APUSH Unit 2 (1607 - 1754)
Main Idea: Comparing motives and methods used by Europeans to colonize the New World.
Spanish wanted wealth through agriculture and the mining of gold and silver
Spanish used the Encomienda system for this, but when this didn’t work, they got Africans to do the work for them
Resulted in Caste System based on race, reshaped society based on racial ancestry
Mission System - Conversion of Native Americans to Christianity
Mixed Results - Some Natives did switch, others incorporated parts of Christianity into their own religion, and others completely fought against it
i.e. Pueblo Revolts
Became interested in sailing West 1524
Mainly interested for sailing route, giving access to trade in Asia
Distracted with wars, and religious persecution
End up Colonizing
Samuel De Champlain colonizes Quebec in 1608 - First permanent French settlement
French more interested in trade than in Conquest, i.e. fish and fur trade
French just established settlements for trade, colonies not as important
French traders would marry Native American women for connections to the tribes for trade
Example: Ojibwe Native Americans, taught French how to make Beaver Pelts, French gave them iron cookware, farming tools, etc.
Dutch send Henry Hudson for water based passage through Americans, doesn’t find one but finds the Hudson River (named after him) and claims the land near there for the Dutch
Establishes the colony of New Amsterdam, 1624
Dutch goals are economic, so New Amsterdam becomes a trading hub of traders, fishermen, farmers
Dutch did not want to convert Natives, unlike the Spanish, only wanted money.
Most important in study of US History
Motivations - Economics, English economy changes a lot because of columbian exchange, along with wars with france and conquest of Ireland, causing nobles to need more money
Nobles wanted to look for new economic opportunities
Peasants were experiencing hardship as well
Enclosure Movement - Peasant land being sold to private parties
Many British people wanted to leave for religious freedom and improved living conditions
British wanted to build homes, unlike other European colonizers
British had an okay start with the Natives - unlike the Spanish, they would not subjugate Natives as a workforce, they would just try and remove the Natives from the land
How did British Colonies develop into distinct societies
Chesapeake Colonies:
First colony was Jamestown, through Joint Stock Company
Joint Stock Company - Pool of investors fund the exploration, share financial risks but don’t lose everything if failure
Jamestown goal is profit
Time divided into searching for gold and building a military fort to protect their wealth.
No focus on food, many die to famine and disease, resort to Cannibalism
Tobacco - learn how to plant it, saves Jamestown economically due to popularity in Britain
Indentured Servants do most of the work - couldn’t afford the trip to the Americas, so they work for a certain period of time to pay off debt, went free after.
Farmers needed land after demand for tobacco, further encroached on Native American land
Natives would retalliate violently
Bacon’s Rebellion - Leads poor farmers and indentured servants against Native Americans and the farms of Willaim Berkeley, who was leading Jamestown
Important, see indentured servants as threats. End up creating slave system
New England Colonies:
Settled by Pilgrims in the 1620’s
Puritans - Protestants unhappy with Church of England, living by their own conscience
Pilgrims did not come mainly for religious freedom
Puritans were given religious freedom, but it was mainly for economic reasons - had trouble being farmers in urban Britain, so they came to America
New England colonists came in Family groups - didn’t come for just profit, came to establish society and create family economies as farmers
Still struggled - fever and disease kills half of the original settlers, ended up establishing a thriving society and economy
British West Indies/Southern Atlantic Coast Colonies
1620’s, British establish their first colonies in the Carribbean
These types of colonies were great for agriculture because of the weather
Grew tobacco and sugarcane
Sugarcane requires a lot of physical work - resulted in a lot of African slaves
Because of how many Africans there were, slave codes were made, and were very strict against the African slaves.
