Middle Colonies and Lower South (1670s – 1750). Themes Middle Colonies: New York and Pennsylvania Colonies of the Lower South: South Carolina and Georgia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Beginnings of Slavery in the Americas
Advertisements

Five colonies that make up the south are: – Maryland – Virginia – North Carolina – South Carolina – Georgia Share a coastal area called the tidewater.
The 13 Colonies.
South Carolina & Slavery (1670s-1740) I.Intro & Background II.Labor A.Who? B.Why Slaves? C.Black Majority III.Slave Trade IV.“Uneven Negotiations” A.Task.
The Colonies Develop Chapter 4.
The English Establish 13 Colonies Mrs. Kercher.
Settling the South Chapter 7 Lesson 1 Pages
The Middle and Southern Colonies
CHAPTER 3.3 MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES. The Middle Colonies New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware Swedes, Dutch, English, Germans and Africans.
Learning Target: I will be able to trace the history of England’s early colonial settlements.
Slaves and Slavery in North America. The African Slave System  Largest forced migration in history.  At least 12 million African slaves brought to Americas,
The Middle Colonies Originally Dutch ~ Henry Hudson, 1609.
13 Colonies Notes The New England Colonies
10/27/10 Discuss the differences between Penn’s “Holy Experiment” and Puritan’s “City on the Hill”. Provide three examples.
AIM: How were the 4 Middle Colonies established?.
Period 2: 1607 – % of APUSH Curriculum. Unit 2 Part 1 French Colonization: Built extensive trading partnerships French fur traders – trade beaver.
Coach Medford Building American History Champions.
Middle colonies Chapter 3 Lesson 3.
THE SOUTHERN COLONIES Chapter 3 Section 1. The Southern Colonies Founding a New Colony  Company of English merchants went to the king to get a.
3.3 & 3.4 The Middle and Southern Colonies.  Maryland oBecame home to Catholics from England who could not worship as they wanted in England  Named.
The Middle Colonies Notes
Middle Colonies and the South. Middle Colonies Middle Colonies NY, NJ, DE, PA Middle Colonies most diverse of 13 colonies  inhabitants that included.
SETTLEMENT OF THE MIDDLE COLONIES New Netherlands and Pennsylvania.
MIDDLE COLONIES Chapter 3 Lesson 3. BELL RINGER Separatists (Puritans) were persecuted because of their religious beliefs in England so in 1620 they decided.
Southern Colonies.  George Calvert, Lord Baltimore  Catholic  Wanted a safe place for Catholics who were persecuted in England  Died before he received.
 George Calvert, Lord Baltimore – founders  Wanted a safe place for Catholics who were persecuted in England  Died before he received the grant  His.
The Middle Colonies. New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware.
Chapter 3 The Road to Revolution. The Southern Colonies Jamestown – the first permanent English settlement in America Founded in 1607 on the James River.
EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT OF NORTH AMERICA A Guiding Question 1 Why did people settle in the British North American colonies? Did people come for primarily.
3-3 Notes: Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies.
European Colonization of the Americas
Chapter 3 Section 3 Notes The Southern Colonies. I.Lord Baltimore Founds Maryland – second Southern colony, Maryland, settled on Chesapeake Bay.
Objectives Describe the geography and climate of the Southern Colonies. Describe the early history of Virginia. Explain how Maryland, the Carolinas, and.
THE 13 ORIGINAL COLONIES. Different Types of Colonies Operated by joint-stock companies. Jamestown Charter Colonies Under direct authority and rule of.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Middle Colonies Essential Question: How did the Middle Colonies develop and.
Chapter 2, Section 2 The English Colonies. Main Idea The English established thirteen colonies along the East Coast of North America.
Immigration and Slavery. Europeans Migrate to the Colonies By 1700, 250,000 people of European background lived in the colonies. 90% of them are English.
Settlement of the Middle Colonies Chapter 2 section 4.
The 13 Originals.
Colonization.
COMPARING THE COLONIES Chapter 7. English Colonial Expansion Great Britain was an unstable place in the 16 th century ( ). Great Britain included.
CHAPTER 3 LESSON 3 THE MIDDLE COLONIES. 3 GROUPS OF COLONIES North-Then New England Colonies The Southern Colonies The Middle Colonies.
3.3 The Southern Colonies. Royal Colonies and Proprietary Colonies A Royal Colony is one that is owned by the king and he picks (appoints) the governor.
Chapter 2 Section 4: Middle & Southern Colonies.
SOUTHERN COLONIES American History Mr. Lauta. Maryland Founded in 1634 by George Calvert who integrated Virginia’s experiences with tobacco to expand.
SC’s History or European Settlement JAMESTOWN First permanent English settlement in the New World (1607) Tobacco – Made settlement successful –
Our English Heritage – Colonial America – 13 Colonies
The Other Colonies 13 Stories.
Chapter 3 Section 4 Southern Colonies.
Southern and Middle Colonies
The Mid-Atlantic & Lower South Colonies
Colonies in America.
Colonizing America.
The 13 Colonies and their Identities
Lesson 3 “Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies”
The Middle & Lower South Colonies
Essential Question: What are the differences among the Chesapeake, New England, Middle, & Southern colonies? Thought of the Day Based on what you learned.
Chapter 3 Section 4 The Southern Colonies Virginia Maryland
Colonization.
The Middle & Lower South Colonies
The Middle & Lower South Colonies
Chapter 3.3 “Founding the Middle and Southern Colonies”
GEOGRAPHY OF THE SOUTHERN COLONIES
Objectives Describe the geography and climate of the Middle Colonies.
The Middle & Lower South Colonies
The Middle & Lower South Colonies
Objectives Describe the geography and climate of the Middle Colonies.
Middle Colonies.
Elsewhere is America.
Essential Question: What are the differences among the Chesapeake, New England, Middle, & Southern colonies?
Presentation transcript:

