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English Colonies: New England,
Middle Atlantic, Southern
Level 1
Vocabulary• Region: areas of land created by human used to manage and interpret
the complexity of Earth’s surface• Patroons: a person who held an estate of land with certain privileges
like land ownership, the right to establish courts, and the right to appoint local officers
• Proprietors: Investors that support and are supported by the King or Queen, were in charge of colonies to make a profit
• Royal Colony: a colony ruled directly by the King or Queen• Subsistence Farming: a farmer who grew just enough food to survive
until the next growing season• Theocracy: a government that gets it’s right to rule directly from God• Plantations: large farms that usually grow cash crops like tobacco, rice,
or cotton• Legislature: a governing body that creates laws• Self Government: a government by the people for the people• Magna Carta: a constitution that guaranteed rights and laws to the
common people of England• Mayflower Compact: an agreement for governing Plymouth colony
Essential Questions
• What are the political, economic, and social roots of colonial settlements in the Americas?
• What role did geography play in the settlement pattern?
Criteria to Define Formal Regions:• The people who share a
language, religion, nationality, political identity and culture
Types of Regions in the 13 Colonies:
• New England: Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire. New England had a cold climate and rocky soil which made farming hard.
• Middle: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware. The Middle Colonies had a mild climate with warm summers and mild winters that were suited to farming and agriculture.
• Southern: Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia. The Southern colonies had a warm moist climate with a long growing season perfect for cash crops.
Settlement Patterns of
the Colonies
Religious Patterns in
the Colonies
Economic Patterns Emerge to Meet Diverse Needs: Agricultural and Urban Settlements
• From the SeaShipbuilding, fishing, whaling, fur trapping, lumber, shopkeepers and tradesmen in towns, shipping, slave trading, trade in general • Subsistence farmingcorn, pumpkins, beans, squash, apples, tobacco, cattle and dairy
• Fur trapping, lumber, shipping, slave trade, merchants tradesmen: cobblers, silversmiths, blacksmiths in towns
• Agriculture: corn, wheat, vegetables, tobacco, iron mining, cattle and dairy farming
• Lumber shipping, fishing, cattle, iron mining, slave trade, shoe making, brick makers, tailors, blacksmiths, silversmiths, pottery makers
• Agriculture: grains, corn, wheat, vegetables, tobacco, fruit trees,
• Plantation farming, cotton, indigo, rice
• Small farms to Large Plantations
New England Middle Atlantic Southern
Southern Plantation New England Cottage
Tobacco Plants
Political Systems in the Colonies
• Main Idea: Most colonies had some sort of self representation which kept with the tradition of England with the Magna Carta as its basis.
New England Political Systems• Rhode Island:
– Ruled by Governor with 10 assistants a General Assembly elected by the colonists in each town
– Assembly could make laws, create local militia to defend against the natives as well as monitor trade
• Massachusetts:
– Mayflower Compact
– A Theocracy ruled by ministers who got their power from God
– White men in good standing with the church could vote to elect ministers
– Laws based on church teachings and moral beliefs
• Connecticut:
– First written constitution called the Fundamental Orders
– 1 representative from each town and one Governor were all elected by the free white men
• New Hampshire:
– Constitution
– Governor and lieutenant governor with an assembly
Middle Atlantic Political Systems
• Pennsylvania:
– Self government
– Free men elected representatives to the General Assembly each year
– General Assembly voted on laws proposed by the Provincial Council
– Governor oversaw legislature
• New York:
– Governor appointed by King of England who made all laws
• New Jersey:
– Governor, council, and an assembly elected by the people
– Assembly had power to tax
• Delaware:
– Legislature but was ruled by the William Penn
Southern Political Systems• Virginia:
– Free, white, male landowners elected representatives to the House of Burgesses
– Virginia Company appointed 6 members to the Governor’s Council
– Governor was appointed in England and represented the King or Queen
• Maryland:
– Self government but the Lord Proprietor had more power than colonial leaders
– Free men elected representatives who owed loyalty to the Lord Proprietor not the King or Queen
– Lord Proprietor printed money, and had the power to create an army and declare war
• North and South Carolina:
– 1st ruled by proprietors, then ruled directly by the King as a royal colony
– Had a governor and a legislature
• Georgia:
– Free, white men elected representatives to the Common House of Assembly
– Upper House of General Assembly appointed by the Trustees
– Governor had final word and was appointed by Trustees and the King of England
Social Order
Gentry
Middle Class
Hired Farm Hands
Indentured Servants
Slaves
worked in the fields usually on plantations
contracted to work 4-7 years without pay in return for free voyage to America; when their contracts were up, they received “freedom dues” (clothes, tools, 50 acres of land)
Some Native, but mostly African, slaves who worked inside the home, in businesses and in the fields
farmers who worked their own land, skilled crafts workers, and trades people, about ¾ of all white colonists
wealthy planters, merchants, ministers, lawyers, and royal officials
Review Questions
• What was the social structure in the Colonies
• What role did geography play in the settlement pattern?
• Copy and complete the chart below using information from the power point.
Colonies Political System Economic
Systems
Major
Religions
Ethnic Groups
New England
Colonies
Middle Atlantic
Colonies
Southern
Colonies