Slaves defined as property/chattel within slave codes
South Carolina replicates these conditions
Middle Colonies
Lived near many rivers and streams, developed an economy based on exports of cereal crops
Diverse population - however, it grew more and more unequal due to an elite class
Urban Merchants → Artisans/Shopkeepers → unskilled laborers, orphans, widows, unemployed → slaves
Pennsylvania - Founded by William Penn, a Quaker (pacifist)
Religious freedom immediately recognized
Negotiated with Native Americans when expanding land
All of these types of colonies had democratic governments - had to make their own governments since they were so far away from Britain
Examples: Virginia and the House of Burgesses, New England and Mayflower Compact - mostly run by elites of those societies
Late 17th and Early 18th century - Trade becomes global
Trade done primarily through the Triangular Trade.
Merchant ships would start from New England, go to Africa and trade some item for slaves, go to Caribbean Island and trade slaves for sugarcane, sugarcane traded at New England, cycle
Slaves were packed into the boat - Compromise made, Slave Trade Act - awful conditions
Mercantilism - Dominant economic system in Europe
Assumes that there is a fixed amount of wealth in the world, wealth measured by gold and silver
Goal is to have a favorable balance of trade - more exports than imports
Establishment of colonies - Gives sovereign countries more raw materials that aren’t in their countries, become markets for manufactured goods
Navigation Acts passed for this reason - Required merchants to engage in trade with English colonies exclusively in English ships
Valuable trade items required to pass exclusively through British ports
Again - all done to maximize exports
Trade fundamentally changes colonial society
Gives a lot of wealth to the elites of society, such as merchants, investors, plantation owners
Made seaports into thriving urban centers
Consumer Revolution - Families buy more goods, changes how society shaped because your family name matters less than your financial success
How did these interactions change over time?
Spain
Spanish fundamentally change society by introducing a caste system, make it seem like Native Americans only good for labor and put them at the bottom of Spanish society
Forced conversion against the Pueblo natives, resulted in the Pueblo Revolt, where Pueblo’s tried to purge Spanish from their territory
Spain conquered the massive empires, like the Aztecs, Incas, and Mayans - subjected them to the encomienda system
Britain
Settled where no large empires of Native Americans - unlike Spanish, they weren’t able to conquer the Natives and use them as a workforce
Many British weren’t interested in marrying Native Americans, unlike the Spanish and French
Initial coexistence - borrowed whatever they found useful, Natives taught farming and hunting, British gave manufactured goods and iron tools
Didn’t last long, as colonies grew, expansion necessary, went to war
Metacom’s War
Also known as King Philip’s War, 1675
Metacom/King Philip - Leader of Wampanoag Native Americans
More Europeans encroached on land meant destruction of their way of life - wanted to force the British out
Allied with other Native groups, and burned their fields, killed their men, captured women and children
British, in retalliation, ally with Mohawk and kill Metacom, basically ends the war
Spanish conquered Native Americans, British force them out
French
French were much less invasive - military allies and trade partners
French didn’t really create colonies, just created trading posts for fur trade in regions they settled
Allied with native groups, like Heron, to fight against other groups, like the Iroqouis
Still didn’t see them as equal, never had to worry about unified resistance due to variety of their groups
Atlantic Slave Trade - Transferred around 3 million Africans to the Caribbean and the Americas for slave labor
Middle Passage - Journey to Caribbean and Americas, Africans were packed to the point were they was practically no room left on the boats
Half a million would die on the transport
All British colonies participated in, and benefitted from, the African slave trade
Reason for slavery boom was demand for colonial agricultural good and lack of indentured servants to perform labor
Bacon’s Rebellion results in African slavery becoming the main source of labor in place of indentured servants
Population distribution of Africans:
New England: Holds much less slave laborers because of smaller farms
Middle: Agricultural estates, but most were household servants - major port cities had Africans working as seamen, dockworkers, blacksmiths, etc.
