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US History Honors

Chapter 2: Englands American Colonies

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
England Establishes Colonies in North

America:
English patrons promised that an American

colony would solve some of Englands problems


Growing population
Increased poverty

Promised it would generate new wealth for

England

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Charter- certificate of permission from the king
Roanoke:
Joint stock company- business venture founded

and run by investors

Share the company's profits and losses

Sir Walter Raleigh tried to colonize Roanoke twice


Sandy infertile soil
Ships struggled to land supplies
1st colonists returned home in despair
2nd colonists disappeared

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
The Virginia Company sends more colonists:
The Virginia Company
1607- Chesapeake Bay- North of Roanoke
Fertile land
Good harbors
Navigable water ways
Founded Jamestown
Vulnerable to attacks from Indians

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
30 different Indian groups but shared the same

language
Usually a powerful chief
Powhatan
In his 60s and Powhatan impressed the English
colonists
Wanted to trade with the colonists for their

metal weapons
Colonists wanted Indian lands
Even though the Indians were living an using the
lands, Europeans still classified it as wilderness

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Early Challenges to Jamestown:
Swamps surrounding Jamestown bred
mosquitos that carried disease, specifically
malaria
Between 1607 and 1622, Virginia company
transported 10,000 people to Jamestown

By 1622 only 20% survived

1609- war between the colonists and the

Indians

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
1613- English capture Pocahontas
Converted to Christianity and married John
Rolfe
Powhatan reluctantly made peace until his
death in 1618

Passing power to his brother Opechancanough

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Jamestown started out as a money pit
Company began to allow colonists to own and
work their own land as private property
Worked harder to grow corn, squash and beans
1616- learned how to cultivate tobacco
Crop thrived in Virginia
Virginia became the principal supplier of
tobacco in Europe

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
1619- Virginia offers land based on the

headright system
Anyone who paid for passage to Virginia or who

paid for another persons passage receive 50


acres of land
Allowed wealthy to acquire plantations

Landowners imported workers from England

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Virginia company allowed the formation of the

House of Burgesses in 1619


The 1st representative body in colonial America
Male landowners could elect 2 leaders

(Burgesses) to represent their settlement in


colonial government

Make laws and raise taxes

16240 Crown took over Virginia

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
2 types of colonial governments:
Royal colonies: owned by the crown
Proprietary colonies: belonged to individuals or
companies

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Expansion in Virginia creates conflict:
As colonists expanded plantations, they took
Indian lands
In 1622, Openchanacanough led a surprise
attack and burned plantations, killing nearly 1/3
of the colonists

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
The Algonquin Indians fight back:
Counter attacks destroyed Indian villages and
crops- reducing them to starvation
Opechancanough made peace in 1632
1644 fighting broke back out killing hundreds of
colonists and thousands of Indians, including
Openchancanough
Reduced (w/ disease), the Virginian Algoquins went
from 24,000 in 1607 to only 2,000 by 1670
Number of settlers reached 41,000 in 1670

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Bacons rebellion:
New settlers were having to move to the
interior
Less fertile lands
More transportation costs
Greater danger of Indians

Royal Gov. of Virg.- William Berkley- levied

heavy taxes on planters

Passed the money to the wealthy house of


Burgesses

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Bacons rebellion cont.:
1675- war broke out between Indians and the settlers in
the Potomac valley
Berkeley didnt want the settlers to wipe out the Indians
Nathaniel Bacon led a rebellion
Slaughtered Indians
Berkeley protested
Bacon marked his armed followers to Jamestown in revolt

September 1676- drove out the governor and burned

down the town


October- Bacon died (disease) and the rebellion
collapsed

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
Berkley regained power back but wasnt the

same, so 1677, the King appointed a new


governor
Importance: showed poor farmers would not
tolerate a government that catered only to the
wealthiest colonists
Leaders reduced the taxes paid by the farmers
and improved their access to frontier land
Provoked further wars with the American Indians

of the interior

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
England Expands its Southern Colonies:
1632- King established a 2nd Southern colonyMaryland
Lord Baltimore: Owned and governed it as a
proprietary colony
Colonial refuge for fellow Catholics
More protestants than Catholics ended up in
Maryland

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
1670- Carolinas are established
Charles Town- 1st establishment
The Lord Proprietor, who remained in England,
entrusted the colonies leadership to ambitious
men from the West Indies
1691- Northern half became a distinct colony of
North Caroline
1729- North and South Carolina rejected the
control of the lord proprietor
King appointed the governor after that who had
to cooperate with the legislator

