Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Thirteen English Colonies There are 3 regions.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Thirteen English Colonies There are 3 regions."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 The Thirteen English Colonies There are 3 regions

3 3 Regions of English Colonization New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

4 Virginia - The First Success 1607 Southern Colony

5 Jamestown First permanent English colony - the start of Virginia

6 Reasons for Settlement Established to make a profit from trade Tobacco Virginia Company of London – Charter – Joint Stock Company

7 Important people and Events (Virginia) John Smith John Rolfe – tobacco Powhattan & Pocahontas 1609 – 1610 – “Starving Time” 1619 – House of Burgesses – 1 st Representative Government 1619 – Shipload of Women 1619 – 1 st Africans arrive from the Dutch

8 New England Colonies

9

10 Massachusetts Plymouth – 1620 Massachusetts Bay - 1630

11 Plymouth – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of Religion Separatists - Pilgrims A new place for people to make it on their own

12 Plymouth – Important People and Events Mayflower Compact – Representative Government William Bradford – Governor Thanksgiving – Harvest Festival – 1621

13 Massachusetts Bay – Reasons for Settlement Religious Freedom for Puritans – England had fallen on “evil and declining times” Massachusetts Bay Company - Trade

14 Massachusetts Bay – Important People and Events Great Migration (1629 – 1640) – 20,000 Puritans came here John Winthrop – Governor Theocracy – church and government are one General Court – Representative Government – had to be a Puritan

15 Connecticut 1636 Named Connecticut because of the native meaning of the word “long tidal river” Connecticut River located nearby

16 Connecticut – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of religion Better farm land Wanted to be less restrictive religiously than Massachusetts

17 Connecticut – Important People and Events Thomas Hooker – Minister and early leader – wanted strict limits on gov’t Fundamental Orders of Connecticut – 1639 – Democratic Government First Constitution

18 Rhode Island 1636 Rhode Island was discovered in 1524 by Italian navigator Giovanni da Verrazano. The story is that he saw a similarity between this area and the Greek island of Rhodes. But the Dutch explorer Adriaen Block, there in 1635, named it Roodt Eylandt 'red island', for the color of its soil.

19 Rhode Island – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of religion – Religious toleration Massachusetts’ church had too much power.

20 Rhode Island – Important People and Events Roger Williams – founder Separate Church and State Anne Hutchinson – comes here after getting booted from Massachusetts.

21 New Hampshire 1638 The colony was named New Hampshire after the English county of Hampshire, one of the first Saxon shires. Hampshire was itself named after the port of Southampton, which was known previously as simply "Hampton".countyHampshireshiresSouthampton

22 New Hampshire – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of Religion Profits from fishing, lumbering, trade, and ship building

23 New Hampshire – Important People and Events John Wheelwright and John Mason

24 Additional Notes Native Americans – Samoset and Squanto taught Pilgrims how to survive in New England Massasoit – sachem who befriended Pilgrims Pequot Wars – Connecticut – 1630’s King Philips War – 1675 – 1676 – Massachusetts (Metacom – son of Massasoit)

25 Middle Colonies Pennsylvania New York New Jersey Delaware

26 Middle Colonies – Additional Notes 3 Types of English Colonies: Proprietary Colony – colony given to one person or a group of people. Royal Colony – colony run by the King or Queen Colonies owned or run by Trading Companies

27 Pennsylvania 1682 Although Swedes and Dutch were the first European settlers, William Penn, a Quaker, named Pennsylvania in honor of his father by combining the name Penn and the Latin term sylvania, which translates as "woodlands," to come up with "Penn's woodlands."

28 Pennsylvania – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of Religion for Quakers – Society of Friends

29 Pennsylvania – Important People and Events Quakers – George Fox William Penn – Proprietor Frame of Government – Representative Gov’t Philadelphia – City of Brotherly Love – by 1725 it was the second largest English Speaking city in the world next to London.

30 New York 1664

31 New York – Reasons for Settlement 1609 – 1664 owned by Holland and called New Netherlands Taken by English to connect their colonies Fill in the spaces

32 New York – Important People and Events 1621 – 1664 run by the Dutch West India Company Conquered by James – the Duke of York and Albany

33 New Jersey 1664 James later gave New Jersey to Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. James named the colony New Jersey to honor Carteret, who had been the Governor ofJersey, a British island in the English Channel.

34 New Jersey – Reasons for Settlement Conquered by the Duke of York and given to two friends. Agricultural colony

35 New Jersey – Important People and Events Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret are Proprietors Small and Agricultural – shipped produce to market in NYC in the north and Philadelphia in the south.

36 Delaware 1664

37 Delaware – Reasons for Settlement Was the colony of New Sweden with the first log cabin 1638 – 1655 Small trading area

38 Delaware – Important People and Events 1655 – 1664 – Conquered by New Netherlands – Peter Stuyvesant Early 1700’s – becomes a separate colony. – was part of Pennsylvania.

39 Southern Colonies Virginia Maryland North Carolina South Carolina Georgia

40 Maryland 1634

41 Maryland – Reasons for Settlement Freedom of Religion for Catholics Tobacco becomes a major crop

42 Maryland – Important People and Events Religious Toleration Act – 1649 Sir George Calvert – Lord Baltimore

43 North & South Carolina 1663

44 North & South Carolina – Reasons for Settlement Began as one large colony for 8 proprietors North – settled by Tobacco farmers from Virginia South – settled by planters from West Indies who brought the plantation system and slavery – rice and indigo

45 North & South Carolina – Important People and Events South – also settled by Protestants from France 1712 – North and South Carolina become separate colonies

46 Georgia 1732

47 Georgia – Reasons for Settlement Haven for Debtors – Prison Colony Buffer Zone from Invasion from Spanish Florida

48 Georgia – Important People and Events James Oglethorpe – proprietor

49 Southern Colonies – Additional Notes 1587 – Lost Colony of Roanoke – Sir Walter Raleigh – off North Carolina John White Spanish Armada – 1588

50 New England Colonies – Land, Climate, & Economics Rocky soil and short growing season Fishing, whaling, lumbering, and ship building were important. Subsistence farmers grew just enough to survive Strong Puritan Religion

51 Middle Colonies – Land, Climate, & Economics Hudson, Delaware, and Susquehanna Rivers linked the coast with the interior. Philadelphia and New York were port cities Breadbasket colonies – cash crops like wheat, barley, and rye Sent cash crop farm products and manufactured goods all over the world.

52 Southern Colonies – Land, Climate, & Economics Very close economic ties with the “Mother Country” England Wide coastal plain called the tidewater. Excellent soil and a long growing season Plantations grew tobacco, rice, and indigo using slave labor.


Download ppt "The Thirteen English Colonies There are 3 regions."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google