South & Chesapeake: Had many African slaves due to the plantation system
West Indies: Has the most African slaves
Chattel Slavery = Race based slavery, owned them like a domesticated animal or a tool - only way to justify it
West Indies slavery practices influenced the North American colonies, especially in the Southern colonies
Most notable influence is harsh slave laws
Leagally define African laborers as chattel
Slavery perpetual, passed from one generation to the next
Laws would become harsher - could kill laborers if they defy, couldn’t hold weapons, couldn’t leave without permission, interracial relationships were illegal
Slave Resistance - Africans didn’t just take it
Covert Resistance - secretly practiced cultural customs from their homeland, maintained belief systems, spoke their native languages, kept naming practices, and slowed the pace of work by breaking tools and damaging crops
Overt Resistance - Open and clear rebellion
Stono Rebellion - small group of enslaved men steal weapons, kill owners of store, walk up the Stono River, get more enslaved men to join them, burn plantations and kill more white people
How and why did the movement of ideas and people across the Atlantic contribute to the development of an American culture?
Religion/Philosophy
Enlightenment - emphasizes rational thinking over religion
These ideas from the Enlightenment spread to British Americans
Famous Enlightenment philosopher was John Locke, who creates the idea of natural rights
Human beings have right to life, liberty, property given to them by a creator
Rousseau, Kant, Voltaire long for a government with three branches with checks and balances
Social Contract - Citizens give some rights to the Government on the condition that it protects the people’s natural rights
Undermines religion
Great Awakening - Massive religious revival throughout the colonies
New Light Clergy - Group of preachers that lamented the effects of the Enlightenment, inspired by German pietism, which emphasizes the heart over the head in reference to spiritualism
Jonathan Edwards - New England Minister and scholar of philosophy and natural sciences - combines their ideas with religious fervor
George Whitefield - Travels throughout the colonies in random places, people flocked to hear him wherever he was - incredibly powerful speaker
Lack of wealth doesn’t mean that God isn’t with them - this idea is preached to the peasants
Want to resist tyranny of colonial authority
Enlightenment awakens Americans to ideas about democratic movements, Great Awakening convinces Americans to not compromise that democracy - results in resistance against the British when they are not meeting the needs of the colonists
Impressment - seizing men against their will to serve in the royal navy
Americans disagree with the morality of this, as it could result in death by disease or warfare
King George’s War - War over Austrian succession, results in a lot of impressment, and heavy American resistance - riots for three days
Basically - Americans are beccoming more aware of violations to their natural rights
Main Idea: Comparing motives and methods used by Europeans to colonize the New World.
Spanish wanted wealth through agriculture and the mining of gold and silver
Spanish used the Encomienda system for this, but when this didn’t work, they got Africans to do the work for them
Resulted in Caste System based on race, reshaped society based on racial ancestry
Mission System - Conversion of Native Americans to Christianity
Mixed Results - Some Natives did switch, others incorporated parts of Christianity into their own religion, and others completely fought against it
i.e. Pueblo Revolts
Became interested in sailing West 1524
Mainly interested for sailing route, giving access to trade in Asia
Distracted with wars, and religious persecution
End up Colonizing
Samuel De Champlain colonizes Quebec in 1608 - First permanent French settlement
French more interested in trade than in Conquest, i.e. fish and fur trade
French just established settlements for trade, colonies not as important
French traders would marry Native American women for connections to the tribes for trade
Example: Ojibwe Native Americans, taught French how to make Beaver Pelts, French gave them iron cookware, farming tools, etc.
Dutch send Henry Hudson for water based passage through Americans, doesn’t find one but finds the Hudson River (named after him) and claims the land near there for the Dutch
Establishes the colony of New Amsterdam, 1624
Dutch goals are economic, so New Amsterdam becomes a trading hub of traders, fishermen, farmers
Dutch did not want to convert Natives, unlike the Spanish, only wanted money.
Most important in study of US History
Motivations - Economics, English economy changes a lot because of columbian exchange, along with wars with france and conquest of Ireland, causing nobles to need more money
Nobles wanted to look for new economic opportunities
Peasants were experiencing hardship as well
Enclosure Movement - Peasant land being sold to private parties
Many British people wanted to leave for religious freedom and improved living conditions
British wanted to build homes, unlike other European colonizers
British had an okay start with the Natives - unlike the Spanish, they would not subjugate Natives as a workforce, they would just try and remove the Natives from the land
How did British Colonies develop into distinct societies
Chesapeake Colonies:
First colony was Jamestown, through Joint Stock Company
Joint Stock Company - Pool of investors fund the exploration, share financial risks but don’t lose everything if failure
Jamestown goal is profit
Time divided into searching for gold and building a military fort to protect their wealth.
