Top Banner
Chapter Two EARLY ENGLISH AMERICA (1590 TO 1675)
63
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: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

Chapter Two

EARLY ENGLISH AMERICA (1590 TO 1675)

Page 2: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

SPANISH COLONIZATION IN 1600• Spain was the only empire to have successful colonies at the turn of the 17 th century

• However, the defeat of the Spanish Armada and a surge in Dutch trade made expansion and colonial reinforcement difficult

• Issues in North America

• The Spanish believed that the New World was of no value

• They realized that they overestimated how much gold and silver was actually there

• However, they still held on to New Mexico and Florida believing that they would find fortunes similar to the Aztec Empire in Central America

• Catholic missionaries were sent to both locations and started more than 50 missions

• The missionaries believed the Native Americans would readily adopt European dress, customs, food, and farming methods.

• In the North, the Spanish crown grew tired of funding poor expeditions and proposed that all who wished to colonize the North use their own funding

Page 3: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

SPANISH COLONIZATION IN 1600• Interaction with Native Americans

• Spanish and Native Americans frequently intermingled, leading to a class of Spanish citizens known as Mestizos

• Half Spanish, Half Native American

• The Spanish crown took this seriously, gave the Mestizos a decent amount of rights as Spanish citizens

• They also began a series of preventative measures to ensure Spanish explorers and colonists did not further exploit Native Americans

Page 4: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLISH COLONIZATION IN IRELAND• The British’s involvement in Ireland cost the empire an enormous amount of money that could

have been used to fund expeditions to the New World

• Religious Justification

• The British needed to subdue the Catholic threat in Ireland in order to protect Protestant rule in England

• Sort of a passive-aggressive of showing force against the Spanish/Catholic threat

• Pacification Approaches

• Military conquest, slaughter of civilians, seizure of land

• England sought to conquer, not absorb the ethnic Catholic Irish

• English writers at the time frequently compared the ethnic Irish to Native Americans

• Why?

Page 5: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 6: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLISH COLONIZATION IN IRELAND• The English easily confused liberty with license

• The Irish were “too free” (sound similar to their views towards the Native Americans?)

• If the Irish did not convert to Protestantism, they were problematic barbarians and had to be dealt with appropriately

• Convert to the ‘correct religion’ or be annihilated

• This mentality is important because it gets transplanted wholesale to North America with English colonization

• Why did the English give up on annihilating Ireland?

• Queen Elizabeth I turned their attention to North America

• After defeating the Spanish Armada, they scrambled to stake their claims in the New World

Page 7: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLAND’S MOTIVES FOR EXPANSION• Spreading Protestantism

• The quintessential P.R. reasoning

• Anti-Catholicism was the norm in England and they wanted to do anything to stop Catholicism in the rest of the world

• Furthermore, it was a win-win situation if they could destroy Catholicism and Spain at the same time

• The 5 Gs

• Gold, Glory, God, Greed, and Gold

• National glory, profit, and missionary zeal

• Trade

• The English knew the Spanish were fighting a losing battle looking for mineral wealth in North America

• They believed the best way to make a fortune was to exploit resources in North America, make goods, and trade!

• Dealing with the English social crisis

Page 8: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLAND’S SOCIAL CRISIS• England’s decline economy (brought on by frequent drought and war) led to an increasing number of

poor that strained the economy and led to a social crisis

• Population grew from 3 million in 1550 to 4 million in 1600

• A significant change for the time

• “Enclosure movement”

• Rich landlords wanted to make a profit by raising sheep to expand wool trade

• They introduced modern farming techniques such as crop rotation and as a result, they evicted small farmers and took away common land

• (common land was communal land that was frequently used by poor, subsistent, farmers)

• This caused thousands of unemployed farmers to flood the cities in search of jobs

• Crime rates rise as a result

• The English crown did little to alleviate the problem

• Henry VIII stated those without jobs could be whipped, branded, forced into military service, or executed

Page 9: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLAND’S SOCIAL CRISIS• Elizabeth I offered two solutions:

• Force vagrants and vagabonds to accept any job offered

• Go to America!

