Top Banner
Bell Ringer 1. What states surround Virginia today? 2. What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3. What is your definition of slavery?
14

Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Dec 25, 2015

Download

Documents

Rose Greene
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Bell Ringer

1. What states surround Virginia today?

2. What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example)

3. What is your definition of slavery?

Page 2: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

US-U1-L1 SSUSH1a

Page 3: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

SSUSH1a

• Explain Virginia’s development; include the Virginia Company, tobacco cultivation, relationships with Native Americans such as Powhatan, development of the House of Burgesses, Bacon’s Rebellion, and the development of slavery.

Page 4: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Virginia• Location: Chesapeake

region of North America• Settled in 1609 by the

Virginia Company• Many of the settlers were

“gentlemen”• The first English

settlement was Roanoke • The first permanent

English settlement: Jamestown, on the banks of the James River

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZXMjQWr3Z6Y

Page 5: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

The Virginia Company• The Virginia Company was formed

with a charter from King James I in 1606. It was a joint-stock company in charge of settling Virginia. It was in charge of finding people willing to go, supplies needed for the journey, and ships. As people died on the venture and after arrival, support for the Virginia Company decreased. The charter was revoked in 1624 and Virginia became a Royal Colony. http://teachertube.com/viewVideo.php?title

=Jamestown_Settlement&video_id=19705

Page 6: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

3 Minute Review

• What was the first permanent English settlement in North America?

• What is a joint-stock company?

• Who is the leader of a Royal Colony?

Page 7: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Tobacco Cultivation• The colonists tried to make many products that would

be profitable back in England such as silk making, glassmaking, and lumber, all with no success.

• John Rolfe experimented with tobacco until he made a type that would be profitable for the Virginia Company.

Left: Tobacco

Right: John Smith and Pocahontas

Page 8: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Bell Ringer

• Where was the first PERMANENT colony located in North America?

• What was the name of the English firm that planned to make money by sending people to America to find gold and other natural resources?

• What crop became an important source of wealth for Virginia?

Page 9: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Settlers Relations with Native Americans• When the settlers landed they

were met with hostility from the Native Americans, but were soon offered food and became somewhat dependant on the Native Americans because the settlers did not want to plant corn, etc. The settlers wanted to “get rich quick”.

• Captain John Smith helped the colony survive by trading with the Native Americans, but when the Natives didn’t give him what he wanted he took it by force causing hostile feelings.

Page 10: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Settlers Relations with Native Americans, cont.• The Native Americans began

attacking settlers, killing their livestock, and burning plants.

• The settlers attacked back and when Chief Powhatan died hostilities rose.

• Once Powhatan died, his brother, Opechancanough, became chief. He and his tribe waited until 1622, then they fiercely attacked killing 350 colonists. A direct result was that the colony then went under Royal control.

Page 11: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

House of Burgesses

• The House of Burgesses was the first elective governing body of the English colonies.

• They met in Jamestown church on July 30, 1619.

• The House included: a governor, 6 councilors, and 20 representatives, 2 from each colony.

• This representative body was formed to make laws for the colonies.

Page 12: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

• Governor Berkeley managed to stay governor of the House of Burgesses from 1661-1676 with no elections. The western planters had no where to go to vent their concerns so they began to rebel in other ways.

• Governor Berkeley was threatened at gunpoint and Jamestown was burned in 1676.

• Bacon was elected to the House of Burgesses for a short time after the burning of Jamestown. He left Jamestown to attack innocent Native American tribes.

Bacon’s Rebellion

The House of Burgesses was intimidated by Bacon and passed laws that he demanded to be passed. Upon Bacon’s untimely death the laws were repealed.Berkeley was called back to England by the King, where he later died.

Page 13: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Beginnings of Slavery

• Before slavery there was indentured servitude. Indentured servants often worked on tobacco plantations to pay off their journey to America.

• People who had lived in Barbados and Jamaica and were now working as planters in America, decided to import slaves from West Africa to cultivate rice in South Carolina and the low country of Georgia.

Page 14: Bell Ringer 1.What states surround Virginia today? 2.What do you think a cash crop is? (definition or example) 3.What is your definition of slavery?

Closing

1. Why did the Virginia Company come to America to colonize?

2. Who helped the settlers survive?

3. What was the most profitable cash crop?