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The New England Colonies
Ch. 4
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What might make you and your whole family move to another country
What might make you and your whole family move to another country? Which reasons might have applied to people living in the 1600s and 1700s?
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As the colonies grew in the 1600’s and 1700’s, they became the home to people of many lands.
These people brought their own customs and traditions. In time, they shaped these old ways into a new American Culture.
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Who were the Puritans? The Puritans were a religious group that wanted to reform the church in England. They were different from the Pilgrims, who wanted to separate entirely from the English church. The Puritans wanted a simpler form of worship.
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Why did they leave England?
The king disapproved of Puritans and their ideas, canceled Puritan business charters, and had some Puritans jailed. They believed that England had fallen on “evil and declining times.” They wanted to build a new society based on biblical laws and teachings
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John Winthrop and the Puritans
The Puritans were convinced that the English church was not moving with modern times asked for a charter to set up the Massachusetts Bay Company in New England. The Puritans sailed to New England and arrived in 1630 and set up their colony in Massachusetts. John Winthrop was elected the first governor of the colony. As the new governor he passed laws without the people’s say and heavily taxed the colonists.
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People must have say in their government
Winthrop quickly realized that people must have say in their government if things were to run smoothly. Under the leadership of Winthrop and other Puritans: Changed right to vote to all men who were church members This was done to keep non-Puritans out of government Elected representative assembly called the General Court General Court - elected representatives comprised of male church members Under the leadership of Winthrop the town grew and later was called Boston.
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Results of Winthrop’s Leadership Great Migration
Massachusetts Bay Colony prospered Bet over 15,000 men, women, and children journeyed to Mass. Became known as the Great Migration - movement from England to Mass. Many settled in Boston; became colony’s largest town
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Connecticut Thomas Hooker left Massachusetts to live in Connecticut because he didn’t like the way the Puritans lived. IN 1639,Connecticut adopted a rudimentary constitution called the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut.
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Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
2 Important differences: It gave the right to vote to all men who were property owners (even if not church members) It limited the governor’s power.
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Roger Williams Roger Williams believed you should tolerate other people’s beliefs in God (religious tolerance) . He left Massachusetts and started a colony, Providence. Picture Credit: history/0003.html
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Roger Williams Williams believed the business of church and state should be separated. A state should not support a particular church. He believed that the Puritan leaders did not have the right to force people to attend religious services. Puritan leaders ordered him to leave Massachusetts. Indians sold him land and the settlement became the English colony of Rhode Island. Settlers who disliked the strict Puritan rule of Massachusetts flocked to Providence and other towns of Rhode Island.
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Anne Hutchinson Anne Hutchinson was a woman who believed you could go directly to God so you could pray to God without going through a priest. She was ordered to appear before the Massachusetts General Court. She told the court that God spoke directly to her. The court ordered her out of the colony. . Picture Credit: features_hutchison.html
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Anne Hutchinson She moved to Rhode Island with Roger Williams.
Anne Hutchinson became an important symbol of the struggle for religious freedom.
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A Life of Hard Work – New England was a difficult land for the colonists.
The soil was rocky and poor for farming. After some time colonists learned how to grow Native American crops such as corn, beans and squash. The woods were full of deer, hogs and turkeys for hunting. New Englanders fished in coastal waters for cod and halibut. In the 1600’s many New Englanders began hunting whales. In the 1700 to1800’s whaling grew into a big business.
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Life in New England (Economy)
During the 1600’s, Puritan people were very religious. They took the Sabbath (Sunday) very seriously. No one could work or play games on that day. Women had to sit on the other side of the men in the church. Many crimes were punished by the death penalty.
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Government At town meetings, settlers discussed and voted on many issues. Town meetings gave New Englanders a chance to speak their minds. Puritans laws were strict. About 15 crimes carried the death penalty.
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Life in New England One crime punished by death was witchcraft. In 1692, Puritans executed 20 men and women as witches in the Salem village, Massachusetts. The average Puritan family had 7-8 children. They saw children as a blessing of God. As a result of the climate many people reached the age of 70.
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