• (The ‘unruly poor’ was highly encouraged to venture to the New World to find riches)

• Propaganda campaigns

• The crown and colonizing companies appealed to the poor by stating they could become “Masterless Men” in the New World

• A man could control his own labor, gain independence from the English “man”, and own land.

• Thomas Moore’s Utopia describes this in detail and encouraged the ‘unruly poor’ to go to America to escape the inequities of Europe

Page 10: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLAND’S INITIAL PUSH TO AMERICA• How many people left?

• Between 1600 and 1700, over half a million people left England

• Sustained immigration was vital for a colony’s success (and survival)

• Lower class “unruly poor” and indentured servants represented 2/3 of those that left England

• Indentured servants did not enjoy liberties while under contract (essentially another form of slavery)

• Dealing with Land

• Land was the basis of liberty for the English

• It was also a source of wealth and power for colonial officials

• Taking land from Native Americans was needed to expand the English crown’s mission

Page 11: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLAND’S INITIAL PUSH TO AMERICA• Interaction with Native Americans

• Bottom line: English wanted Native American land at any cost

• This sparked over a century of frequent, bloody warfare between colonists and Native Americans

• The English knew how to fight and had superior weapons

• This gave this another sense of ‘authority’ over the savages

• Unlike the Spanish, the English could care less for how the Native Americans were treated

• English interaction essentially reshaped Indian society and culture

• The English also transformed the natural environment by fencing in land and introducing disease, crops, and livestock

• Paradox of colonial land entitlement:

• The English recognized Native American sovereignty to land based on their occupancy on that land

• However, the English forcibly took the land surrounding the Native Americans based on vacuum domicilium (land not actively in use by the natives was up for grabs)

Page 12: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 13: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 14: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ENGLISH COLONIES• Roanoke (Failure)

• Jamestown

• 1st attempt – Failure

• 2nd attempt – Success

• Virginia

• Maryland

• Structural success

• Religious/Cultural failure

• Plymouth (limited success)

• Massachusetts Bay

• Rhode Island Connecticut

Page 15: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ROANOKE

Page 16: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

ROANOKE• Sir Walter Raleigh (English pirate) sent 100 colonists to set up a colonial base on Roanoke

Island, off the coast of North Carolina.

• Why? He wanted to keep pressure on Spanish ships in the area

• The initial push to colonize was abandoned and most of first 100 returned to England

• In 1586, he sent another 100 colonists to try to establish a permanent colony

• Those 100 disappeared when a supply ship came in 1590

• More than likely, they assimilated with the local Indian tribes

• The only evidence left was the word “Croatoan” scrawled on a tree

• Raleigh quickly lost his enthusiasm for colonization and gave up

• Moral of the story: England really needed to plan better before attempting to colonize

Page 17: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 18: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

JAMESTOWN

Page 19: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

JAMESTOWN• The first successful English colony (1607)

• The colony was located in the middle of a swamp in present-day Jamestown, Virginia

• They thought it was safe from Spanish attack

• Big mistake from the beginning

• There were no riches to be found in the swamp

• However, there were many mosquitos

• Led to malaria and typhoid fever

• Local resources were non-existent

• The colonists did not want to work or trade with anyone

• None of the original settlers were farmers

• Occupations: blacksmith, jeweler, goldsmith, perfumer, and indentured servants

Page 20: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 21: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

JAMESTOWN• In the first year, disease and lack of food killed over 50 of the original 104 settlers

• 400 more settlers came the next year

• After the winter of 1610, only 65 settlers remained

• Basically, 1 in 10 survived

• Most died of starvation and disease

• Moral of the story:

• This is similar to Roanoke

• Failure to plan and take advantage of economic resources

• Very poor planning on the type of laborers that were sent over initially

• Geographic planning was not the greatest either

Page 22: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

JAMESTOWN RELIGIOUS SERVICE

Page 23: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

JOHN SMITH

Page 24: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH SAVES JAMESTOWN• Tough, professional soldier that saved Jamestown by instilling martial law

• Also a statutory rapist

• Made everyone an ‘employee’ of the colony

• Death penalty for all

• Rape, adultery, theft, lying, slander against the company or crown, blasphemy, laziness, stealing an ear of corn, etc.

