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Settling The Northern Colonies Chapter 3 1619-1700.

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1 Settling The Northern Colonies Chapter 3 1619-1700

2 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism 0 German friar Martin Luther denounced the Catholic Church when he nailed his 95 Theses to the door of Wittenberg’s cathedral in 1517. 0 He declared that the Bible alone was the source of God’s word. He started the “Protestant Reformation.”

3 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism 0 John Calvin of Geneva elaborated Martin Luther’s ideas. 0 He spelled out his basic doctrine in Latin in 1536, entitled Institutes of the Christian Religion. 0 These ideas formed Calvinism.

4 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism 0 King Henry VIII broke his ties with the Roman Catholic Church in the 1530s, he formed the Church of England

5 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism 0 There were a few people who wanted to see the process of taking Catholicism out of England occur more quickly. These people were called Puritans. 0 A tiny group of Puritans, called Separatists, broke away from the Church of England.

6 The Pilgrims End Their Pilgrimage at Plymouth 0 Separatists leave Holland. 0 Mayflower missed Virginia and landed near Plymouth Rock in 1620. 0 Captain Myles Standish-Standish was hired by the Pilgrims to be their military captain, to establish and coordinate the Colony's defense against both foreign (French, Spanish, Dutch) and domestic (Native American) threats.

7 The Pilgrims 0 Pilgrim leaders signed the Mayflower Compact. 0 It was a simple agreement to form a government 0 It was signed by 41 adult males. It was the first attempt at a government in America. 0 In the Pilgrims’ first winter of 1620-1621, only 44 of the 102 survived 0 Many non-separatist went back to England.

8 Pilgrims continued 0 1621 - first Thanksgiving Day in New England. Celebration for the good autumn harvest. 0 Economy of Plymouth was based on fur trading, fishing and lumber. 0 William Bradford- elected 30 times as governor of the Pilgrims in the annual elections 0 He was a self-taught scholar who read Hebrew, Greek, Latin, French, and Dutch; Pilgrim leader.

9 The Bay Colony Bible Commonwealth 0 1629 Charles I dismissed Parliament 0 An energetic group of non-Separatist Puritans, fearing for their faith and for England’s future, secured a royal charter to form the Massachusetts Bay Company. 0 During the Great Migration of the 1630s, about 70,000 refugees left England for America

10 The Bay Colony Bible Commonwealth 0 John Winthrop- the Bay Colony’s first governor - served for 19 years. 0 Winthrop wanted to create a “City Upon a Hill” 0 Voting and decision making were left to members of the church.

11 The Rhode Island “Sewer” 0 Roger Williams- popular Salem minister who also challenged the Church; an extreme Separatist; was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

12 The Rhode Island “Sewer” 0 Anne Hutchinson- an intelligent woman who challenged the Puritan orthodoxy; was banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony because of her challenges to the Church.

13 New England Spreads Out 0 Hartford and Connecticut were founded in 1635. Boston Puritans poured into the Hartford area led by Reverend Thomas Hooker. 0 In 1639, settlers of the Connecticut River colony drafted the Fundamental Orders. It was a basic constitution. 0 New Haven, CT was established in 1638. 0 Part of Maine was purchased by Massachusetts Bay in 1677 from the Sir Ferdinando Gorges heirs.

14 Puritans versus Indians 0 The Wampanoag chieftain, Massasoit, signed a treaty with the Plymouth Pilgrims in 1621. 0 In 1637, hostilities exploded between the English settlers and the powerful Pequot tribe. 0 The English annihilated the Pequot tribe 0 In 1675, Massasoit’s son, Metacom, also called King Philip, launched a series of attacks and raids against the colonists towns. The war ended in 1676.

15 Seeds of Colonial Unity and Independence 0 1643 - 4 colonies banded together to form the New England Confederation for defense 0 only Puritan colonies 0 Each colony had 2 votes, regardless of size.

16 Edmund Andros 0 In 1686, the Dominion of New England was created by royal authority 0 In 1688, it was expanded to New York and East and West Jersey 0 The leader of the Dominion of New England was Sir Edmund Andros 0 His headquarters were in Puritanical Boston

17 William and Mary 0 Andros stopped the town meetings; laid heavy restrictions on the courts, the press, and schools; and revoked all land titles. 0 In 1688-1689, England engineered the Glorious (or Bloodless) Revolution. They dethroned Catholic James II and enthroned the Protestant rulers of the Netherlands, the Dutch-born William III and his English wife, Mary, daughter of James II.

18 Old Netherlands at New Netherlands 0 The Dutch won their independence from Spain in the late 16 th century 0 The Dutch Republic became a leading colonial power, with by far its greatest activity in the East Indies in the 17 th c.

19 The Dutch New Netherland 0 The Dutch East India Company was nearly a state within a state and at one time supported an army of 10,000 men and a fleet of 190 ships, 40 of them men- of-war

20 Henry Hudson 0 Hired by the Dutch East India Company to seek riches 0 Sailed into the Delaware Bay and New York Bay in 1609 and then ascended the Hudson River. He filed a Dutch claim to a wooded and watered area

21 The Dutch in the New World 0 1623-1624 - the Dutch West India Company established New Netherland in the Hudson River area. 0 It was made for quick-profit fur trade. The company also purchased Manhattan Island from the Indians for worthless trinkets. The island encompassed 22,000 acres. 0 New Amsterdam, later New York City, was a company town. The Dutch abused the local Quakers terribly.

22 New Amsterdam Ends 0 1664 - the Dutch were forced to surrender to the English when a strong English squadron appeared off the coast of New Amsterdam. 0 New Amsterdam was renamed New York, after the Duke of York.

23 Pennsylvania (again) 0 Quakers began their religious dissent in the mid-1600s in England 0 Religious Society of Friends 0 They refused to support the Church of England with taxes William Penn

24 Pennsylvania 0 The Quakers treated the Indians very well. 0 Many immigrants came to Pennsylvania seeking religious freedom 0 By 1700, Pennsylvania surpassed all but Massachusetts and Virginia as the most populous and wealthy colony 0 In 1664, New Jersey was formed when two noble proprietors received the area from the Duke of York

25 The Middle Colonies 0 New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania make up the Middle Colonies 0 They were known as the “bread colonies” because of their heavy exports of grain. 0 These colonies were more ethnically mixed than any of the other colonies 0 Religious tolerance was a characteristic of the Middle Colonies


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