Chapter 2 Section 1: The Southern


Colonies Take Route
1732- Georgia began as a proprietary colony
To protect South Caroline from Florida (Spanish)
James Oglethorpe
Set up Georgia as a haven for English debtors
Most of their 1st settlers were poor traders and
artisans/refugees from Switzerland and Germany
Couldnt drink or own slaves
Had to work their own lands
colonist protests

1752- Georgia became a royal colony

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New


England
Puritans-religious dissenters
Wanted to Purify the Anglican church of
Catholicism
Didnt like Catholic style hierarchy
Separatists- wanted to separate complete

from the Anglican church


These two groups made up most of New
England

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Puritan Beliefs and Values
Puritans followed the teaching of John Calvin
Moral lives
Praying
Reading the bible
Doing what their minister told them

Salvation depended on the will of God\


Typically from the middle class
Puritan work ethic and modest living

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Puritan Challenges Lead to Persecution
1620s- Charles I began to persecute the
Puritans due to their threat of the Anglican
Church

Led to their desire to move to the New World

Puritans Arrive in North America


1620s- first Puritan Separatists (Pilgrims)
Mayflower founded Plymouth Colony
100 on board made and signed the Mayflower
Compact

Formed a government and agreed to obey their laws

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Massachusetts Bay Colony
1630- John Winthrop
City Upon a Hill
Established Mass. Bay Colony
Puritan men elected their governor, deputy
governor, and assembly
Only colony at the time that elected its governor

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


New Hampshire and Maine emerged
Anglicans and Puritans lived their
Rhode Island became a haven for more

radical Puritans
Connecticut- more Conservative Puritans
By the end of the 17th century
Massachusetts's Bay colony included Maine

and Plymouth
Connecticut absorbed New Haven

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Religious Differences Lead to New Colonies
Not friendly toward people of other religious
Wanted their own prefect society
Massachusetts executed 4 Quakers and burned their
books
Thought God would punish anyone who tolerated
individual choice in religion

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Roger Williams- dissenter
Said church was still too Anglican
Settlers had no right to take land from the
Indians and that they needed to purchase it
from them
Fled to Rhode Island where he founded
Providence in 1636

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Anne Hutchinson
Puritans had only let men be in charge
Hutchinson was banished from Massachusetts
Moved to Rhode Island after she was banished
Rhode Island
Attracted Baptists, Quakers, and Jews
Lacked a majority of just one faith
Separated Church and State
Believed mingling church and state corrupted
religion

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Salem Witch trials:
Prosecuted witches

Could be because cattle or children sickened- they


would blame magic

1692- Salem, Massachusetts


Executed 19 suspected witches
Stopped when people of authoritys family started
being accused
Helped in prosecution of witches in New England

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


English Relationships with American Indians:
Colonists tried to recreate English style life and
towns and saw the Indians as lazy that they
hadnt done so
The Pequot War: Fur trading was established

between the Puritans and the Pequots, but it


was an uneasy peace

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


1636- Puritans accused the Pequots of murdering an

English trader
Pequots denied
Puritans- With the Narragansett and Mohegans

attacked Pequot villages


Pequots then raided a Puritan village
Puritans then burned a Pequot village filled mostly with
women and children

Killed most of its 600 to 700 inhabitants

Virtually eliminated the Pequots


Pequots lost all their land and went to live among

other Indian peoples

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


Attempts to convert the Indians:
Puritans (after the Pequot war) tried to convert
the Indians and make them European

Set up praying towns that they made Indians


move in to, so that missionaries could look over
them

1674- Massachusetts had 14 praying towns with

1,600
Puritans then claimed most of their land
Praying towns forced Indians to abandon tradition
English division of gender roles

Only a minority agreed to enter praying towns

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


King Phillips war:
1675- Indian Rebellion erupted
Colonist called the chief of the Wampanoag Indians
King Phillip
Real name was Metacom
Metacom led attacks in Plymouth
War spread as a loose confederation of Indians
attacked English settlements
Destroyed 12 towns

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


1676- Indians started to starve because their

crops were destroyed by colonial


counterattacks
Ran out of ammo

August 1676- Metacom died in battle


War killed at least 1,000 colonists and 3,000
Indians
Indians lost most of their remaining land

Ch. 2-2: New Lives in New England


1700 in New England
92,000 colonist
9,000 Indians
Some Indians fled to Canada
Typically Indians would then side with the
French when the French and English would fight

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