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New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

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Page 1: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

New World Experiments: England’s 17th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School

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Page 2: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Breaking Away• Rapid social change in 17th century England

• English population is mobile • Different motives for immigration

• Religious versus economic • Personal: escaping bad marriages, jail sentences, or poverty

• Enclosure movement created a large groups of vagrants

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Page 3: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

English Civil War and the Glorious Revolution • English Civil War, 1640—1649

• Stuart Monarchy vs. Parliament • Charles I beheaded • Oliver Cromwell made Lord Protector • Stuarts restored with Charles II, 1660

• Glorious Revolution, 1688• William and Mary Replace James II• Established that monarchs must rule alongside Parliament

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Page 4: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Stuart Monarchs

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Page 5: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Four Colonial Subcultures • Chesapeake • New England • Middle Colonies • Carolinas

• These four colonial subcultures will go on to be divided into three• New England • Middle Colonies • Southern Colonies

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Page 6: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Chesapeake• Richard Hakluyt • Colonies make great profit for investors • Free England from dependence on rival power for valuable

commodities • Anti-Catholicism prompted English people to challenge

Spain’s dominance in New World

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Page 7: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Chesapeake Colonies , 1640

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Page 8: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Virginia • Joint-stock companies provided financing • English stockholders in Virginia Company expected instant

profits• This did not happen

• Jamestown settled in 1607• Complete disaster, built near swamp • Director competition from the expansive Powhattan tribe• Colonist did not work for the common good

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Page 9: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Everything Out of Control • 1608-1609—John Smith arrives and imposes order• Harsh, but keeps the survivors alive

• 1609—London Company reorganizes colonial government • 1610—”Starving Time” ended by arrival of Lord De La Warr,

fresh settlers, and martial law

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Page 10: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Stinking Weed • 1610—John Rolfe introduced tobacco• Marries Pocahontas, changes her name to Rachel and dies shortly

after giving birth to a son • 1618—Reforms of Edwin Sandys• House of Burgesses instituted for Virginia self-government• Head right: 50-acre lot granted to each colonist who paid his own

transportation, or for each servant brought into the colony • Allowed development of huge estates

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Page 11: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Where are the Ladies?• Population increase prevented by imbalanced sex ratio• 3,570 colonists to Virginia, 1619–1622

• Men outnumbered women 6:1 after 1619 • Creates a vagabond culture in the colonies

• Men are willing to pick up everything and move on every couple of years

• Contagious disease killed settlers• 1618: Virginia population numbered 700• 1618–1622: 3,000 immigrated• 1622: Virginia population numbered 1,240• Indentured servants denied promised land• 1622—Powhattan attack killed 347 settlers 11

Page 12: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Corruption and Reform• Problems of colony blamed on greed and mismanagement of

London Company• 1624—King James I dissolved London Company • Virginia became a royal colony

• House of Burgesses continued to meet• Burgesses created County Courts

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Page 13: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Maryland: A Refuge for Catholics • Initiated by Sir George Calvert (Lord Baltimore) as refuge for

English Catholics• 1632—Calvert’s son Cecilius (second Lord Baltimore) gained

charter to Maryland • Required toleration among Catholics and Protestants

• Wealthy Catholics unwilling to relocate in America• Common settlers demanded greater voice in Maryland

government• Protestants refused to tolerate Catholics and seized control in 1655

• Scattered riverfront settlements of poor tobacco planters

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Page 14: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

New England • 1630-1640—16,000 immigrated • Settlers usually came as family units

• Area would be settled generally health

• Puritans’ view of their colony • A City on a Hill”

• Success as part of covenant with God• “Beacon of righteousness” to the world

• Church attendance required, but membership not automatic • Public confession and execution of criminals • Government by elected representatives responsible to God

• All adult male church members could vote • Ministers had nor formal role and were not allowed to hold office

• Town was center of Puritan Life 14

Page 15: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Limits of Religious Dissent• Laws and Liberties, 1648• Codified rights and responsibilities of all citizens• Engendered public trust in government • Kept magistrates from arbitrary rule

• Puritans did not tolerate religious dissent • Roger Williams would object

• Questioned validity of colony’s charter • Advocated toleration of religious beliefs • Expelled to Rhode Island in 1636

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Page 16: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

Limits of Religious Dissent • Anne Hutchinson • Claimed that divine intervention came through the Holy Spirit

and not through good works • Implied that the Puritan ministers of the colonies were no better

than the Church of England • Questioned the views and leadership of the established Church • Contradicted the expressed views of male clergymen

• Women were not allowed to challenge the decisions of males during this time • Banished to Rhode Island in 1637

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Page 17: New World Experiments: England’s 17 th Century Colonies Oseas Romero AP US History Stafford High School 1

New World Colonies: The Ultimate Experiment • COLONIAL STOCK PROSPECTUS – 2014• Project will be explained September 5th, 2014

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