November 9, 2015 – A day Do Now: Pilgrims Magna Carta Homework: No Homework!
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Transcript of November 9, 2015 – A day Do Now: Pilgrims Magna Carta Homework: No Homework!
November 9, 2015 – A day
• Do Now: Pilgrims
• Magna Carta
• Homework: No Homework!
November 9, 2015
• Go over missing assignments
• Go over Test
• Finish Jamestown
• Go over colonies sheet
What did England Want?– 104 MEN came on 3 ships after a 4 month
journey– Built a fort and lived on the James River– Land was swampy with mosquitoes that spread
disease, causing many settlers to die
3
English Ships that sail to Jamestown, Virginia
Inside the Ship
What did England Want?Colonists were so busy looking for gold, they did not plant enough crops
Captain John Smith helps save colony by setting up rules to force colonists to work planting food.
The Powhatan Indians also saved the colonists from starving by trading corn to them
Peaceful friendship between Indians and colonists lasted a short while until there were disagreements over food and land
Powatan Village
Making a canoe and leather
Inside the Fort at Jamestown
Inside a home at Jamestown
November 12, 2015 – A Day
• Do Now: Representative Government
• Homework: Read 100-105
• Q# 4, 5, and 7 on page 105
• Rewrite Question and answer in
• complete sentences
• Take out New England Colonies Worksheet
• About.com 13 Colonies
• Go over Colonies Worksheet
• In depth on New England Colonies
• Video on New England
• Video on Mayflower
• Video on Pilgrims and Puritans
Who are England’s 13 Children?England’s Colonies
I) Why do the ppl from England come to America?
A) Looking for wealth – gold – cash crops
B) Looking for better life – crowded in cities of
England – here they can have land and farm
C) Escaping religious persecution – King did not
always let ppl worship as they wanted
Who are England’s 13 Children?New England Colonies
• The 13 Colonies
(Notice Maine and
Massachusetts
are the same colony)
Who are England’s 13 Children?New England Colonies
II) New England Colonies (Northeast)
Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, New Hampshire
A) Massachusetts
1. Pilgrims left England
a) Left England to worship God as
they wanted (religious reasons)
1)King James was attacking them
for believing in their own religion
Who are England’s 13 Children?New England Colonies
Who are England’s 13 Children?New England Colonies
2. Pilgrims ask Virginia Company for land to settle on (April Showers…)
a) They travel on the Mayflower
1. 3 month journey
2. 100 men and women
3. Land north of Virginia
Company’s land in Plymouth,
Massachusetts
(History Channel … Deconstructing
the Mayflower)howers bring
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
3. Mayflower Compact a) Agreement made on the Mayflower
as to what laws would be when they got off ship – “Power to the People”!
4. Puritans – also left England for religious reasons
5. Puritans mixed religion and gov’t when they passed laws saying ppl had to live by their religion (God’s Will).
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
5. Like Jamestown, Pilgrims built a fort at
Plymouth, but life is hard
a) During the first winter cold and disease killed
half the ppl
b) Had to steal corn from the Natives
c) A Native American named Squanto (spoke
English) and helped the Pilgrims with a peace
treaty between the Pilgrims and Natives
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
d) Taught them to grow three sisters, hunt, fish, and
traded for furs
e) In the fall the Natives and Pilgrims celebrated
their time of peace and harvest with a three-day
feast - Thanksgiving
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
• The First Thanksgiving»
»
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
» Plymouth Village and Fort
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
• Inside the
colonist’s homes
Bed with curtain keeps
cold out
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
• Inside homes at Plymouth
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
B) Rhode Island1. Settled on the basis of religious freedom for Puritans a) disagreed with some of the
New England church’s rules b) Believed in religious toleration = allowing ppl
to have their own beliefs c) Did not believe the colony’s church and
government should be mixed together – should be separate.
Who are England’s Children?New England Colonies
d) Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson started
the R.I. colony after being thrown out of
Massachusetts for their religious beliefs
November 13 – B Day
• Do Now: House of Burgesses
• Indentured Servants
• Homework: Complete graphic organizer
• Write and type (if possible) paragraph
November 13 – B day
• Pass up Homework
• Notes on Middle Colony
• SAS William Penn HW
• Southern Colonies Notes
• Chart in pairs
• Go over chart
• Hand out homework
Who are England’s 13 Children?England’s Colonies
Who else came to the colonies?Middle Colonies = The Bread Colonies
New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware
III) New York – Henry Hudson helped discoverA) Dutch (Dutch West India Company) settled Hudson River
Valley and NYC1. Dutch colony named New Netherland
a) Governor: Peter Stuyvestant (Old Silvernails – had wooden peg
leg w/nails on it)
b) New Amsterdam = NYC (bought for
$24 from Indians)
Who else came to the colonies?Middle Colonies
c) Put up a wall at end of Manhattan Island to protect them from wolves = Wall Street
d) Farms and trading were big business. NY Harbor brought ppl and goods from around the world.