• New policies in Jamestown

• Head-right system

• 50 acres of land for whoever pays their way over to Jamestown

• Established House of Burgesses and instilled new liberties

• However, the company could veto anything it wanted

• Established slavery in the colony in 1619

• Overall, the ends justify the means

• Jamestown survives by John Smith’s near totalitarian management

Page 25: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 26: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

VIRGINIA COLONY• Founded in 1607 after England realized they could make a profit off of selling tobacco (the “stinking

weed”

• Ironically, King James I considered tobacco “harmful to the brain and dangerous to the lungs”

• However, he did not have any problem with selling it to make a profit

• Tobacco later becomes the ‘cure-all’ for medicinal purposes in the 17 th century

• By 1624, 200,000 pounds were grown and exported

• By 1680, 15 million pounds were grown and exported

• Essentially, tobacco becomes the new gold for English in North America

• The tobacco boom was partially responsible for the establishment of colonial government in Virginia

• This led to rich immigrants coming to stake their claim in Virginia

• Eventually, a social and political elite was established

Page 27: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 28: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 29: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 30: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

VIRGINIA COLONY• Social Conditions

• Men outnumbered women 6 to 1

• Virtually no stable family life as most single men were out to “strike it rich” on tobacco

• At this point, it was better to be a single woman and keep an independent legal identity

• However, most married women received “dower’s rights”

• 1/3 of their husband’s estate upon his death

• Slavery in the colony

• The number of slaves slowly climbed during the mid-17 th century

• 1623 – 23 of 1200 Virginians were black

• 1660 – 900 of 24,000

• Before 1660, blacks were able to acquire freedom and land (similar to indentured servitude)

• Some freedmen became very wealthy and had property rights similar to whites

Page 31: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MARYLAND

Page 32: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MARYLAND• Established in 1632 as a proprietary colony

under Cecilius Calvert (Lord Baltimore)

• Land grants and governmental authority was organized under a single individual who had “full, free, and absolute power” over the colony; only answered to the King

• Most of the land was carved up from sections of Northern Virginia

• Maryland was the second Chesapeake Bay colony and developed like Virginia

• Tobacco became the dominate economic commodity

Page 33: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MARYLAND• Colonial Structure

• Essentially a return to the Middle Ages

• Calvert wanted Maryland to be a feudal domain where land was divided out into manors and the owners paid Calvert

• Any person who brought 5 laborers received 2000 acres

• Calvert believed representative government did not work

• Ordinary people should have nothing to do with politics and government

• Colonial Structure Loophole

• Calvert’s charter provided for “all privileges, franchise, and liberties to all Englishmen”

• This was vague enough to leave the government limited by its own law

• This was also a good recipe for conflict

Page 34: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 35: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MARYLAND• Religion and Conflict

• Calvert was a Catholic and fully expected Maryland to be a haven for his downtrodden Catholic brethren (particularly the wealthy)

• He imagined Maryland as a Catholic utopia where Protestants and Catholics could work together in peace and harmony

• However, Protestants quickly outnumbered Catholics

• The rich Catholics never showed up and Protestants gained enough strength to overthrow Catholic influence in Maryland by 1655

• Overall

• Maryland had a different foundation, but ended up like Virginia

• Tobacco plantations, some religious radicals, and mostly Protestant

• Structural success

• Religious/Cultural failure

Page 36: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

PLYMOUTH BAY COLONY

Page 37: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

PLYMOUTH BAY COLONY• Pilgrims

• Primarily religious separatists that fled England to Holland because of their animosity toward the Church of England

• They wanted nothing to do with the Church of England

• After staying in Holland, they believed their children were too influenced by the English, Dutch, and Satan

• They decided to go to the Virginia Colony

• However, they landed in Cape Cod, Massachusetts in 1620 aboard the Mayflower

• Mayflower Compact

• All adult men aboard the Mayflower signed a compact indicating that they would obey “just and equal laws” enacted by representatives of their choosing

• Why is this important?

