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The American Pageant
Chapter 4:
American Life in the 17th Century
Difficult life in the Chesapeake
• Diseases such as malaria, dysentery, typhoid fever lead to 50% of the population in Virginia and Maryland not living past 20
• Six men for every woman in 1650. 3 men for every two women in 1700.
• One parent usually dead in a family within 7 years
• As native-born colonists gained immunities to diseases, the populations grew. In 1700, Virginia most populous and Maryland 3rd.
Tobacco in Virginia and Maryland
• As soil became unfertile, the colonists pushed inland for new land.
• 1.5 million pounds shipped out yearly in the 1630s and nearly 40 million a year by 1700.
• Increase in production lowers prices
• Growing more requires more labor, and indentured servants where the key
Headright system
• Whoever pays for a worker to come to Virginia or Maryland can get 50 acres of land
• Benefits the WEALTHY• 100,000 indentured servants brought to the
Chesapeake area by 1700.• Huge estates created by wealthy planters• System leads to hard existence for many
indentured servants even after they gain their freedom
Bacon’s Rebellion
• Freemen in Virginia have a rough life in the late 1600s.
• In 1670, the Virginia assembly takes the vote away from most of these freemen who do not own land
• Nearly 1,000 Virginians rebel in 1676 led by Nathaniel Bacon
Reasons for Bacon’s Rebellion
• Resented Governor William Berkeley’s friendly treatment of Native Americans
• Berkeley refuses to retaliate against brutal attacks on frontier settlements
• Bacon’s men killed hundreds of Native Americans, ran Berkeley out of Jamestown, and burned the city
• The rebellion spread throughout Virginia• Ends when Bacon dies suddenly of
disease, and Berkeley crushes the rebellion and hangs more than 20 rebels
Slavery in the Colonies
• Increase in slavery directly tied to Bacon’s Rebellion and unrest of freemen
• Less indentured servants coming from England
• By the mid-1680s, black slaves outnumber white servants in new arrivals to the southern colonies
• Slave trade rises after 1700 as over 10,000 Africans are brought to America by 1710
Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8
Map 4.1: Main Sources of African Slaves, c. 1500–1800
Treatment of Slaves
• The “Middle Passage”– The horrible trip on a ship from Africa to the New
World auction blocks in towns like Charleston and Newport, Rhode Island.
– Death rates as high as 20%• Laws change based on race
– Virginia (1662)- earliest slave codes make blacks and their children chattel
– Crime in some colonies to teach slaves to read or write
– Slavery begins for economic reasons, but racial discrimination will mold the slave system in America
Impact of Africans in America
• Life for slaves hardest in the South on isolated rice plantations in South Carolina
• Somewhat better conditions in Virginia– Farms closer together, more contact with
family and friends, more women by the 1720s so families are possible
– Chesapeake slave society is one of the few slave societies in history to actually grow in number through reproduction
Impact of Africans in America
• Language– Goober, gumbo, voodoo
• Music– Banjo, bongo drum, later the development of
jazz• Labor
– Revolt in New York City and the Stono River Revolt in South Carolina examples of slaves trying to gain freedom, but none come close to the size of Bacon’s Rebellion. Slaves were a much more manageable labor force
Southern Society
• Slavery leads to increased gap in society, most notably in disease and poverty
• Small group of wealthy planters at the top– Owned lots of slaves, and held most of the
political power– FFVs (First families of Virginia)- families that
had been in Virginia since before 1690. Huge tracts of land and controlled the House of Burgesses
• Most were hard-working, and spent long hours managing their plantations
Southern Society
• Small farmers– May own one or two slaves on small tracts of
land– Subsistence farming for the most part
• Landless whites– Mostly former indentured servants
• Slaves
• Few cities, so the urban professional class found in New England is slow to come about
Life in New England• Immigrants came as families typically, not
as individuals
• Women typically married by their early 20s and on average had a child every two years
• For women, child rearing was a full time occupation
• Children grew up in stable environments where obedience was the rule
• “Invention” of grandparents
Contrasts between Chesapeake and New England
• Less rights for women in New England– Women give up property rights when married– “A true wife accounts subjection her honor”– Believed in Puritan society to be morally weaker than
men• Not all bad for women
– Widows could have property rights– Men were punished for abusing their wives– Integrity of marriage was defended as sacred
• Little divorce, adultery one of the major reasons allowed
New England Towns
• Close-knit society– Tied by geography– Puritan emphasis on unity of purpose
• Orderly growth of society– New towns had to be legally chartered– Proprietors would get a land grant, move their
families, and build a new town surrounding a meeting house and a town hall
– Each family would get land for a woodlot, crops, and pasturing animals
New England Towns
• Towns with more than 50 families required to provide elementary education
• Harvard College founded in 1636– Wasn’t until 1693 that William and Mary is
established in Virginia
• Town meetings are one “cradle of democracy”
Half-Way Covenant
• Puritanism begins to be watered down by population spreading out
• Half-Way Covenant admits to baptism, but not full communion, the children of the elect
• Weakens the divide between the elect and others
• Goal is to add more members to the church.• Women become the majority in Puritan
congregations after this
Salem Witch Trials
• Group of girls claim some older women had bewitched them
• Leads to 19 hangings and 1 pressed to death
• These persecutions were often targeting women that owned property
• The accusers came from the farming families and the accused came from the new city economies in cities like Salem
New England Life
• Soil and climate encourage a diversified agriculture and industry
• Condemned the Native Americans for wasting the earth---justification for pushing them off the land
• Goal was to improve the land
• Introduction of livestock- pigs, horses, sheep, and cattle
New England Life
• The large amounts of timber led to shipbuilding as a major industry
• Fishing became a huge industry with the availability of cod off the coast
Wrapping Up
• Women did the housework of cooking, cleaning, and watching children
• Men planted and harvested crops, cut firewood, butchered livestock
• Compared to most Europeans, the American colonists lived much better
• Most whites that came to America were neither very wealthy nor very poor
• Equality and democracy seem to be taking root…at least for the whites