I.
England’s
Imperial Stirrings
A. North America
1. North America in 1600 was largely unclaimed, though the Spanish
had much control in Central and South America.
2. Spain had only set up Santa Fe, while
France had founded Quebec and Britain had founded Jamestown.
3. In the 1500s, Britain didn’t really
colonize because of internal conflicts.
a. King Henry VIII broke with the Roman Catholic Church in the
1530s and launched the English Protestant Reformation.
b. After Elizabeth I became queen, Britain became basically
Protestant, and a rivalry with Catholic Spain intensified.
c. In Ireland, the Catholics sought Spain’s help in revolting
against England, but the English crushed the uprising with brutal atrocity, and developed an attitude of sneering contempt
for natives.
II.
Elizabeth
Energizes England
A. Colonization
1. After Britain basically defeated Spain
(i.e. Spanish Armada defeat), British swarmed to America and took over lead in colonization and power.
a. Sparked new literature, like Shakespeare
2. After Drake circumnavigated the globe,
Liz I knighted him on his ship.
3. However, English tries at colonization
in the New World failed often and embarrassingly.
4. Britain and Spain finally signed a peace
treaty in 1604.
III.
England
on the Eve of the Empire
A. Reasons for Emigration
1. In the 1500s, Britain’s population
was mushrooming.
2. Farmers were enclosing land for farming.
3. Puritanism took a strong root in the woolen
districts of western and eastern England.
4. Younger sons of rich folk (who couldn’t
inherit money) tried their luck with fortunes elsewhere, like America.
5. By the 1600s, the joint-stock company
was perfected, being a forerunner to today’s corporations.
IV.
England
Plants the Jamestown Seedling
A. Jamestown
1. In 1606, the Virginia Company received
a charter from King James I to make a settlement in the New World.
a. Such joint-stock companies usually did not exist long, as
stockholders hoped to form the company, make a profit, and then quickly sell for profit a few years later.
2. The charter of the Virginia Company guaranteed
settlers the same rights as Englishmen in Britain.
3. On May 24, 1607, about a 100 English settlers
disembarked from their ship and founded Jamestown.
a. Forty colonists perished during the voyage.
b. In mosquito-ridden Virginia, disease was rampant. It didn’t help that a supply ship shipwrecked in the Bahamas in 1609 either.
4. Luckily, in 1608, a Captain John Smith
took over control and whipped the colonists into discipline.
a. He had been kidnapped by local Indians and forced into a
mock execution by the chief Powhatan and had been “saved” by Pocahantas.
b. The act was meant to show that Powhatan wanted peaceful relations
with the colonists.
5. Still, the colonists were reduced to eating
cats, dogs, rats, even other people.
6. Finally, in 1610, a relief party headed
by Lord De La Warr arrived to alleviate the suffering.
7. By 1625, out of an original overall total
of 8000 would-be settlers, only 1200 had survived.
V.
Cultural
Clash in the Chesapeake
A. The Indian’s Begin to Lose Power
1. At first, Powhatan possibly considered
the new colonists potential allies and tried to be friendly with them, but as time passed and colonists raided Indian food
supplies, relations deteriorated and eventually, war occurred.
2. The First Anglo-Powhatan War ended in
1614 with a peace settlement sealed by the marriage of Pocahontas to colonist
John Rolfe.
3. Eight years later, in 1622, the Indians
struck again with a series of attacks that left 347 settlers, including John
Rolfe, dead.
4. The Second Anglo-Powhatan War began in
1644, ended in 1646, and effectively banished the Chesapeake Indians from their ancestral lands.
5. After the settlers began to grow their
own food, the Indians were useless, and were therefore banished.
VI.
Virginia:
Child of Tobacco
A. Tobacco Info
1. Tobacco created a greed for land, since
it heavily depleted soil and ruined the land.
2. King James I detested tobacco.
3. Representative self-government was born
in Virginia, when in 1619, settlers created the House of Burgesses.
4. Slavery in the Americas was also born
in 1619.
VII.
Maryland:
Catholic Heaven
A. Religious Diversity
1. Founded in 1634 by Lord Baltimore, Maryland
was the second plantation colony and the fourth overall colony to be formed.
2. It was a place for persecuted Catholics
to find refuge.
3. Lord Baltimore gave huge estates to his
Catholic relatives, but the poorer people who settled there where mostly Protestant, creating friction.
