37

The Settlement of New England

  • Upload
    torie

  • View
    46

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The Settlement of New England. Separatists. vs. Puritans. Puritanism. Calvinism  Institutes of the Christian Religion Predestination. Good works could not save those predestined for hell. No one could be certain of their spiritual status. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The Settlement of New England
Page 2: The Settlement of New England
Page 3: The Settlement of New England

Separatists

vs.

Puritans

Page 4: The Settlement of New England

PuritanismCalvinism Institutes of the Christian Religion

Predestination.• Good works could not save those

predestined for hell.• No one could be certain of their spiritual

status.• Gnawing doubts led to constantly seeking

signs of “conversion.”Puritans: Want to totally reform [purify] the Church

of England. Grew impatient with the slow process of

Protestant Reformation back in England.

Page 5: The Settlement of New England

Separatist Beliefs: Puritans who believed only “visible saints”

[those who could demonstrate in front of their fellow Puritans their elect status] should be admitted to church membership.

Because the Church of England enrolled all the king’s subjects, Separatists felt they had to share churches with the “damned.”

Therefore, they believed in a total break from the Church of England.

Later called Pilgrims

Separatists

Page 6: The Settlement of New England

1620 a group of 102 people [half Separatists] Negotiated with the

Virginia Company to settle in its jurisdiction.

Non-Separatists included Captain Myles Standish.

Plymouth Bay way outside the domain of the Virginia Company. Became squatters without legal right to

land & specific authority to establish a govt.

The Mayflower

Page 7: The Settlement of New England

The Mayflower Compact

November 11, 1620Written and signed before the Pilgrims disembarked from the ship.Not a constitution, but an agreement to form a crude govt. and submit to majority rule.

Signed by 41 adult males.Led to adult male settlers meeting in assemblies to make laws in town meetings.

Page 8: The Settlement of New England

The Mayflower Compact

November 11, 1620

Page 9: The Settlement of New England

That First Year….Winter of 1620-1621

Only 44 out of the original 102 survived.

None chose to leave in 1621 when the Mayflower sailed back.Fall of 1621 First “Thanksgiving.”

Colony survived with fur [especially beaver], fish, and lumber.

Plymouth stayed small and economically unimportant.

1691 only 7,000 people Merged with Massachusetts Bay

Colony.

Page 10: The Settlement of New England

Indians especially weak in New England epidemics wiped out ¾ of the native popul.Wampanoags [near Plymouth] befriended the settlers. Cooperation between the two

helped by Squanto.1621 Chief Massasoit signedtreaty with the settlers. Autumn, 1621 both groups

celebrated the First Thanksgiving.

Puritans vs. Native Americans

Page 11: The Settlement of New England

The First Thanksgiving?

In 1863, President Lincoln proclaimed Thanksgiving an official US holiday.

Page 12: The Settlement of New England

William BradfordSelf-taught scholar.1st real leader of colonyChosen governor of Plymouth 30 times in yearly elections.Worried about settlements of non-Puritans springing up nearby and corrupting Puritan society.

Page 13: The Settlement of New England

The MA Bay Colony1629 non-Separatists got a royal charter to form the MA Bay Co.

Wanted to escape attacks by conservatives in the Church of England.

They didn’t want to leave the Church, just its “impurities.”

1630 1,000 people set off in 11 well-stocked ships

Established a colony with Boston as its hub.“Great Migration” of the 1630s

Turmoil in England [leading to the English Civil War] sent about 70,000 Puritans to America.

Not all Puritans 20,000 came to MA.

Page 14: The Settlement of New England

First Seal of MA Bay

Page 15: The Settlement of New England

Colonizing New England

Page 16: The Settlement of New England

John WinthropWell-off attorney and manor lord in England.Became 1st governor of Massachusetts. Believed that he

had a “calling” from God to lead there.

Served as governor or deputy-governor for 19 years.

Page 17: The Settlement of New England

Covenant TheologyPuritan belief that they had a covenant with God to lead a new religion in a new world

“We shall be as a city on the hill”- Winthrop

“Social Covenant”: Between members of Puritan

communities with each other. Required mutual watchfulness. No toleration of deviance or disorder. No privacy.

Page 18: The Settlement of New England

Characteristics of New England Settlements

Low mortality average life expectancy was 70 years of age.

Cooler weather and clean waterMany extended families.Average 6 children per family.Average age at marriage:

Women – 22 years old Men – 27 years old.

Page 19: The Settlement of New England

Characteristics of New England Settlements

1636- Harvard is founded to train clergy- 1st American collegeTowns with more than 50 people were required to have elementary schools

Teach children to read the bibleThus New England became most literate section of colonies

Most adults could read

Page 20: The Settlement of New England

PatriarchyAuthoritarian male father figures controlled each household.

