Chapter 3The Colonial Regions
New England• Pilgrims
• King Charles I (1625)
• The Anglican Church
• Governor John Winthrop
• “A city upon a hill”
Puritan Orthodoxy
• Enforced Conformity
• “State” Church
• Reading the Bible
• Harvard College
Banishment
• Dissenters
• Roger Williams
• Anne Hutchinson
• Restrictions on Women
• Thomas Hooker
The Puritan Church
• Male Dominance
• Voting Rights
• Puritan Villages
• Watchful Women
New England Families
• A proper Puritan family
• Divorce
• Women’s rights
• Large families
New England• Rocky soil/short growing
seasons
• Subsistence farming
• Lumber/shipbuilding
• Fishing/whaling
• Rum distilling
• Port cities/shallow rivers
Witchcraft in Salem• Salem (1691)
• Accusations
• Escalations
• Executions
• Challenges to the Puritan way of life
The Southern Colonies• Chesapeake Society
• Church and state in Virginia
• Bicameral Legislature
• The Anglican Church
• Little emphasis on religion
Maryland
• Cecilius Calvert (Lord Baltimore)
• Catholics
• Puritans vs. Catholics
• The Act of Religious Toleration
Tobacco
• Growing tobacco
• Population
• Deep Rivers
• Lack of towns
Slavery
• First slaves (1619)
• Slave laws
• Slave population
• Reasons for the increase in slavery
The Caribbean
• Heading for the Caribbean
• Sugar
• Caribbean slave population
The Carolinas• King Charles II
• Tobacco
• Use of slaves
• Rice
• Split in the Carolinas
The Middle Colonies
• New Netherland
• New Sweden
• English Conquests
• New York
• New Jersey
Quaker Pennsylvania
• Charles II
• William Penn
• Religious Tolerance
• Growing Grains
• Immigration
• Delaware
France• Louis XIV
• Fur Traders
• Ohio Valley
• Mississippi Basin
• Treatment of Natives