Middle Colonies and Lower South (1670s – 1750)

Themes Middle Colonies: New York and Pennsylvania Colonies of the Lower South: South Carolina and Georgia Your goals: - Understand the early histories of these colonies - Describe slave life in the Lower South

The Middle Colonies (New York)

New York New York was not founded by English Colonists or French Founded by the Dutch Henry Hudson explored Hudson River in 1609 Dutch traders established Fort Nassau in 1614 near Albany New Netherland was established in 1625 on Manhattan Island

New York (Dutch West India Fur Company) Dutch West India Fur Company founded New Netherland Fur trade was key to regional economy “Patroonships” (large land grants) were awarded to individuals bringing 50 settlers to the colony Small group of elites began to dominate the area because of their accumulated wealth

New York About 9,000 lived in New Netherland by 1660s Living space became a factor with English colonies to the north and south of the area England saw Dutch as interlopers; tension grew between powers King Charles II orders James, Duke of York, to kick out Dutch from the area Gov. Peter Stuyvesant surrendered to English in 1664 without a shot fired New Netherland became known as New York

Dutch Legacy in New York Diverse Population: - Dutch and English, German, French, Scandinavian, African slaves - Protestants, Catholics, Jews, Muslims No organized places of worship for many years Dutch customs and Influence: Place names such as Brooklyn and Harlem; painting Easter eggs and making waffles

The Middle Colonies (Pennsylvania)

Pennsylvania (Background) William Penn, and father Admiral Sir William Penn were close to King Charles II To pay back the Penn family for remaining loyal to the king, Charles II in 1681 granted Penn a charter to establish a colony west of the Delaware River

Pennsylvania (William Penn) Two Goals: 1. Establish a haven for Quakers 2. Penn hoped to make money - immigration to Pennsylvania was successful. By the late 1680s over 8,000 traveled from Europe to the colony Immigrants from England, Whales, Germany, Ireland, Scotland Colony offered religious toleration Colony’s port (Philadelphia became one of the most successful ports in the Colonies)

Pennsylvania (Quakers) Quakers – Society of Friends Founded by George Fox in mid-1600s Faced persecution in England Everyone had an “inner light” Egalitarian: - no clergy – body of people ordained for religious duties - Women were involved with church policy and decision making

The Settlements of the Lower South Charles II granted land south of Virginia to supporters in 1663 Region was named Carolina Capital (Charleston) had a very serviceable harbor In 1729 South and North Carolina were officially divided

Background South Carolina’s settlement began in years after the Pilgrims landed Plymouth Colony - Many came from colonies in the Caribbean (Bahamas) During the first half of the 17 th Century around 110,000 English migrated to the West Indies to avoid persecution Many settled in Carolina because most of the other land had already been taken South Carolina’s main crop: RICE

The Caribbean Colonies

The Caribbean Economy Sugar production was key to Caribbean economy Industry was very labor intensive African slaves emerged as the dominant labor force Black slaves outnumbered whites by a ratio of 4:1 by 1700

South Carolina and Labor Because Rice was a labor intensive crop, settlers began looking for cheap labor 1.Native Americans – many ran away or fought back 2.Indentured Servants – white servants; many became sick and died 3.African Slaves