Patriarchal ministers and magistrates controlled church congregations and household patriarchs.

Page 21: The Settlement of New England

Puritan Government

Governing open to all free men who were puritans (40% of the population)Whole purpose of Government was to enforce God’s lawTown hall meetings emerge as a staple of governmentClergy not allowed to hold office (separation of church and state?)

Page 22: The Settlement of New England

Puritan “Rebels”Young, popular minister in Salem. Argued for a full break

with the Anglican Church. Condemned MA Bay

Charter.• Did not give fair

compensation to Indians. Denied authority of civil

govt. to regulate religious behavior.

1635 found guilty of preaching “newe & dangerous opinions” and was exiled.

Roger Williams

Page 23: The Settlement of New England

1636 Roger Williams fled there. MA Bay Puritans had wanted to exile him to

England to prevent him from founding a competing colony.

Remarkable political freedom in Providence, RI• Universal manhood suffrage later restricted by

a property qualification.• Opposed to special privilege of any kind

freedom of opportunity for all.RI becomes known as the “Sewer” because it is seen by the Puritans as a dumping ground for unbelievers and religious dissenters More liberal than any other colony!

Rhode Island- The Las Vegas of the New World

Page 24: The Settlement of New England

Intelligent, strong-willed,well-spoken woman.Threatened patriarchal control.Antinomialism [direct revelation] Means “against the law.” Carried to logical extremes

Puritan doctrine of predestination.

Holy life was no sure sign of salvation. Truly saved didn’t need to obey the law of

either God or man.

Puritan “Rebels”

AnneHutchinson

Page 25: The Settlement of New England

1638 she confounded the Puritan leaders for days.Eventually bragged that she had received her beliefs DIRECTLY from God.Puritan leaders banished her she & her family traveled to RI and later to NY. She and all but one member of her family

were killed in an Indian attack in Westchester County.

John Winthrop saw God’s hand in this!

Anne Hutchinson’s Trial

Page 26: The Settlement of New England

New England Colonies, 1650

Page 27: The Settlement of New England

Population of the New England Colonies

Page 28: The Settlement of New England

Population Comparisons:New England v. the

Chesapeake

Page 29: The Settlement of New England

The Middle Colonies

• New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania

• Most diverse region in colonies- ethnically mixed so generally tolerant of religions

• Known as breadbasket of colonies for all the grain that was grown

• Geographically and culturally the middle of the colonies

Page 30: The Settlement of New England

The Middle Colonies

• Patroonship- similar to plantations in the south. Dutch estates granted to promoters who would get 50 people to live on them– One in Albany that was larger than

Rhode Island!• 1664- English drive Dutch out of

New World

Page 31: The Settlement of New England

Pennsylvania• 1681- William Penn secured

an immense land grant from king in exchange for money owed to his father

• Primary motive- haven for Quakers– Secondary motive-

experiment with liberal ideas in Govt. while making a profit• “holy experiment”-

religious toleration

Page 32: The Settlement of New England

Pennsylvania• Pennsylvania became best advertised colony and

population grew fast– Promised people land, religious freedom, and representative

Govt.– Attracted many skilled workers- carpenters, masons,

shoemakers, blacksmiths, etc– Penn also incorporated all squatters living within his land grant

and gave them citizenship (4,000 people)– Philadelphia carefully planned by Penn– Penn had good relations with Indians and bought land from

them to increase his holdings• Representative Govt. with landowners having voting

rights- no church requirements• No militia- Quakers were pacifists

Page 33: The Settlement of New England

The Big Picture

• Similarities between 3 regions:– Mostly English– Some self government in all regions– Religious toleration to at least some

degree– Opportunities for economic and

social advancement– Increasingly unique from British

population

Page 34: The Settlement of New England

The Big Picture

• New England- – What were the colonies?

• MA, CT, RI, NH– Puritan dominated– Less religious toleration than other

colonies– More restrictions on civic participation– More industry– Less agriculture

Page 35: The Settlement of New England

The Big Picture

• Middle Colonies- what were they?– NY, NJ, PA, DE– Ethnically diverse– Religious toleration– Democratic– Agriculture– Quaker influenced

Page 36: The Settlement of New England

The Big Picture• Southern Colonies- what were

they?– MD, VA, NC, SC, GA– Plantation economy (aristocratic)– Slavery– Cash crops– Scattered population– Expansionary– Little religion (church of England)– Population slow to develop (few

women)

Page 37: The Settlement of New England

The Big Picture• General info about the colonies as a

whole– 80% rural– Women wove, cooked, cleaned, cared

for kids– Men cleared, fenced, and planted land,

cut firewood, butchered livestock– Children helped with adult tasks– Americans had a higher standard of

living than Europe- wages were 3 times higher

– Longer life expectancy as well