Original 13 colonies. The Southern Colonies The settlement in Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement in America. King James I allowed the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Are You Smarter Than the Social Studies STAAR
Advertisements

Virginia The economy was based on the growth and export of tobacco
Colonial America Unit 1: Notes #1 9/6/13 Mr. Welch.
The Southern Colonies Chapter 3 Section 1.
THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES
Chapter 3 – The English Colonies
Despite a difficult beginning, the southern colonies soon flourished.
Chapter 2 – The English Colonies
The English Establish 13 Colonies Mrs. Kercher.
The English Colonies
The English Colonies
C ALL TO F REEDOM HOLT HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON Beginnings to THE ENGLISH COLONIES (1605–1735) Section 1: The Virginia Colony Section 2: The Pilgrims’
The Middle Colonies Chapter 3 ● Section 3.
CHAPTER 2 The American Colonies Emerge
SILENTLY… Copy this week’s assignments in your agenda
Please Do Now  If you were there …….. You are a farmer in southern Germany in Religious wars have torn your country apart for many years. Now you.
13 Colonies Notes The New England Colonies
THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES
London Company settles Poor site Unskilled colonists Capt. John Smith takes control.
CH 3 Starting the 13 colonies. New England Colonies  Long, cold winters and short growing season made farming difficult.
Chapter 4 Notes. Puritans Did not want to separate entirely from the Church of England. Wanted to reform the church of England. They wanted to do away.
Bell Work  What’s the difference in motivation for coming to the New World from the settlers at Jamestown to the settlers in New England? This Day in.
The Thirteen Colonies.
Colonial America. First Settlement, 1607 Jamestown, Virginia 104 citizens from England settled Most died within the first 5 years (They didn’t know how.
The New England Colonies
Colonies Review.
Chapter 3, Section 3 The Middle Colonies. New York and New Jersey New Netherland was founded in 1613 as a trading post with the Iroquois –Town of New.
STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO: -identify the original 13 colonies and label them according to region and production -locate the original 13 colonies on a map.
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.
Colonies. Division of Colonies Southern Middle New England.
COLONIES REVIEW NOTES. ENGLISH Roanoke The English Wanted To Provide New Markets and Raw Materials for English Industry The English Wanted To Provide.
Chapter 3 The Road to Revolution. The Southern Colonies Jamestown – the first permanent English settlement in America Founded in 1607 on the James River.
The New England Colonies
PLEASE DO NOW You live in a town near London in the early 1700s. Some of your neighbors are starting new lives in the American colonies. You would like.
The Colonies Chapter 3.
Ch 3 13 English Colonies $100 Who settled there? Salem Witch Trials Vocabulary Location Random $200 $300 $400 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 $400 $300.
The Founding of the American Colonies. New England Colonies.
Bell Work  What was the significance of the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut?  Pick up the Anne Hutchinson article in front of the trays.  Cite evidence.
Chapter 3 Copyright © by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Next US History: Beginnings to 1914 The Southern Colonies The Big Idea Despite a.
13 Colonies. The Southern Colonies Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia.
Salem Witch Trials and Middle Colonies. Salem Witch Trials  What caused the “witchcraft craze” throughout Europe?  What sent many refugees into Salem.
The Middle Colonies Topic #17 Chapter 3 Section 3.
Why did people settle the New World?. Who do you think this picture is of? When do you think this source was created? How may this image tells more than.
Colonial Regions. The Three Regions  New England Colonies  Middle Colonies  Southern Colonies.
The Thirteen Colonies 3 Regions of English Colonization New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies.
The Middle Colonies Chapter 3 ● Section 3. Middle Colonies 1. New York 2. New Jersey 3. Pennsylvania 4. Delaware
Our English Heritage – Colonial America – 13 Colonies
Crops grown mainly to be sold for profits __________
THE GROWTH OF THE THIRTEEN COLONIES
England plants settlements in the New World
The 13 Original Colonies Created by Mrs. Dunne.
Women’s Contributions
The English Colonies The Southern Colonies The New England Colonies
Colonial America Chapter 3.
The Southern Colonies The first permanent English settlement in the Americas was Jamestown; Virginia. Jamestown was founded as a commercial town by a.
VOCABULARY DAY #8 PROPRIETARY COLONY – a colony in which the owner, owns all the land and controlled the government QUAKERS – Protestant group that believed.
VOCABULARY DAY# 7 PGS INDENTURED SERVANTS BACON’S REBELLION
VOCABULARY DAY #9 PILGRIMS – Separatists that cut all ties with the Church of England and left England to escape persecution SALEM WITCH TRIALS – Several.
Chapter 2: The English Colonies
Chapter 2: The English Colonies
The Thirteen American Colonies
The 13 Colonies and their Identities
The Southern Colonies Chapter 3 Section 1.
New England Colonies: Settled – to practice religious freedom Industry – lumber, shipbuilding, international trade Culture – small towns, small family.
The 13 Originals Exploring the who, when, where, and why behind the 13 original colonies of early America.
Chapter 3 Section 1 THE SOUTHERN COLONIES.
The Middle Colonies Chapter 3 ● Section 3.
Chapter 2 Section 2: The New England Colonies
A Close Look at the Thirteen Colonies
Unit 3: The English Colonies Lesson 2: New England Colonies
Presentation transcript:

Original 13 colonies

The Southern Colonies The settlement in Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement in America. King James I allowed the London Company to settle in a region called Virginia. The first colonists arrived in America on April 26, They settled in Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in America. The colonists were not prepared to build and farm. Two- thirds died by their first winter.

