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John Murrin, et al Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People Chapter 3 American Life in the Seventeenth Century
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John Murrin, et al Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People Chapter 3 American Life in the Seventeenth Century.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: John Murrin, et al Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People Chapter 3 American Life in the Seventeenth Century.

John Murrin, et al

Liberty, Equality, PowerA History of the American People

Chapter 3

American Life in the Seventeenth Century

Page 2: John Murrin, et al Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People Chapter 3 American Life in the Seventeenth Century.

I. (Un)Healthy LivingA. Chesapeake Bay Colonies

1. Disease 2. Life expectancy < Europe3. Gender gap

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B. New England1. Life expectancy

a. New England = Europe + 10 yearsb. Equaled modern America at approx. 70+ years

2. Climate differences3. Family units v. single males4. Extended families

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II. The Chesapeake Bay ColoniesA. Tobacco – soil exhaustion – conflict with IndiansB. Headright System & Indentured Servitude

1. VA & MD colonists received 50 acres of land for each paid passage2. Birth of plantation system

‘Eastern Shore’ of MD

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C. Bacon’s Rebellion VA – 1676)1. Western settlers (former indentured servants) were dissatisfied

with the government in Jamestowna. Promise of landb. Indian policyc. Economic inequality & disenfranchisement

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2. Rebellion led by Nathaniel Bacon – burned Jamestown

3. Effect – planters looked for less troublesome labor source – African slaves

Gov. Berkeley

Riot or Rebellion? How can this incident be ‘spun’ in either direction?

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III. Colonial SlaveryA. Distribution of slaves

1. 400,000 of 10 million in NA2. Most to West Indies and South America

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B. Rise of slavery in America1. Slavery too risky/expensive in pre-Bacon colonies2. Rising wages in England = less indentured servants3. Bacon’s Rebellion4. Royal African Company loses British monopoly of slave trade

A Ghanaian holding fort

The Goree Warehouses, Liverpool

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The Slave Chain

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C. The Experience of Slavery1. The Middle Passage

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Africans were often treated like cattle during the crossing. On the slave ships, people were stuffed between decks in spaces too low for standing. The heat was often unbearable, and the air nearly unbreathable. Women were often used sexually. Men were often chained in pairs, shackled wrist to wrist or ankle to ankle. People were crowded together, usually forced to lie on their backs with their heads between the legs of others. This meant they often had to lie in each other's feces, urine, and, in the case of dysentery, even blood. In such cramped quarters, diseases such as smallpox and yellow fever spread like wildfire. The diseased were sometimes thrown overboard to prevent wholesale epidemics. Because a small crew had to control so many, cruel measures such as iron muzzles and whippings were used to control slaves.

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Heading for Jamaica in 1781, the ship Zong was nearing the end of its voyage. It had been twelve weeks since it had sailed from the west African coast with its cargo of 417 slaves. Water was running out. Then, compounding the problem, there was an outbreak of disease. The ship's captain, reasoning that the slaves were going to die anyway, made a decision. In order to reduce the owner's losses he would throw overboard the slaves thought to be too sick to recover. The voyage was insured, but the insurance would not pay for sick slaves or even those killed by illness. However, it would cover slaves lost through drowning.

The captain gave the order; 54 Africans were chained together, then thrown overboard. Another 78 were drowned over the next two days. By the time the ship had reached the Caribbean,132 persons had been murdered.

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When the ship returned to England the owners made their claim -- they wished to be compensated the full value for each slave lost. The claim might have been honored had if it had not been for former slave Equiano, then living in England, who learned of the tragedy and alerted an abolitionist friend of his. The case went to court. At first the jury ruled in favor of the ship's owners. Since it was permissible to kill animals for the safety of the ship, they decided, it was permissible to kill slaves for the same reason. The insurance company appealed, and the case was retried. This time the court decided that the Africans on board the ship were people. It was a landmark decision.

On another voyage, on another ship, a similar incident occurred. On La Rodeur in 1812, there was an outbreak of ophthalmia, a disease that causes temporary blindness. Both slaves and crew were afflicted. The captain, fearing that the blindness was permanent and knowing that blind slaves would be difficult if not impossible to sell, sent 39 slaves over the rails to their watery death. As with the captain of the Zong, he hoped that the insurance would cover the loss.

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2. Slave Markets

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3. Slave Codes A. Servant v. SlaveB. Slavery based on race, heredity, and chattel

The English / Americans invented a new chapter in slavery in human history.Race had never been a defining factor in bondage – rather it was an economic orpolitical institution.

“Slave market in Rome” by Jean-Leon Gerome

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4. Slave Lifea. Deep South – rice and indigo farming w/ harsh conditionsb. Upper South – tobacco farmingc. Culture - Language (Gullah), music, religion, and weaving all show

blending of Africa and America

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5. Slave Revoltsa. New York City (1712)b. Stono Rebellion, SC (1739)c. None equaled the size of Bacon’s rebellion, so African slaves

were seen as a ‘safer’ investment

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IV. Colonial Southern societyA. Slavery exacerbated the gap between rich and poorB. Hierarchy

1. Merchant Planters & FFVs (First Families of Virginia)2. Small Farmers – largest social/economic class3. Landless whites and indentured servants4. Slaves & Indians

C. Plantation economy prevented growth of – 1. Cities and a transportation network2. Merchant and professional classes3. Schools and Churches

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V. Colonial New EnglandA. Health (previous slide)B. Family Life

1. Migrants came as family units2. Strong family structure + early marriage = population growth

women average 10 pregnancies w/ 8 surviving children3. Women

a. Confined to domestic sphereb. Could not inherit or own land unlike Southern women

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C. Town Life in Colonial New England1. Homogeneous population (background, language, religion)2. Town-based

a. Towns chartered by colonial authoritiesb. Meeting House – Thomas Jefferson will call these the

‘Classroom of democracy’c. Both the Congregational Church and Town Meetings fostered democratic traditions

                                                                                                                                                   

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3. Educationa. MA law declared that town of 50+ families must provide public

education for childrenb. Purpose of education – encourage the reading of the Biblec. Harvard College established in 1636 = train ministers

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4. Disruptions in New England Lifea. Declining church membership

i. “Jeremiad” sermonsii. Half-Way Covenant

b. Salem witch trials – 20 executedi. Economic and religious undertonesii. Moldy wheat?

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5. Environment and Economya. Rocky and infertile soil – encouraged thriftb. Rivers short and rapid – not suitable for commercec. Fishing and Shipbuilding

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VI. Generalizations about colonial AmericaA. Higher standard of living than EuropeB. Close relationship with environment -

Disease, agriculture, weatherC. Class distinctions grew with economic growth