Historical Settlement of North America
Early Perceptions
• A wild and forbidding place• Dense forests and
wilderness landscapes• A paradise overflowing
with wealth and promise• An “empty” wilderness
– Had been populated for at least 25,000 years, maybe more.
– Contrary images helped create myths
• Some still persist today
First Effective Settlement
• General rule conceptualized by geographer Wilbur Zelinsky that the first group of people who settle in an uninhabited area have more important impact than those that follow.– English and French Culture
dominate because they were the first settlers.
– Spanish too…
Evolution of New Cultures
• Selection and Maintenance of certain cultural traits– Newcomers are in a new environment-
different plants, animals, foods, people– Mixing of groups that were separated in
Europe, Africa, and elsewhere.– Leads to cultural interchange and forging of
unique national and local identities.• Select and maintain traits from different cultures.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Native American settlement patterns– Came from Asia, Europe, and other places
– Traveled across ice/land bridges, came in boats
– Came in through the Pacific AND the Atlantic
– Evidence of human habitation from 25,000 years ago, some sites even older.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Many texts treat Native Americans as one culture.• In fact they were much more diverse than the
newcomers from Europe.• Belief is that they came following game, changed the
landscape with fire and hunted large mammals into extinction.– Mastodon, dire wolves, saber tooth cats, armored rhino
• Comet/Meteor hits Canadian Ice sheet 13,000 years ago, evidence of impact ALL over North American continent, even here as far away as California.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Europeans arrive 15th century (1400’s)– Report back to Europe that indigenous people
are all over.– Living in small groups and even in cities as
large as several thousand.– Living all over the continent in all of the
different environments and actively trading with each other.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• The native people did not believe in private property like the Europeans.
• Did not own or sell land.– Big problems over this issue to come…
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Europeans bring diseases that the natives have no resistance to.– Spanish and French make contact with Native
Peoples end of the 1400’s. – Both go far into the interior, bringing their
diseases.– Native people are actively trading and
communicating with each other, spread new diseases amongst each other.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• English are late on the scene, settlements in 1607 and 1621.– One hundred plus years after Spanish and
French.– Most of the Native population is gone by the
time the English come.• Plymouth colony is started in an abandoned
village, all the residents had died earlier from European diseases.
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Native American Economic Systems– Hunting, gathering, fishing, farming– From nearly stone-age hunting/gathering to
highly developed irrigation systems of the Hohokam in Arizona
– Champlain describes rich fields of corn and other products of abundance in what is today Eastern Canada.
• Large variety
Exploration, Discovery, Settlement, Exploitation
• Imperialism in North America– A geopolitical relationship: the aggressive
encroachment of one people upon the territory of another, resulting in the subjugation of the latter people to alien rules.
• Native Americans victims of mass destruction• Massive decline in numbers• Extinction of many cultures
» Damage caused by progress of imperialism.
New European Things
• Small pox, bubonic plague, typhus, influenza, malaria, yellow fever, measles…– Pigs brought by Hernan
DeSoto may have helped aid in the spread.
– Also brought weeds, other destructive animal species, alcohol, new technologies, and new weapons
Implications
• By 1900, estimates are that only 10% of the original Native Peoples were left.– Today try to hold on to native culture and
survive economically.– Impact on today’s culture seen in place
names (Cucamonga), food, clothing, environmental attitudes, and religious beliefs in New Age spiritual seekers.
European Explorers
• 1000 years ago, Norse• Sagas hint at religious and political
discontent…– Newfoundland
• Was thought to be a myth, part of a saga, old colonies were largely forgotten
• Vinland proposed to be real in 1837
• L’Anse Aux Meadows– Possibly also further down the Atlantic Coast,
inland into present day Minnesota.
Commercial Exploitation
• Late 1400’s…
• Portuguese, French, Spanish, English, Russian, and Dutch all start coming to North America.– A direct result of leaders needing money and
more territory.– Part of a changing world economic system.
Commercial Exploitation
• Slavery, Feudalism, Mercantilism, Capitalism
• Post 1300 Europe transitioning from feudalism to mercantilism to capitalism.
• North American exploitation driven by whims of leaders and new inventions like the compass and the astrolabe.
• New geographical knowledge too
Process of Discovery and Exploration
• Difference between discovery and exploration:– Discovery is finding
something or somewhere “new”
– Exploration follows up discoveries with assessment of potential for development and settlement.
• A complex process that started what we call the Columbian Exchange
Columbian Exchange
• Transfer of culture, economy, politics, and organisms from Europe to the Americas after 1492.
Portuguese
• It all begins with Portugal…
• Exploring and colonizing Madeiras, Azores, Cape Verde Islands then down the west coast of Africa.– Trading with Asia by sailing
around Africa– Europe was cut off from
Asia by Muslims.– Used islands to grow
sugar, using slaves for labor.
Portuguese
• The Portuguese use slaves from West Africa to grow sugar on their islands, then carry the idea to South America.
• Others copied it, becomes a trade pattern: – From Europe to West Africa carrying money
and weapons, traded for slaves who are taken across the Atlantic and sold, boats then filled with sugar which is taken back to Europe.
Portuguese
• The Portuguese were also the first to arrive in the Northern part of North America, the first to reach Newfoundland.– They had contact with Icelanders who still told
sagas of lands to the west.
• They established a migratory fishing trade there.– Sailors would come fish for the summer then
go back to Europe.
Who were the Spainards?