Relations with Native Americans John Smith became the leader of Jamestown in Colonists were helped by the powerful Powhatan Confederacy of Indians. More settlers arrived, but many died from famine and disease. Settler John Rolfe married Pocahontas, which helped form peaceful relations with the Powhatan. Conflict started between colonists and the Powhatan in 1622 and lasted for 20 years.

Daily life in Virginia was challenging to the colonists. Headright System –Large farms, called plantations, were established by tobacco farmers. –Colonists who paid their way received 50 acres of land and 50 acres for each person they brought.

Labor –Most workers were indentured servants: people who came to America for free by agreeing to work without pay for a set amount of time. –The first Africans were brought as slaves and servants in Increased work and the falling cost of slaves led colonists to use more slave labor.

Religious freedom and economic opportunities were motives for founding other southern colonies, including Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia. English Catholics came to America to escape religious persecution. Maryland was founded as a refuge for Catholics by Lord Baltimore in The Maryland assembly passed the Toleration Act of 1649 to support religious tolerance. The Carolinas and Georgia expanded economic opportunities.

The Carolinas and Georgia The Carolinas –Carolina was founded south of Virginia in –It was divided into North and South Carolina in –Most colonists in North Carolina were farmers. –South Carolina had large plantations with many slaves.

Georgia –Georgia was founded by James Oglethorpe as a refuge for debtors in –He wanted small farms, so he outlawed slavery and limited land grants. –Settlers grew unhappy, and Georgia became a royal colony. Large rice plantations, worked by many slaves, were created.

Farming and slavery were important to the economies of the southern colonies. Economies of the South depended on agriculture. Cash crops were tobacco, rice, and indigo. The climate allowed for a long growing season; thus, more labor was needed Enslaved Africans became the main source of labor. The conditions of slavery were brutal. Slave codes, or laws to control slaves, were passed.

The New England Colonies The Pilgrims and Puritans came to America to avoid religious persecution. Puritans wanted to purify, or reform, the Anglican Church. Pilgrims wanted to separate from Anglican Church. Some pilgrims left England to escape persecution. They became immigrants, people who leave the country of their birth to live in another country.

The Pilgrims Mayflower Compact –Left Netherlands in 1620 on Mayflower. –Signed Mayflower Compact: legal contract agreeing to have fair laws. –Arrived at Plymouth Rock in present-day Massachusetts in late Native Americans –Squanto taught Pilgrims to fertilize soil. –Pilgrims celebrate first Thanksgiving with the Wampanoag Indians.

Pilgrim Community –Most were farmers. –Family members worked together. Women –Cooked, sewed clothing, wove wool. –Had more legal rights

The Puritans Puritans were dissenters who disagreed with official opinions and church actions in England. Many thousands left England in Great Migration from 1629 to Puritan colonists led by John Winthrop went to Massachusetts to seek religious freedom. Established Massachusetts Bay Colony.

Religion and government were closely linked in the New England colonies. Established a General Court that turned into a type of self-government. Government leaders were also church members. Dissenters were forced out of the colony.

Religious Conflicts Thomas Hooker and followers founded Connecticut to make government more democratic. Roger Williams founded Providence and supported the separation of church and state. Anne Hutchinson questioned teachings of religious leaders and was forced out of Colony. In the 1690s, Salem held the largest number of witchcraft trials. Nineteen people were put to death.

The New England economy was based on trade and farming. Farming –Harsh climate and rocky soil meant few cash crops. –Most farming families grew crops and raised animals for their own use. –Little need for slaves Trade –Merchants traded goods locally, with other colonies, and overseas. –Fishing was one of region’s leading industries. –Shipbuilding was also an important industry.

Education was important in the New England colonies. Public Education –Communities established town schools. –Students used New England Primer, which had stories from the Bible. –Availability of schooling varied in the colonies. –Most children stopped education after elementary grades.

Higher Education –Important to colonists –John Harvard and the General Court founded Harvard College in –College of William and Mary founded in Virginia in 1693

The Middle Colonies The English created New York and New Jersey from former Dutch territory. New York –Dutch founded New Netherland in 1613 as fur trading post. –New Amsterdam was center of fur trade. –Peter Stuyvesant led the colony from –English captured colony in 1664 and renamed it New York.

New Jersey –English took control in –The colony occupied land between the Hudson and Delaware rivers. –Had diverse population, including Dutch, Swedes, Finns, and Scots.

William Penn established the colony of Pennsylvania. Society of Friends, or Quakers, was one of largest religious groups in New Jersey. Quakers, who supported nonviolence and religious tolerance, were persecuted. William Penn founded Pennsylvania, a larger colony for Quakers that provided a safe home. Penn limited his power, established an elected assembly, and promised religious freedom to all Christians.

The economy of the middle colonies was supported by trade and staple crops. Middle colonies had good climate and rich soil to grow staple crops, crops that are always needed. Crops included wheat, barley, and oats. There were slaves, but indentured servants were a larger source of labor. Trade to Britain and the West Indies was important to the economy of middle colonies.

Women’s Contributions Ran farms and businesses, such as clothing stores, drugstores, and bakeries. Some were nurses and midwives. Most worked primarily in the home. Married women managed households and raised children.