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Building the Jamestown Colony Chapter Three Section Four.

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Presentation on theme: "Building the Jamestown Colony Chapter Three Section Four."— Presentation transcript:

1 Building the Jamestown Colony Chapter Three Section Four

2 The First English Colony  During this time Spain was the riches of the countries, and England envied them.  Several wealth Englishmen proposed that the English should establish settlements in the Americas as well.  Sir Walter Raleigh raised money to start a colony in North America with the permission of Queen Elizabeth.

3 The First English Colony  In 1585, 100 men set sail across the Atlantic to the new land.  These sailors landed in Roanoke an island off of North Carolina.  Within a year they ran out of food and were fighting with Indians.  An English ship came and many of the settlers left back to England.

4 The First English Colony  In 1587 Raleigh sent John White, back to Roanoke with new settlers including women and children.  Supplies again ran low and White returned to England leaving 117 colonist behind.  He had originally planned to return in a few months but when he arrived in England the country was at war with Spain.

5 The First English Colony  It took 3 years before he could return with supplies.  When he arrived back to Roanoke he saw that he colony was empty.  There was one word carved into a tree, “CROATOAN” the name of a nearby island.  White was going to investigate but a storm was coming and the crew refused to go to the island.  No one knows what happened to the colony

6 Challenge and Survival in Jamestown  It took 20 years before England attempted to make another colony in the Americas.  In 1606, the Virginia Company of London received a charter from King James I.  What is a charter?  This charter gave the company the right to settle lands between the lands of North Carolina and the Potomac River.  It guaranteed what?

7 Challenge and Survival in Jamestown  In 1607, a group of 105 colonists arrived in Virginia.  They sailed into ______ and began building homes along the James River.  Their outpost was called______ after who___?  What was wrong with the outpost?  There was a council of 13 men that were chosen by the Virginia Company to rule the outpost. The council fought all the time and did little for the outpost.

8 Challenge and Survival in Jamestown  The colonist only wanted to dig for gold as opposed to planting crops.  This caused the colony to begin to starve.  Captain John Smith saved the colony by setting up rules that forced the colonists to work if they wanted to eat.  He also visited nearby Indian villages to make amends.

9 Challenge and Survival in Jamestown  Powhatan was what and agreed to what?  Were the relations between the colonists and the Indians always peaceful?  What did the colonists do to the Indians?  What did Smith do to Powhatan’s brother?  Peace resumed briefly when colonist John Rolfe married Pocahontas the daughter of Powhatan.

10 Challenge and Survival in Jamestown

11  The colony faced terrible times. The often had to cook their dogs, cats, snakes, toadstools to survive. To keep warm they broke down homes and burned the wood.  It wasn’t until 1612 that the colony began to improve when the colonist began to grow what?  King James called the pip smoking ____?  By 1620, England was importing more than 30,000 pounds of tobacco a year.

12 Representative Government  The colony for a long time was run like a military post. Every morning a drumbeat summoned settlers to work at their assigned tasks.  Harsh laws imposed the death penalty for small offenses like stealing corn.  Not many wanted to move to the colony to live under those conditions.

13 Representative Government  To attract more settlers the Virginia Company allowed male settlers to elect burgesses or representative to their government.  Where did the burgesses assemble?  Together with the council the burgesses made laws for the colony. Their first meeting was in July and August of 1619 in a church.  This marked the beginning of what?

14 Representative Government  Define Representative Government.  Were does the idea of political rights come from?  What did the document say?  Eventually the rights won by the nobles were extended to other people. Later the Great Council grew into ______.

15 Representative Government  How is Parliament divided?  Who were the few that had the right to vote?  The English had established the principle that even monarchs had to obey the laws.

16 Representative Government  At first Virginia’s had more rights than those in the mother land, England.  They did not have to own property to vote.  In 1670, the colony restricted the right to vote to free, white males who owned property.  Even though many were excluded from voting the idea that colonist had a say in the affairs of the colony became very important.  Colonist came to refer to the Virginia Company’s 1619 frame of government as their own “Great Charter.”

17 New Arrivals  During the beginning few women and workers came to the colony.  The first women to arrive came in 1608 “Mistress Forrest” and her maid Anne Burras.  In 1619, the Virginia Company sent out about 100 women to help “make the men more settled.”  Many married and the company profited from the marriages, because it charged each man who found a wife 150 pounds of tobacco.

18 New Arrivals  Women survived the hardships of the colony better than the men.  Men were twice as likely to die than women.  Women had to make everything from scratch- food, clothing, even medicines.  Many died young from hard work or from childbirth.  In 1624, there were fewer than 300 women in Jamestown compared to over a thousand men.

19 New Arrivals  Africans also came to Virginia. Research shows that 15 men and 17 women were living in Jamestown by 1619.  In 1619, the Dutch shipped 20 more Africans. They sold them to the Virginias who needed laborers to grow tobacco.  The colonist valued the agricultural skills the Africans brought.

20 New Arrivals  In 1644, there were about 300 Africans living in Virginia.  Some were slaves for life. Other were servants and given one day to work their own fields. Some became free planters.  Anthony Johnson a colonist, owned 250 acres of land and employed five servants to help him work it.  For a time, the free Africans in Virginia could vote.

21 New Arrivals  In the late 1600’s, Virginia set up a system of laws that allowed white colonist to enslave Africans for life. Slavery expanded and the Africans lost their rights.  By the 1700’s, the free African property owners could not vote.


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