Page 38: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

SIGNING OF THE MAYFLOWER COMPACT

Page 39: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

PLYMOUTH BAY COLONY• The Mayflower Compact is the first written frame of government that transferred to the United States

• Society

• The Pilgrims wanted to build a society based on the early Christian saints that was founded on government based on consent

• Voting would not be restricted to only male church members

• Land would be common, but could be divided among settlers

• Initial Problems

• They faced a similar situation to Jamestown; starvation

• They arrived 6 weeks before winter with no food or animals

• Half of the settlers died that first winter

• Squanto and a band of Native Americans taught the Pilgrims where to fish, plant corn, and helped them form an alliance with a local chief

• In the autumn of 1621, the Plymouth settlers invited their Native American allies for a feast of Thanksgiving (harvest festival)

• Plymouth remained independent until 1691 when it was absorbed by the Massachusetts Bay colony

Page 40: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

PILGRIMS

Page 41: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY

Page 42: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY• Chartered in 1629 by Puritans (another religious separatist group) from England

• Puritans were upset over the Protestant reformation, but were still very nationalistic toward England

• They believed the best way to remedy the religious issues was to create a perfect society in the New World that England could model itself after

• They believed religion was complex and they wanted to create a Bible Commonwealth governed by “moral liberty”

• Moral liberty kept the Puritans close knit and prompted more families to come to the colony

• They essentially wanted to be the “City on a Hill” to serve as a prime example for how religious life should be

• King Charles I granted the Puritans charter while he decided to rule England without Parliament’s consent

• Another one of the various reasons why Charles got the axe (literally)

• Massachusetts Bay became the second great English colony

Page 43: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 44: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY• Religion, Politics, and Law

• Law revolved around a combination of English Common Law, Biblical Law, and statutes fit to specific colonial needs

• They allowed for slaves however

• Statutes were created to instill a sense of fear with potential offenders

• They would rather scare than carry out harsh punishments

• Puritans organized into self-governing towns with no large-scale colonial government

• Think of the states without a federal government (or the Articles of Confederation)

• Each town had a Congregational Church and a school

• Harvard College was created in 1636 to train ministers

• Church government was decentralized, but full church membership was required to vote in elections

• Church and colonial governments were closely connected

Page 45: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes
Page 46: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY• Economy

• Per capita, wealth was pretty evenly distributed (significantly better than Virginia)

• The economy was primarily centered on farming

• Fishing and timber exportation were large industries though

• A merchant class that traded with England rose gradually

• This did not bode well for some of the most conservative Puritans

• Merchants that continually clashed with Puritan authorities left to establish Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Page 47: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY• Family Life

• Structurally patriarchal

• Women were expected to be subordinate to their husbands at all times

• True freedom for Puritan women meant submission to authority

• Reasoning:

• Biblical in nature

• Eve was the evil temptress that caused man to fall into sin

• However, women were allowed full church membership and could divorce

Page 48: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

MASSACHUSETTS BAY COLONY• Liberty

• Liberty was defined by social class

• A rigid hierarchal structure that was justified by God’s will

• Bodies of Liberties set the rights for free speech, assembly, and equal protection for all

• Basically, liberties were decided by a body of men

• No true sense of “natural rights” just yet

• Ministers were forbidden from holding political office

Page 49: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PURITANS AND PILGRIMS?• Puritans

• Wanted to fix and reform the Church of England

• They felt it was worth salvaging and wanted to use their utopian colony to lead by example

• They believed the Church had too many trappings of Catholic influence, but it could be remedied

• Pilgrims

• They were the true separatists

• They had enough of the Church of England and wanted nothing to do with it

Page 50: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

RHODE ISLAND

Page 51: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

RHODE ISLAND• Founded by Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson

• Williams was a young, liberal Puritan minister that preached any citizen should be able to practice whatever religion they choose

• Believed in separation of church and state

• Hutchinson was a well-educated, articulate woman who charged all Puritan ministers of preaching falsely

• Believed she was directly inspired by the Holy Sprit

• This did not make her popular with most Puritans

• Put on trial for sedition and banished from the Massachusetts Bay colony

• Both wanted to create a society based on true religious toleration

Page 52: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

Roger Williams Anne Hutchinson

Page 53: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

RHODE ISLAND• Government

• Separation of church and state

• Participation in government by all male property owners

• An early view of voter’s rights expressed in the Constitution

• Overall, Rhode Island is probably the best example of religious freedom and democratic government in the early colonies

• Religious toleration

• Did the treatment of Hutchinson and Williams go against Puritan’s ideal of religious freedom?

