The Colonies Come of Age
British Mercantilism
Theory or power – a country’s ultimate goal was self-sufficiency and all countries in competition to acquire gold, wealth, power The purpose of colonies is to enrich the mother country Colonies expected to provide raw materials to England
(lumber, furs, fish, tobacco) Colonies serve as a market for British manufactured
goods (furniture, utensils, china, etc.)
Many merchants desire to sell to other countries (Spain, France, Holland). England sees this as a threat – colonies must only support the mother country
Mercantilism
Navigation Acts 1651
Navigation Acts puts the theory of mercantilism into practice
Most products could be sold only to England and all products have to pass through English ports
Some merchants resent the restrictions and start to smuggle goods to and from other countries
Tensions….. Glorious Revolution
King Charles II cracks down on MA – revokes the charter and makes it a royal colony under control of the crown
All the N. colonies united into Dominion of New England and placed under Sir Edmund Andros
Andros plans to crack down and enforce the Navigation Acts
Bloodless revolution in England in 1688/89. King James II flees as William and Mary are invited to take the throne by Parliament
Parliament passes a series of laws strengthening their powers
Colonists in MA follow and arrest Andros and his royal councilors
Tensions Emerge…..the Glorious Revolution
England loosens control
After 1688 (and for much of the first half of the 1700s) England turns its attention away from the colonies and towards France who is competing for greater control of Europe
Ushers in period of salutary neglect – England relaxes its enforcement of most regulations in exchange for continued econ loyalty of the colonies
Colonial Assemblies pay royal governor’s salaries and as such are able to exert some self-government
By 1750 – colonists still considered themselves British subjects – enjoying more economic and political autonomy and have little desire to unite against GB. However, colonies start to develop a taste for self-gov
AGRICULTUAL SOUTH
AND URBAN/MERCANTILIST NORTH
North versus South
PLANTATION ECONOMY
THE AGRICULTURAL SOUTH
- The South stakes its livelihood on fertile soil and long growing seasons
- Plantations develop that specialize in a single cash crop – grown for sale/profit instead of the farmer’s own use
- MD, VA, NC – tobacco- SC/GA – rice, indigo
- Many long, deep rivers in South allow planters to ship goods directly without need for many ports or city docks
- South develops largely as a rural and self-sufficient society
Life in the South
During the 1700s large numbers of Europeans traveled to N. America Many Germans settle in MD, VA, NC Many Scots and Scots-Irish settle in the South mostly along the
hills of western VA, NC
Small farmers formed the majority of Southern society, but planters controlled much of the South’s economy as well as its political and social institutions
Women had few legal rights (couldn’t vote). Educated in domestic tasks and expected to submit to husband. Average Southern woman worked hard throughout the day – cooking, milking cows, gardening, caring for children, cleaning, sewing, washing clothes, etc.
Indentured Servitude to Slavery
Indentured servants made up a significant part of colonial population in the 1600s (approx. ½ - 2/3 of all white immigrants after 1630) – however their numbers declined towards the end of the century
To meet labor shortages, colonies gradually turn to slavery (African slave trade had long been in place to W. Indies sugar plantations – Barbados and Jamaica)
What is the difference between an indentured servant and a slave?
Triangular Trade
17th century transatlantic trade network
Network encompassed trade routes criss-crossing N and S colonies, West Indies, Europe, and Africa
The Middle Passage – terrible conditions
• African Slave traders from the West Coast of Africa captured other Africans from the interior of Africa
• African Slave Traders gave Slaves to the Europeans in exchange for weapons and other goods.
• Ships – overcrowded, disease, whippings, heading into the unknown
• Passage in 1700s – 5-8 weeks
It is estimated that 20% of slaves starting the Middle Passage died en route to the Americas
Slave Trade in the Americas
Slavery in the South
Most slaves (80-90%) were field slaves working in plantations
On large plantations slaves were directed by overseers. On small plantations they worked alongside their master
The other 10-20% were house slaves (cooked, cleaned cared for children) or artisans (carpenters, blacksmiths, bricklayers).
Full-time work begins around age 12 – lasts all day
Slave owners whipped or beat those slaves they thought were disrespectful or disobedient
(Movie – 12 Years a SlaveBook – The Invention of Wings)
Slave Culture
Africans sold into slavery often came from a variety of tribes, cultures, and languages
Wove baskets and molded pottery as they had done in their homeland. Kept alive musical traditions and dance customs. Ring Shout – a circular religious dance that pays tribute to groups’ ancestors and gods invoking loud chants and quick, circular steps
Because merchants often tore apart nuclear families slaves formed tight bonds among the slave community of the plantation. They raised other’s children and filled family obligations for extended networks.
