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Is colonialism more dangerous as a physical or mental act.

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Presentation on theme: "Is colonialism more dangerous as a physical or mental act."— Presentation transcript:

1 Is colonialism more dangerous as a physical or mental act

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3  1534 Jacques Cartier  2 ships & 61 men  Looking for  northwest passage

4  Discovers inlet of St Lawrence river  mouth of channel through the continent?  Postpones exploration until next summer  Claims whole region for his king  New France.

5  1535 Cartier returns  up St Lawrence as far as island occupied by Huron Indians  Welcome him to the highest point on the island  Names it Mont Réal, or Mount Royal  Returns for a third visit in 1541-2  Attempt to found colony comes to nothing

6  Discoveries prompt fur traders in these regions  1611 Samuel de Champlain establishes settlement on same island  Montreal  3 years earlier Champlain formed settlement at Quebec.  Cartier's search unwittingly began French empire in the west.

7 France – Empire?  Did France have an American empire?  Demographically  In the North  Whites replace Native Americans  In the South  Blacks replace Native Americans  Tropics to Tundra

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9  All locations  French Government interested in territorial expansion  Colonies were state directed  But does definition of boundaries create a colony  In most cases  Colonies built by a combination of local people and environment

10 Canada  Founder of Quebec (1608)  Samuel de Champlain  Explores region  to build fur trade with the help of the Huron  Progress slow  1635, the settlers in Quebec number fewer than 100  1660 New France has only about 2300  Boston has a larger population

11  French fur traders find it hard to get their wares to the St Lawrence  1660 settlers appeal to Louis XIV for help  New France into a royal province  ruled by a governor, with military, religous and educational support supplied by France  1660s more than 3000 colonists are sent out  including women of marriageable age  Decade proves a turning point for New France

12  Explorers begin the process of pressing west and south from the Great Lakes  1668 a Jesuit mission is established at the junction of the three western Great Lakes  Sault Sainte Marie  selected in 1671 as an appropriate place from which to claim the entire interior of the American continent for the king of France

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15 1609 the Dutch East India Company hire English sailor Henry Hudson to find a northeast passage to India

16  Unsuccessfully searched above Norway  Turned his ship west  "northwest passage”

17  Cape Cod  sailed into the mouth of a large river  Hudson River  Made way as far as present-day Albany  Claimed the entire Hudson River Valley for his Dutch employers

18  Numerous unsuccessful efforts at colonization  Dutch Parliament chartered the West India Company  joint stock company  1624 30 families arrive  establishing a settlement on present- day Manhattan  Focus fur trade – purely business venture

19  1626, Director General Peter Minuit arrived in Manhattan  "purchased" Manhattan Island from Native American Indians for the now legendary price of 60 guilders  Formally established New Amsterdam  Strengthened fort up Hudson River, named Fort Orange.

20  1630s new Director General Wouter van Twiller claimed lands by the Connecticut River  Already claimed by English settlers  Twiller forced to back down  Dutch lost any claims to the Connecticut Valley

21 Dutch and Native Americans  Around Fort Orange needs of the profitable fur trade required a careful policy of appeasement with the Iroquois Confederacy  Lower Hudson Valley  Colonists setting up small farms  Native Americans viewed as obstacles  1630s and early 1640s, the Dutch Director Generals carried on a brutal series of campaigns against the area's Native Americans

22  1640 marked a turning point  West India Company gave up monopoly  Businessmen invest in New Netherland  Profits flowed to Amsterdam, encouraging new economic activity in the production of food, timber, tobacco, and eventually, slaves

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24  Director General's preoccupation with  Native Americans and border conflicts with the English  greatly weakened other portions of colonial society  1647 Director General Peter Stuyvesant arrived  New Netherland in disarray

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