No focus on food, many die to famine and disease, resort to Cannibalism
Tobacco - learn how to plant it, saves Jamestown economically due to popularity in Britain
Indentured Servants do most of the work - couldn’t afford the trip to the Americas, so they work for a certain period of time to pay off debt, went free after.
Farmers needed land after demand for tobacco, further encroached on Native American land
Natives would retalliate violently
Bacon’s Rebellion - Leads poor farmers and indentured servants against Native Americans and the farms of Willaim Berkeley, who was leading Jamestown
Important, see indentured servants as threats. End up creating slave system
New England Colonies:
Settled by Pilgrims in the 1620’s
Puritans - Protestants unhappy with Church of England, living by their own conscience
Pilgrims did not come mainly for religious freedom
Puritans were given religious freedom, but it was mainly for economic reasons - had trouble being farmers in urban Britain, so they came to America
New England colonists came in Family groups - didn’t come for just profit, came to establish society and create family economies as farmers
Still struggled - fever and disease kills half of the original settlers, ended up establishing a thriving society and economy
British West Indies/Southern Atlantic Coast Colonies
1620’s, British establish their first colonies in the Carribbean
These types of colonies were great for agriculture because of the weather
Grew tobacco and sugarcane
Sugarcane requires a lot of physical work - resulted in a lot of African slaves
Because of how many Africans there were, slave codes were made, and were very strict against the African slaves.
Slaves defined as property/chattel within slave codes
South Carolina replicates these conditions
Middle Colonies
Lived near many rivers and streams, developed an economy based on exports of cereal crops
Diverse population - however, it grew more and more unequal due to an elite class
Urban Merchants → Artisans/Shopkeepers → unskilled laborers, orphans, widows, unemployed → slaves
Pennsylvania - Founded by William Penn, a Quaker (pacifist)
Religious freedom immediately recognized
Negotiated with Native Americans when expanding land
All of these types of colonies had democratic governments - had to make their own governments since they were so far away from Britain
Examples: Virginia and the House of Burgesses, New England and Mayflower Compact - mostly run by elites of those societies
Late 17th and Early 18th century - Trade becomes global
Trade done primarily through the Triangular Trade.
Merchant ships would start from New England, go to Africa and trade some item for slaves, go to Caribbean Island and trade slaves for sugarcane, sugarcane traded at New England, cycle
Slaves were packed into the boat - Compromise made, Slave Trade Act - awful conditions
Mercantilism - Dominant economic system in Europe
Assumes that there is a fixed amount of wealth in the world, wealth measured by gold and silver
Goal is to have a favorable balance of trade - more exports than imports
Establishment of colonies - Gives sovereign countries more raw materials that aren’t in their countries, become markets for manufactured goods
Navigation Acts passed for this reason - Required merchants to engage in trade with English colonies exclusively in English ships
Valuable trade items required to pass exclusively through British ports
Again - all done to maximize exports
Trade fundamentally changes colonial society
Gives a lot of wealth to the elites of society, such as merchants, investors, plantation owners
Made seaports into thriving urban centers
Consumer Revolution - Families buy more goods, changes how society shaped because your family name matters less than your financial success
How did these interactions change over time?