e) British took colony from Dutch, renamed it New York and added land for the New Jersey colony
• Manhattan Island – New York State
NYC with “Wall Street” with Hudson
River
Who else came to the colonies?Middle Colonies = The Bread Colonies
Life in the Middle ColoniesNew York
• Throughout all of the colonies, people farmed
Life in the Middle ColoniesNew York
• Philipsburg Manor
Life in the Middle ColoniesNew York
• Philipsburg
Manor
Who else came to the colonies?Middle Colonies – The Bread Colonies
IV) Pennsylvania and DelawareA) English Quakers settled Pennsylvania
1. Quakers = looking for religious freedom
a) did not believe in war –wouldn’t fight for King of Englandb) William Penn (Quaker) offered his land to them – colony was set up
c) Philadelphia set up with no walls or forts because ppl were expected to behave w/ peace –CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE
Who else came to the colonies?The Middle Colonies – The Bread Colonies
* Middle Colonies called: The Bread Colonies
A) Immigrants came to farm – GOOD SOIL
1. Came from England, France,
Germany, Sweden
2. Grew wheat, rye, oats, corn, indigo (blue
dye) – ingredients for making bread
3. Cash crop = sold grain for money
Who are England’s 13 Children?England’s Colonies
Who else came to the colonies?Southern Colonies
Maryland, Virginia, No.Carolina, So.Carolina, Georgia
V) Maryland
1. Proprietary Colony: Colony owned by
businessmen and taxed the settlers
a. Owned by Lord Baltimore
1. Allowed religious freedom and
toleration to Catholics and Protestants
2. Grew tobacco – required slaves
Who else came to the colonies?Southern Colonies
VI) Carolina Colony - Plantations 1. Split into North and South
VII) Georgia-Plantations 1. Set up as a place where England’s poor could make a new life-ppl in debt a) not a lot of ppl came
VIII) Virginia-Plantations1. Jamestown/Williamsburg2. Cash Crops – Tobacco
•
3. House of Burgesses – First representative gov’t in the colonies!
Followed the British idea of the Magna Carta – limited the king’s power and gave ppl representative government
Williamsburg, Virginia
• Colonial Soldiers
Williamsburg, Virginia
• Governor’s Palace – Chosen by the King
Williamsburg, Virginia
• The Entrance Hall of the Governor’s Palace
Williamsburg, VirginiaColonial Life
• Street in
Williamsburg
with businesses (trades)
Williamsburg, Virginia
• Trades (Businesses)
Shoemaker Butcher
Williamsburg, VirginiaColonial Life
• Brick making
Williamsburg, Virginia
• The next time you do not do your homework,
you’ll be put in the stocks!
Who else came to the colonies?Southern Colonies
IX) Plantations – large farmsA) Grew cash crops = grown to be sold
1. Tobacco2. Indigo – plant used to make blue dye3. Cotton
B) Needed large amount of workers to plant and pick crops C) INDENTURED SERVANTS AND
SLAVES
• Southern colonies – about.com
• 13 Colonies Chart
• Paragraph for homework
Who else came to the colonies?Southern Colonies
1. Indentured Servants
a) most came from Europe
b) Plantation owners paid the cost
of their trip to America
c) workers agreed to work as
servants for a number of years
Who else came to the colonies?Southern Colonies
2. Slavesa) permanent workers
b) sent from Africa in chains on
slave ships
c) many died of disease on ships
d) legal to sell as property
e) gave up their names, had no rights
Slavery
• First Passage: Inside Africa to shore where ships were waiting
• For weeks, months, sometimes as long as a year, they waited in the dungeons of the slave factories scattered along Africa's western coast.
• Out of the roughly 20 million who were taken from their homes and sold into slavery, half didn't complete the journey to the African coast, most of those dying along the way.
And the worst was yet to come.
SlaveryMiddle Passage
• The captives were about to embark on the infamous Middle Passage, so called because it was the middle trip of a three-part voyage. The last part was the sale of slave in America.
SlaveryVoyage of Death
• The African slave boarding the ship had no idea what lay ahead. Africans who had made the Middle Passage to the plantations of the New World did not return to their homeland to tell what happened to those people who suddenly disappeared.
Slavery Voyage of Death
• The slaves were branded with hot irons and restrained with shackles. Their "living quarters" was often a deck within the ship that had less than five feet of headroom
• an area with little ventilation and, in some cases, not even enough space to place buckets for human waste -- disease spread quickly.
Slavery No Hope!
• Faced with the nightmarish conditions of the voyage and the unknown future that lay beyond, many Africans preferred to die. But even the choice of suicide was taken away from these persons. From the captain's point of view, his human cargo was extremely valuable and had to be kept alive and, if possible, uninjured. A slave who tried to starve him or herself was tortured. If torture didn't work, the slave was force fed
Slavery Triangle Trade
• The first part of the voyage carried products such as iron, cloth, rum, firearms, and gunpowder from Europe. Upon landing on Africa's "slave coast," the cargo was exchanged for Africans. Africans were then sent on the Middle Passage to America.
SlaveryTriangle Trade 2
• The triangle trade could also send slaves to the West Indies, then sending sugar to New England, New England made the sugar to rum and sent the rum to Africa for more slaves.
US and European Map
• Triangle Trade
Triangle Trade• Fully loaded with its human
cargo, the ship set sail for the Americas –
• Slaves packed like cargo between decks often had to lie in each other's feces, urine, and blood. (Middle Passage)
• slaves were exchanged for sugar, tobacco, or some other product.
• The final trip brought the ship back to Europe.
• Colony slavery.mov
Who are England’s 13 Colonies?Review
• Why did people come to the colonies?I) Religion (pilgrims) – escape persecution
II) Profit – Looking to make money (Virginia
Company) – trade or farming – most ppl were farmers
III) Get out of England• Crowded
• Not as many jobs
IV) Hope for a better life – new opportunities – own land
V) Slaves – did not come by choice
Who are England’s Children?The Beginnings of a New Government - Democracy
A) Democracy and Self-government
1. Democracy – Ppl choose their own
leaders
2. Self-government – Ppl rule themselves
instead of ruled by a king
3. Held town meetings to discuss ideas
Who are England’s 13 Colonies?Review
4. House of Burgesses – Ppl in Virginia
elected representatives to make laws
(Legislature)
5. Mayflower Compact – Pilgrims agreed
to laws they made for Plymouth
6. America is starting to want to rule
itself instead of having England do it
Williamsburg, Virginia
• House of Burgesses – Legislature (makes laws)