederation warded off the Wampanogs and leader Metacom (aka King Philip) Metacom united tribes to fight the English but lost in a

terribly bloody battle

LEARN MORE: PT1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_DCFIJ26EaI

PT2:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GMV0OQjGsM&feature=relmfu

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Navigation Acts The Navigation Acts were passed by the English

Parliament in the seventeenth century. The Acts were originally aimed at excluding the Dutch from the profits made by English trade.

The Navigation Acts of 1660 and 1696 restricted American trade in the following ways;

1. Only British ships could transport imported and exported goods from the colonies.2. The only people who were allowed to trade with the colonies had to be British citizens.3. Commodities such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton wool which were produced in the colonies could be exported only to British ports.

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Navigation ActsPositives: English shipbuilding prospered,

Chesapeake tobacco had a monopoly, English military protected the colonies from French and Spanish attacks

Negatives: Colonial manufacturing was very limited, Chesapeake farms received low prices for their crops, colonists had to pay high prices for English goods.

*These Acts were poorly enforced by the British!

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SlaveryNumber of slaves grew rapidly between 1650

and the early 18th c. half of Virginia’s population & two-thirds of South

Carolina’s populationWhy?1. Wages in England increased = less

immigration to colonies 2. Large plantation owners were disturbed by the

political demands of indentured servants 3. As tobacco prices fell and indigo became more

profitable, plantation owners needed a cheap labor source