Spain
Spanish fundamentally change society by introducing a caste system, make it seem like Native Americans only good for labor and put them at the bottom of Spanish society
Forced conversion against the Pueblo natives, resulted in the Pueblo Revolt, where Pueblo’s tried to purge Spanish from their territory
Spain conquered the massive empires, like the Aztecs, Incas, and Mayans - subjected them to the encomienda system
Britain
Settled where no large empires of Native Americans - unlike Spanish, they weren’t able to conquer the Natives and use them as a workforce
Many British weren’t interested in marrying Native Americans, unlike the Spanish and French
Initial coexistence - borrowed whatever they found useful, Natives taught farming and hunting, British gave manufactured goods and iron tools
Didn’t last long, as colonies grew, expansion necessary, went to war
Metacom’s War
Also known as King Philip’s War, 1675
Metacom/King Philip - Leader of Wampanoag Native Americans
More Europeans encroached on land meant destruction of their way of life - wanted to force the British out
Allied with other Native groups, and burned their fields, killed their men, captured women and children
British, in retalliation, ally with Mohawk and kill Metacom, basically ends the war
Spanish conquered Native Americans, British force them out
French
French were much less invasive - military allies and trade partners
French didn’t really create colonies, just created trading posts for fur trade in regions they settled
Allied with native groups, like Heron, to fight against other groups, like the Iroqouis
Still didn’t see them as equal, never had to worry about unified resistance due to variety of their groups
Atlantic Slave Trade - Transferred around 3 million Africans to the Caribbean and the Americas for slave labor
Middle Passage - Journey to Caribbean and Americas, Africans were packed to the point were they was practically no room left on the boats
Half a million would die on the transport
All British colonies participated in, and benefitted from, the African slave trade
Reason for slavery boom was demand for colonial agricultural good and lack of indentured servants to perform labor
Bacon’s Rebellion results in African slavery becoming the main source of labor in place of indentured servants
Population distribution of Africans:
New England: Holds much less slave laborers because of smaller farms
Middle: Agricultural estates, but most were household servants - major port cities had Africans working as seamen, dockworkers, blacksmiths, etc.
South & Chesapeake: Had many African slaves due to the plantation system
West Indies: Has the most African slaves
Chattel Slavery = Race based slavery, owned them like a domesticated animal or a tool - only way to justify it
West Indies slavery practices influenced the North American colonies, especially in the Southern colonies
Most notable influence is harsh slave laws
Leagally define African laborers as chattel
Slavery perpetual, passed from one generation to the next
Laws would become harsher - could kill laborers if they defy, couldn’t hold weapons, couldn’t leave without permission, interracial relationships were illegal
Slave Resistance - Africans didn’t just take it
Covert Resistance - secretly practiced cultural customs from their homeland, maintained belief systems, spoke their native languages, kept naming practices, and slowed the pace of work by breaking tools and damaging crops
Overt Resistance - Open and clear rebellion
Stono Rebellion - small group of enslaved men steal weapons, kill owners of store, walk up the Stono River, get more enslaved men to join them, burn plantations and kill more white people
How and why did the movement of ideas and people across the Atlantic contribute to the development of an American culture?
Religion/Philosophy
Enlightenment - emphasizes rational thinking over religion
These ideas from the Enlightenment spread to British Americans
Famous Enlightenment philosopher was John Locke, who creates the idea of natural rights
Human beings have right to life, liberty, property given to them by a creator
Rousseau, Kant, Voltaire long for a government with three branches with checks and balances
Social Contract - Citizens give some rights to the Government on the condition that it protects the people’s natural rights
Undermines religion
Great Awakening - Massive religious revival throughout the colonies
New Light Clergy - Group of preachers that lamented the effects of the Enlightenment, inspired by German pietism, which emphasizes the heart over the head in reference to spiritualism
Jonathan Edwards - New England Minister and scholar of philosophy and natural sciences - combines their ideas with religious fervor
George Whitefield - Travels throughout the colonies in random places, people flocked to hear him wherever he was - incredibly powerful speaker
Lack of wealth doesn’t mean that God isn’t with them - this idea is preached to the peasants
Want to resist tyranny of colonial authority
Enlightenment awakens Americans to ideas about democratic movements, Great Awakening convinces Americans to not compromise that democracy - results in resistance against the British when they are not meeting the needs of the colonists
Impressment - seizing men against their will to serve in the royal navy
Americans disagree with the morality of this, as it could result in death by disease or warfare
King George’s War - War over Austrian succession, results in a lot of impressment, and heavy American resistance - riots for three days
Basically - Americans are beccoming more aware of violations to their natural rights