59
Colonial Society (Up to 1750) I. Intro II. New England vs. Chesapeake A. Community & Family III. From Servants To Slaves IV. Economics & Politics V. Enlightenment & Religion A. Social Compact B. Great Awakening VI. Conc. Key Terms Indentured Servants Bacon’s Rebellion Mercantilism Navigation Acts John Locke Deism George Whitefield

Lect05- Colonial Society - Weeblyewhite410.weebly.com/.../5._colonial_society.pdf · relied less on the labor of Indentured Servants Bacon’s Rebellion. Toward Slavery In Chesapeake

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

Themes

• Family and community life

in New England &

Chesapeake Bay

• Colonial economy & politics

• History of ideas:

– Enlightenment & Great

Awakening

Luxury Items: A Watch

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

Colonizing New England (1620–1674)

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

New England Society

• Sailing scene in background

• Skull = brevity of human

life

• Poem: "The Eternal" would

"Crowne me (after Grace)

with Glory"

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Thomas Smith

New England Society (Education)

• Towns were required to appoint teachers

• Harvard College was founded in 1636 to train

ministers

New England Society (Education & Literacy)

• About 90% of adult white men & 40% of adult

white women could sign their names

• Other colonies: it was no more than 50%

• In England: up to 33% could read and write

New England Society: Community Life

• The Meeting House was the “center”

A Meeting House (Hingham, Massachusetts)

• Built in 1681; designed

to resemble the hull of

an upside down ship

• Very simple interior

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Old Ship Meeting House

New England Society: Community Life

• Homes were close to one another; plots allotted for

farming were not necessarily next to homes

• High population density:

– Many families within one mile of each other

– Created atmosphere of “watchfulness;” fit goal to

become a “City Upon A Hill” without dissent

– Easy to help each other & work together

• The Meeting House was the “center”

Convicted Criminal Exposed To

Public Ridicule

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Land Divisions In Sudbury, Massachusetts (1639–1656)

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

New England Society: Family Life

• Family = Backbone of community

• Family Organization

– Father - Head of family

– Mother - Often became “deputy husbands”

– Children - Provided labor force

• Stability

– 80% of children reach adulthood

– Long life expectancy Thomas Smith

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Chesapeake Bay

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Chesapeake Society

• Tobacco cultivation

dominated the region

• Large profits could be

made, but prices

fluctuated

• Indentured Servants and

slaves were common on

plantations

Tobacco Plantation

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Chesapeake Society: Community Life

• Homes were spread-out & far from one another;

usually placed along rivers & streams

Pattern of

Settlement In

Surry County,

Virginia (1620–1660)

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Chesapeake Society: Community Life

• Homes were spread-out & far from one another;

usually placed along rivers & streams

• Low population density:

– 6 people per sq. mile

• Large plantation homes were the “center” of

social life

Chesapeake Society: Family Life

• Chaotic!

• High infant mortality rates

• Life expectancy in 1600s

– Men: 48

– Women: 44

• Complex households

developed with numerous

stepchildren & stepparents

• Labor Force: servants &

slaves

Virginia Planter's Family

by August Köllner

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

Indentured Servants

Headright System:

• 50 acres was granted to those who paid a

Servant’s travel costs

• Many Servants traveled for economic

opportunity

Indentured Servants

• Between 1630-1700 110,000 migrated from

England to the Chesapeake Bay

• Up to 90% were Indentured Servants

– Most servants were male & starting families

proved difficult

• Up to 40% died within six years

Decline In Real Wages In England (1500–1700)

• Living standards

declined along with

wages

• Population increased

while land (and

opportunity) became

more scarce

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Life For Indentured Servants

Indentured Servants

• Owners paid for passage across

the Atlantic

• In return servants worked 4-7

years

• They often faced very poor

treatment

• At end of service they received

supplies & land (in some cases)

Tobacco Plantation

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Indentured Servants

• Indentured Servant Contract

Bacon’s Rebellion (Background)

• Tension developed between large landowners &

former Indentured Servants

1. Growing gap between rich & poor

Luxury Items (A Watch)

• This elaborate gold and

enamel watch belonged to

female members of the

Byrd family of Virginia in

the mid-eighteenth

century

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Luxury Items: A Watch

Bacon’s Rebellion (Background)

• Tension developed between large landowners &

former Indentured Servants

1. Growing gap between rich & poor

2. The price of tobacco plummeted

Tobacco Prices (1618-1710)

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Bacon’s Rebellion (Background)

• Tension developed between large landowners &

former Indentured Servants

1. Growing gap between rich & poor

2. The price of tobacco plummeted

3. Conflict with Native Americans

Conflict With Native Americans (1670s)

• Settlers (often former servants) in outlying areas

encroached on land reserved for Indians

• Indians retaliated

• William Berkeley, Virginia’s Governor, did not

respond with force; settlers acted on their own

Bacon’s Rebellion (1676)

