Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock + Massachusetts Bay

I. John Calvin

  A. Takes ideas of Martin Luther and advances on them, creating Calvinism.
  • Calvanism - Whether a person goes to Heaven or Hell is predetermined, eliminating guilt.

II. Henry VIII

  A. Henry VIII creates the Anglican Church and makes himself the head.
  • Puritans aim to purify the church. They remove aspects of the Catholic Church from the new Anglican Church.
  • Separatists are the extreme group. They want to remove all aspects of the Catholic Church. The Separatists eventually become the Pilgrims and move to Plymouth Rock by way of the Mayflower.
III. Massachussetts Bay (1629)
  
 A. Much bigger colony. Consisted of Puritans. John Winthrope creates what he calls a "City upon a hill." He envisions The city as a colling from God for a holy society.
  • Great Migration - 20,000 people move to The Americas from England. (1630s)
  • New principles of Democracy. 2/3 of the people can vote.
  • John Winthrop does not like Democratic ideals. Cares more for church.
  • Anne Hutchinson - Famous dissenter. Disagrees with many ideas of the time. Very well educated. Seen as a heretic and banished. These events in Massachusetts are the basis of The Scarlet Letter, written years later.
  • Roger Williams - Extreme separatist. Friendly with Indians. Establishes Baptist Church and religious freedom. Establishes Rhode Island.
  • Rhode Island - Land is bought from American Indians. Fairly Democratic.

IV. Connecticut
  • Closer Church and State alliance
  • Create first modern Constitution in American History. Government rights given to substantial citizens.
   











United States History


Contents

17th Century


I. The Chesapeake

A. Virginia (Founded in 1607 by The Virginia Company)


   1. Jamestown (1607) - First permanent British Colony in the New World.

  • Founded by The Virginia Company, received charter from King James I
  • Main Goals: Promise of gold, conversion of Indians to Christianity, and new passage to Indies.
  • Consisted largely of well-to-do adventurers.
  • Virginia Charter - Overseas settlers given same rights as Englishmen in England. This became a foundation for American liberties. These rights extended to other colonies in The New World as well.

   2. Tragedy During Early Years
  • Famine, disease, and war with Indians were prevalent.
  • By 1625, only 1200 of the nearly 8000 colonists survived.
  • Only 60 of 400 settlers survived the "starving time" of 1610 - 1611

   3. Captain John Smith
  • Organized the colony shortly after. He famously stated that "He who will not work shall not eat.

   4. Pocahontas
  • Became a central figure in preserving peace in early Jamestown.
  • Provided foodstuffs for settlers
  • Hostage of colonists in 1613 during military conflict.
  • Married John Rolfe (Not John Smith. Ignore the movie for a moment.) and taught him the Indian way of curing tobacco.

   5. John Rolfe and the tobacco crop economy ("colony built on smoke")
  • Tobacco industry became cornerstone of Virginia's economy.
  • Plantation system emerged

   6. House of Burgesses - An assembly authorized by The London Company in 1619
  • 1st miniature Parliament in the British-American colonies
  • Representative self-government. Most representatives were substantial property owners. This was created as an incentive to attract settlers to the Virginia "death trap."

   7. Virginia Charter revoked by King James I in 1624
  • King believed assembly to be seditious but also hated tobacco.


B. Maryland

   1. Charles I gave Sir George Calvert, the first Lord Baltimore, a portion of Virginia for Catholic Haven and profit.
  

 2. Eventually, growth of Protestants meant Catholics rapidly becoming a minority; Catholics feared loss of religious freedom.
  

 3. Act of Toleration (1649)
  • Guaranteed toleration to all Christians but instituted death penalty for anyone denying divinity of Jesus.
  • Motive - Catholics sought to protect their faith by granting certain degree of religious freedom.
  • Maryland became largest Haven for Catholics in British-American colonies


II. The Carolinas

A. Impact of the British West Indies   
  • West Indies, especially Barbados, developed sugar plantation economy.
  • Slaves in British West Indies outnumbered Whites 4 to 1
  • Slave codes adopted in Barbados to control slaves
  • West Indies increasingly relied on Mainland British America for foodstuffs.
  • As sugar plantations began to crows out small farmers, many come to Carolina with their slaves to farm.
  • Carolina adopted slave code in 1696

B. American Colonization during English Civil War (1640s) and Cromwells Protectorate (1650s)
  • New colonies not founded until restoration to the throne of Charles II (1660-1685)
  • New restoration colonies included Carolinas, New York, Pennsylvania.
C. Caroliona created in 1670 after restoration and named after Charles II
  • Goals - Grow foodstuffs for sugar plantations in Barbados and export non-English products like wine, silk, and olive oil.
  • Exported Indians as slaves to West Indies and new England colonies
  • Rice became main cash crop for export; by 1710, blacks outnumbered Whites.
  • Charles Town (Charleston) became most active seaport in the South. Became a center for aristocratic younger brothers of English Aristocrats. Religious toleration existed.
  • Indians and Spanish soldiers in Southern California settlements resented British intrusion into the region.
D. North Carolina
  • Created officially in 1712 as a refuge for poor whites and religious dissenters from Carolina and Virginia.
  • Became most democratic, independent, and least aristocratic of original 13 colonies.
  • Yet treated Indians ruthlessly and sold many into slavery.

III. Georgia
  • Became last British-American colony. Founded in 1733 by James Oglethorpe.