4. However, Maryland prospered with tobacco.
5. It had a lot of indentured servants.
6. Only in the later years of the 1600s (in
Maryland and Virginia) did Black slavery began to become popular.
7. Maryland’s religious statute guaranteed
toleration to all Christians, but decreed the death penalty to Jews and atheists and others who didn’t believe in the
divinity of Jesus Christ.
VIII.
The
West Indies: Way Station to Mainland America
A. Their Use
1. As the British were colonizing Virginia,
they were also settling in the West Indies (Spain’s declining power opened the door).
2. By mid-1600s, England had secured claim
to several West Indies islands, including Jamaica in 1655.
3. They grew lots of sugar there.
4. Thousands of African slaves were needed
to operate sugar plantations, and these weren’t for the poor either.
5. To control so many slaves “codes”
were set up that defined the legal status of slaves and the rights of the masters. They
were typically strict.
IX.
Colonizing
the Carolinas
A. Restoration Period
1. In England, King Charles I had been beheaded. Oliver Cromwell had ruled for ten years before tired Englishmen restored Charles II
to the throne.
2. The bloody period had interrupted colonization.
3. Carolina was named after Charles II, and
was formally created in 1670.
4. Carolina flourished by developing close
economic ties with the West Indies.
5. Many original Carolina settlers had come
from Barbados.
6. Interestingly, Indians as slaves in Carolina
was protested, but to no avail. Slaves were sent to the West Indies to work,
as well as New England.
7. Rice emerged as the principle crop in
Carolina.
a. African slaves were hired to work on rice fields, due to
their immunity to malaria and their familiarity with rice.
8. Despite violence with Spanish and Indians,
Carolina proved to be too strong to be wiped out.
X.
The
Emergence of North Carolina
A. Conflict
1. Many newcomers to Carolina were “squatters,”
people who owned no land.
2. North Carolinians developed a strong resistant
to authority, due to geographic isolation from neighbors.
3. In 1712, North and South Carolina were
officially separated.
4. In 1711, when Tuscarora Indians attacked
North Carolinas, the Carolinians responded by crushing the opposition, selling hundreds to slavery and leaving the rest to
wander north, eventually becoming the Sixth Nation of the Iroquois.
XI.
Late-Coming
Georgia: The Buffer Colony
A. Georgia’s Purpose
1. Georgia was intended to be a buffer between
the British colonies and the hostile Spanish settlements in Florida and the enemy French in Louisiana.
2. Founded in 1733 by a high-minded group
of philanthropists, it was the last colony founded.
3. Named after King George II of England,
Georgia was also meant to be a haven for wretched souls in debt.
4. James Oglethorpe, the ablest of the founders
and a dynamic soldier-statesman, repelled Spanish attacks.
a. He saved “the Charity Colony” by his energetic
leadership and by using his own fortune to help with the colony.
5. All Christians except Catholics enjoyed
religious toleration, and many missionaries came to try to convert the Indians.
a. John Wesley was one of them, and he later returned to England
and founded Methodism.
6. Georgia grew very slowly.
XII.
The
Plantion Colonies
A. Comparisons and Contrasts
1. Slavery was found in all the plantation
colonies.
2. Growth of cities was often stunted by
forests.
3. Establishment of schools and churches
was difficult.
4. In the South, the crops were tobacco and
rice.
5. All the plantation colonies permitted
some religious toleration.
6. Confrontations with Native Americans was
often.
XIII.
Makers
of America: The Iroquois
- In what is now New
York State, the Iroquois once were a great power.
- They were made up
of the Mohawks, the Oneidas, the Onondagas, the Deganawidah, and the Hiawatha.
- They vied with neighboring
Indians and later French, English, and Dutch for supremacy.
- The longhouse was
the building block of Iroquois society.
- Only 25 feet wide
but over 200 feet long, longhouses were typically occupied by a few blood-related families (on the mother’s side).
- The Mohawks were middlemen
with European traders.
- The Senecas were fur
suppliers.
- The Five Nations of
the Iroquois’ rivals, the neighboring Hurons, Eries, and Petuns, were vanquished.
- Throughout the 1600s
and 1700s, the Iroquois allied with the British and French (whichever more beneficial).
- When the American
Revolution broke out, the decision to side with who was split. Most sided with
the British, but not all.
- Afterwards, the Iroquois
were forced to reservations, which proved to be unbearable to these proud people.
- An Iroquois named
Handsome Lake arose to warn his tribespeople to mend their ways.
- His teachings live
today in the form of the longhouse religion.
- He died in 1815.