Page 54: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

RHODE ISLAND• Religious Toleration

• Perhaps the Puritans had a very narrow view of what religious freedom meant

• True religious tolerance violated the Puritans’ view of moral liberty

Page 55: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

CONNECTICUT

Page 56: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

CONNECTICUT• Founded in 1633

• Puritanism was the only recognized religious organization and government model

• The Bible became the absolute basis for law

• Inerrancy of scripture

• Indian Relations

• Connecticut General Court punished anyone who chose to live with Indians

• The wilderness was perceived as the harborage of Satan and the Native Americans were his minions

• Colonists argued frequently over efficient ways to take land from the natives

• Sometimes they traded or paid them

Page 57: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

CONNECTICUT• Pequot War

• The white population in Connecticut grew rapidly

• Conflict with natives became inevitable

• The war was sparked by a fur trader that was killed by the Pequot Indians

• They were a large tribe that controlled the fur trade and collected tribute from other Indian tribes

• Angered by the death of the fur trade, Connecticut and Massachusetts Bay soldiers combined with neighboring Indians to massacre the Pequot tribe.

• Over 500 men, women, and children died after their village was set on fire

• After a few months, the tribe was virtually eliminated

• Most were dead or sold into slavery

Page 58: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR• Religion, Politics, and Freedom

• By 1600, commoners in England were insisting that all Englishmen had certain rights that applied to everyone in the kingdom

• This did not set well with the privileged social elite who believed rights were confined to those with money, influence, and power

• The tradition of English liberties goes back to the Magna Carta passed by King John in the 1200s

• Extension of certain liberties and rights to “all the free men of the realm”

• This was not bad in the 1200s as the majority of England worked as serfs (another form of indentured servitude)

• However, in 1600, many “free men” in England demanded that their liberties be respected

• This caused friction between the King, Parliament, and the people

Page 59: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR• What were the rights?

• Right to oversee the King’s conduct (King is not above the law)

• Right to revolt if the King grossly violated his authority

• Right to subject the King to the rule of law

• Right to own property

• Right to security of their person (no illegal search and seizure, false imprisonment, etc.)

• Habeas Corpus (cannot be held without being formally charged for a crime)

• Right to face one’s accuser

• Right to a trial by jury

Page 60: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR• What sparked the war?

• King Charles I wanted to impose taxes without Parliament’s consent

• He also wanted to imprison political enemies

• Worst of all…he wanted to make England a Catholic nation

• Under the pretense of revolting against a King who grossly violated his authority, civil war broke out in 1642

• Charles loses his head literally

• Oliver Cromwell becomes the Lord Protector of England and the Commonwealth of England was founded

Page 61: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE ENGLISH COMMONWEALTH• The general definition of freedom called for the “common rights of all individuals”

• Belief that freedom was the common heritage of all Englishmen

• Belief that England was the world’s guardian of liberty (another justification for warfare)

• They reasoned that the King of England ruled over a nation of free men

• Very different from the idea that the King granted a nation of men freedom

• The Colonies During the Commonwealth

• England was too busy with it’s own issues to pay attention to the colonies

• The New England colonies formed a confederation to serve as a means of protection against hostile natives

• The British army was too busy

Page 62: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE ENGLISH COMMONWEALTH• What did Cromwell and the Commonwealth do for the colonies?

• Took an aggressive stance for colonial expansion

• Greatly promoted Protestantism

• Promoted trade and commerce in the Western Hemisphere

• End of the Commonwealth

• Cromwell dies, his son is an inept ruler, and Charles II (Charles I’s son) gets reinstated to the throne

• Charles II officially accepts the charter of Connecticut and Rhode Island during this period

Page 63: HIST_1301_Chapter_2_Notes

THE NAVIGATION ACTS• A series of acts passed to ensure that the Dutch did not interfere with England’s commercial

empire

• It was illegal to trade with anyone other than English citizens

• Charles II figured this was the best way to confine colonial trade

• Additional importation taxes increased the crown’s revenue and helped keep some English merchants from bankruptcy

• However, these laws were fairly ineffective

• Most colonial governors ignored the laws