Slave Culture
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of_Niger-Congo_origin
Slave Resistance
If you were a slave, how would you resist?...........
SLAVE RESISTANCE
Faked illnessBroke toolsWorked slowlySabotaged the cropRan awayOpen Revolt – ex: Stono Rebellion- September 1739 – 20
slaves gathered at the Stono River near Charles Town, SC wielding guns and weapons. Killed several planter families and marched south, beating drums and calling for other slaves to join. Planned to head to Spanish held FL. Later the same day, they were surrounded by a white militia. Those captured were executed.
White planters terrified of revolt (especially in plantation areas where blacks outnumber whites – sometimes 2-1).
NORTHERN COLONIES DEVELOPED A MORE URBAN SOCIETY – BASED ON
COMMERCE AND TRADE. LARGELY DUE TO GEOGRAPHY AND CLIMATE, THE
NORTH DEVELOPED MUCH DIFFERENTLY THAN THE SOUTH.
The Commercial North
Commerce in the North
Cold winters and rocky soil restricted New England farmers to smaller farms. They typically grew several crops instead of one cash crop on a large plantation.
More diversified economy Wheat grinding Harvesting fish Timber, sawing lumber Ship building Iron production The merchant class thrived and was powerful
Urban North
Many port cities developed to support the expansion of trade (Boston, NYC, Philadelphia)
Northern cities were more culturally diverse with a greater influx of immigrants – Germans, Dutch, Scots- Irish, Scandinavians, etc.
Slavery did exist in the north and slaves were treated harshly and considered property, but the north never had the number of slaves as the South did. Their economy was based on things that were less labor intensive and they never had the same demand for large numbers of slaves.
Northern Cities - Philadelphia
Philadelphia was a large port and the main point of entry in the colonies (later surpassed by NYC).
At one time, Philly
was the second largest city in the British empire behind London
Witchcraft Trials in Salem, MA (Puritan)
Winter 1691/927 Salem girls accused a West
Indian slave woman of practicing witchcraft
Accusations grew out of control as those who were accused tried to save themselves by naming other “witches”
Hysteria grips the town as more people made false accusations
Result – 20 hanged, 5 “witches” died in jail, and about 150 imprisoned
http://www.history.com/topics/salem-witch-trials/videos/salem-witch-trials
The Enlightenment and Great Awakening
Enlightenment swept colonial society in the 1700s Optimistic belief in science and reason
General spirit of inquiry and invention
Openness to new ideas
Scientific method to obtain knowledge
World is governed by fixed mathematical laws – not by chance
Enlightenment thinking also influenced political thought and would eventually lead colonists to question the authority of the British gov. It stressed the idea that individuals have natural rights, which governments must respect.
Influential Enlightenment Thinkers
Jean-Jacques Rousseau – “social contract” exists between the government and the
people. Role of gov is to ensure that the common good is protected
Montesquieu – Separation of powers
John Locke – Champions idea of representative gov All people have individual, natural rights – life, liberty and
property When gov violates those rights, people can legitimately
rebel
Benjamin Franklin – epitomized Enlightenment ideals
Believed humans could use intellectual powers to improve their lot in life
Invented the lightening rod, bifocals, and a heating system called the Franklin stove
Knowledge and discovery should be put to practical use
CauseResult – Great Awakening
By the early 1700s the Puritan church had lost its strong hold on society and church membership declined.
Many became more worldly and materialistic and less religiously inclined
New Mass charter Allowed freedom of worship Banned practice of only
allowing Puritans to vote
Traveling preachers went from village to village, having revival mtgs and encouraging people to rededicate themselves to God
Religious fervor
The Great Awakening – 1730s/40s
Great Awakening
Jonathan Edwards Early 18th century
preacher in MA sought to revive religious intensity of original Puritan settlers
“The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one holds a spider, or some loathsome insect over the fire, abhors (hates) you, and is dreadfully provoked; His wrath towards you burns like fire; He looks upon you as worthy of nothing else but to be cast into the fire;….and yet it is nothing but his hand that holds you from falling into the fire every moment.”
Edwards – “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”
Result of the Great Awakening?
The Great Awakening challenged the authority of established churches
Some colonists abandoned Puritan or Anglican congregations
Independent denominations (Baptists/Methodists) gained new members
Increased interest in higher education as Protestant denominations establish colleges (Princeton, Brown, Columbia, Dartmouth)
Colonists Question British Authority
Both the Enlightenment and the Great Awakening…. Caused people to question traditional authority Stressed the importance of the individual
Set the stage for colonists to question British authority over their lives.