Why Switch from Servants to Slaves? 1.Even though they cost more money, slaves were slaves for life 2.African slaves had a great deal of knowledge of rice cultivation 3.Health reasons: Malaria and yellow fever were deadly to Europeans - Many Africans had natural immunities to these diseases

Black Majority By 1710s, blacks outnumbered whites in South Carolina A great resource for more information: Black Majority, by Peter Wood

Slave Trade Up to about 10 million Africans were involved in the slave trade 400,000 came to live in British North America Largest forced migration in human history Middle Passage: The voyage from Africa to “New World”

African Origins of North American Slaves, 1690 – 1807

African Slavery, Inland Trade Slavery was common in African long before Portuguese trades became involved with the slave trade For centuries, slaves were often criminals or captives of war between tribes Slavery was temporary in Africa however when British traders became involved slavery was permanent Both foreign slave traders and African slave traders played a major role in the slave trade African slave traders would march captured slaves to the west coast where ships would take them to their destination

Black Slavers in Africa

Slave Ship and Middle Passage Slaves ships were unsanitary and packed as many African slaves as possible Slaves were seen as cargo not people Different shipping companies would compete with one another to see which could pack in more slaves; meant more profit Death Rate: 10%-20% through the Middle Passage

Slave Ship and Middle Passage

Life under Slavery Conditions in South Carolina were unique: - Culture shock - Type of work often involved rice cultivation - Blacks outnumbered whites

Life under Slavery (Work Patterns: Lower South) Task System 1.Slaves were given a “task” each day; once completed their work day was over 2.On a daily basis, slaves often did not work closely with whites 3.Gave slaves time to raise the little crops that they could

Life under Slavery (Work Patterns: Chesapeake Bay) Gang System 1.Grouped by gender or age 2.Slaves worked in smaller groups 3.Whites were ever watchful of slaves 4.They often worked from sunrise to sunset

Life under Slavery (Brutality) Slaves were bought and sold like animals Worked long hours and could be whipped for no reason Lived in 1 room shacks and dirt floors; ate corn and salted pork

Life under Slavery (Holding Onto African Heritage Blacks did not live close to whites 1.Children were given “African” names 2.Music reflected African origins 3.Gullah – A language made up of English and African words

Life under Slavery (Slave Resistance) Completely Submissive and Obedient – small in number Completely Resistant – small in number Subtle Resistance – occurred quite often (sometimes on a daily basis)

Life under Slavery (Slave Resistance) Subtle Resistance: - Breaking tools, faking illnesses, pretending not to know English or how to use tools, etc. - Escape for short periods of time. Slaves majority of the time were brought back because of the color of their skin and their lack of knowledge of geography

Stono Rebellion (Background) Whites always feared a major slave rebellion. Remember slaves outnumbered whites in most areas; in 1739 their fears came true Context: - Yellow fever outbreak in Charlestown - Hostilities between Spain and England

Stono Rebellion: Beginnings (1739) Rebellion began on a September morning in slaves, led by a slave named Jimmy, broke into a store Slaves cut off their heads and put them on display They traveled south, stopping at plantations along the way, involving between 60 – 100 slaves Would kill slaver owners who treated their slaves bad and spared owners who treated their slaves well They were on their way to Spanish Florida when local militia stopped their advancement

Stono Rebellion 1.Militia surrounded the rebels and slaughtered them 2.Twenty whites and over 100 slaves were killed 3.Militia put their body parts on display throughout the south, as a warning Largest slave rebellion of colonial era

Aftermath of the Stono Rebellion A new Slave Code was passed: 1.Slave patrols were expanded 2.Tighter security on slaves 3.Slave owners faced fines if they did not control their slaves

Georgia: Background Georgia was founded in 1732 and named for King George II Goal: A buffer between South Carolina and Spanish Florida

Georgia: Goals A group of Trustees was charged with ruling the colony for the first two decades One Trustee, James Oglethorpe, was key to the colony’s early history They hoped the colony could serve as a haven for English debtors who would choose to live in the colony and work rather than go or stay in prison Slavery and alcohol were prohibited; landholdings were limited to 500 acres

Georgia: Early History By 1740 nearly 3,000 colonists had arrived Many settlers came from Germany, Switzerland, England, and Scotland Missionaries attempted to spread Christianity including John Wesley who founded the Methodist Church

Georgia: Early History Population remained small and early goals were not reached The limits of landholding proved to be impractical Changes were implemented and slavery was legalized; conditions became similar to those in South Carolina with the rise of a few elite plantation owners who demanded slave labor

Review Middle Colonies (New York and Pennsylvania) vs. Lower South (South Carolina and Georgia) Compare and contrast key events and people who shaped the colonies Describe African slave trade and life under slavery