• Nathaniel Bacon led a militia of

about 300

• Fought to exterminate Indians on

Virginia’s frontier

• Clashed with Governor Berkeley

and burned Jamestown

• Bacon died suddenly of

dysentery

Nathaniel Bacon

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Bacon’s Rebellion (Aftermath)

• Many elites in the Chesapeake were shocked by

the events

• Before the Rebellion, but particularly afterward,

planters increased importation of African slaves &

relied less on the labor of Indentured Servants

Bacon’s Rebellion

Toward Slavery In Chesapeake

• 1619: first documented

slaves arrived in Jamestown

• 1660: fewer than 1,000

slaves in Virginia and

Maryland

• 1700: at least 20,000 slaves

in Virginia and Maryland

(22% of population)

Chesapeake Bay Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Slavery Outside The Chesapeake

• By early 1700s slave labor was used extensively

in South Carolina

• Slavery existed in all of England’s North

American colonies

– Slaves made up 20% of New York City’s

population in mid-1700s

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

Economics

• Trade tied the colonies & England to one another

• England purchased more American goods &

provided more imports than any other nations

• This was partly due to: Mercantilism

Mercantilism

• A nation’s power was determined by its wealth (in

gold & silver)

• Key: nations must export more goods than are

imported

• Development of colonies was influenced by this

system overall

Mercantilism (England & Its Colonies)

• Colonies provided raw materials: tobacco, rice,

sugar, lumber, furs, etc.

• Colonists purchased finished products

manufactured in England

Atlantic Trade Routes (Triangular Trade)

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Navigation Acts (1651-1673)

1. All trade goods sent to the colonies had to be

transported on English ships

2. Enumerated goods, such as wool, sugar, tobacco

& indigo, had to be shipped to England

3. All foreign goods had to travel through England

before reaching the colonies

Populations Of Boston, New York, And

Philadelphia, 1690–1776

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Economics & Politics

• The Crown & Parliament established regulations

for the colonies, however each colony did have its

own local government

Colonial Governments

A. Governor: appointed by the King or Proprietor

in most cases

B. Council: chosen by Governor & served as

advisors

C. Assembly: elected by voters; had the power to

pass laws, levy taxes & controlled budgets

Colonial Governments

• Royal Governors theoretically had the most

power, but by early 1700s Assemblies became

assertive

• How: Assemblies controlled the Governors’

salaries

Colonial Governments (Voting & Holding Office)

• Women & non-whites were not eligible voters

• However, most adult white males over 40 had

the right to vote

– In England: only about 33% of men could

vote

• Wealthy elites tended to dominate Assemblies

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

The Enlightenment

• An intellectual movement associated with Europe

in the 17th and 18th centuries

• Individuals applied rational/scientific thought to

the world in which they lived

The Enlightenment (Science)

Isaac Newton

• A Mathematician & Physicist

• “Discovered” the law of gravity

• Explained how the Universe was organized by a

series of rational laws

Enlightenment (Role Of Government)

John Locke’s Compact Theory

1. All have natural rights of life, liberty & property

2. To protect rights, people establish a government

with limited powers

3. The people have the right to revolt if the

government oversteps its powers

Enlightenment (Role Of Government)

• Impact of Locke’s writings:

– Provided a philosophical justification for

colonists during the American Revolution

Enlightenment (In The Colonies)

• Ben Franklin = influenced

by Enlightenment

• Born in Boston; moved to

Philadelphia

• Founded American

Philosophical Society

From Poor Richard’s Almanac

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Enlightenment (In The Colonies)

• Thomas Jefferson = Enlightened

thinker

• He and others were influenced

by Deism

• Believed in a Supreme Being

who created the universe

• Universe then operated without

Divine interference

• Supported religious freedom Thomas Jefferson

Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Great Awakening

• A religious fervor spread across British North

America in 1730s

• Jonathan Edwards, a New England minister, was

an example

– “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

Jonathan Edwards Biography

Great Awakening

George Whitefield

• Arrived in 1739

• Impact = increased church membership

– Connecticut: from 630 church members to

3,200 following his visit

• An electrifying public speaker

Great Awakening (Legacy)

• Presbyterian & Baptist churches gained members

at the expense of Anglicans & Congregationalists

• Slave owners were encouraged to convert their

slaves to Christianity & improve their treatment

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield

Review

• Life in the Chesapeake colonies compared to New

England

• Indentured servants & growth of slavery

• Mercantilism & politics

• Enlightenment & Great Awakening

• Describe colonial society & determine which traits

are most important

Colonial Society

(Up to 1750) I. Intro

II. New England vs.

Chesapeake

A. Community & Family

III. From Servants To Slaves

IV. Economics & Politics

V. Enlightenment &

Religion

A. Social Compact

B. Great Awakening

VI. Conc.

Key Terms

• Indentured Servants

• Bacon’s Rebellion

• Mercantilism

• Navigation Acts

• John Locke

• Deism

• George Whitefield