• The Moors had been in Spain since 711. • The were asked to come and help repel the Visigoths
(Germans) who also spent time in Spain.• The Celts (Irish) has also been in Spain.• The Jews had been in Spain.• The Romans had also been in Spain.• The Greeks had also been in Spain.• The Phoenicians had also been in Spain.• In 1492, Spain was already a very mixed population with
people descended from all of the groups listed above. • Spain had been a multicultural area for more than 2,000
years.
Spain and 1492
• October 12, 1492 Columbus discovers America
• July 1492 Spain Expels its Jews
• January 1492 Spain defeats the Moors at Granada
Christopher Columbus
• He has symbolized many things over the years:– 1792: Independence from
England– 1892: American Progress
and Potential– 1992: By Native Americans
as despoiling their cultures, decimating their numbers; by Africans Americans forced migration and slavery
Christopher Columbus
• He was never in the Spanish Borderlands
• He landed in the Bahamas
• He explored the coast of Cuba
• Established a headquarters on Hispaniola– Came back three times in twelve years
He established the Columbian Exchange
Came from Europe1. Bananas2. Sugar3. Coffee4. Cotton5.Citrus fruits6. Rice7. Sheep8. Dogs9. Rats10. Horses11. Goats12. Many diseases, including the flu and smallpox
Came from America1. Guinea pigs2. Llamas3. Turkeys4. Alpacas (like a camel)5. Cocoa/chocolate6. Corn7. Peanuts8. Tobacco9. Potato10. Sunflowers11. Chili pepper12. Beans
The Columbian Exchange
Requirimiento
• The order to acknowledge the Church as the ruler and superior of the whole world, the Pope as high priest, and the King and Queen of Spain.
• If the people failed to obey "with the help of God we shall forcefully... make war against you... take you and your wives and children and shall make slaves of them."
Hernan Cortez• Landed near Vera Cruz, Mexico is 1519• Defeated the Aztecs in 1521• Destroyed Tenochtitlan, founded Mexico City on top
of Tenochtitlan– Would not have been possible with out guns, horses,
and La Malinche/Dona Marina
La Malinche (Dona Marina)
• She was a slave, she was given to Cortez’ party along with 20 other women
• She was tall, pretty, and smart• It is rumored that she was of
noble birth, but ended up a slave
• She spoke at least three languages before she learned Spanish– She was given to another
Spaniard, but he was sent back to Spain
– After that she was given to Cortez
La Malinche (Dona Marina)
• She bore Cortez a son– For this she is seen as the mother of the Mexican people– The birth of La Raza (the race)
• She translated for Cortez as he conquered the Aztecs– For this she is seen as a traitor – Malinchismoism-being a traitor
La Malinche (Dona Marina)
• Some say that it would have been much worse for the Aztecs if she was not there to translate and tell them what Cortez wanted.
Alvar Nunez Cabeza De Vaca• Part of the Panfilo de
Navarez Expedition 1528– Shipwrecked on the Gulf
Coast of Texas– Enslaved by Native
Americans– Walked back to Mexico
City, six years after shipwreck
– Reported untold riches to the north
– Expeditions sent north after his reports
• Esteban his African slave with him the whole time.
Francisco Coronado
• Took 300 Spanish soldiers, 1,000 Tlaxcalan Indians and four Franciscan Monks looking for riches– Didn’t find any– Was eventually tried for ‘atrocities against Indians’
• Opened the way for settlement
Laws of the Indies
• Guidelines for creating and expanding Spanish towns in the Americas
• History: comes from the Laws of Burgos 1512 which were to regulate relations with the Spaniards and the Indians to ensure spiritual and material welfare for the Indians who were severely treated.
• 1542 New Law of the Indies written and met with armed resistance, was supposed to correct inadequacies in the first version.
Laws of the Indies 1573
• Did more than just deal with Native-Spaniard relations…
• Had requirements for town site selections, building requirements, layout of towns.
CHOLULADate of map: 1581
Spain and Florida
• Established a colony in Florida for two reasons:
1. Needed a port for ships coming out of South America, Central America, and Mexico
2. The French were in the area
Spain and Florida
• St. Augustine founded 1565, source for expansion and dissemination of crops.
• Most Spanish crops would not grow, except citrus and peaches.
• Had to adapt to native diet of corn, beans, and squash.– Not a profitable settlement,
sold to the English, then back to Spain, then to the US.
New Mexico
• Juan Onate was the first to take settlers– Traveled up the Rio Grande
River– Most of the settlers were from
Spain (Castile and Andalusia)– Onate went on to explore in
Kansas and California, was– Eventually recalled to Mexico
and tried for cruel treatment of the Natives.
• Pueblo people were harshly treated and revolted in 1680. – New Mexico had to be
reconquered and reoccupied by force.
Don Juan de Oñate Salazar
New Mexico• Two Regions:• Rio Arriba-up river, higher
elevation, wetter climate, wooded
• Rio Abajo-lower river, dry, longer growing seasons
• Genizaros were captured Native American Children who were hispanicized.
• Some were allowed to colonize their own frontiers, notably Ojo, Tome, Abiquiu, and San Miguel
• Mestizaje-the mixing of Spanish and Native America (mestizo)
1680
Primeria Alta• Present day Southern Arizona• Father Kino built missions in
the area and was a cartographer
• He had a way with the Native people and they liked him, but after his death in 1711, they revolted.
• There was not much expansion in this area because the Apache would not be ‘civilized’ and they constantly raided the Spanish.
• There are many ruins in the area today of failed Spanish settlements that died out because of the raids.
• The areas that thrived were mostly Spanish land grants for cattle.
Eusebio Kino (Father Kino)
Texas
• Mission and Presidios built in East Texas
• Another response to French settlement
Alta California
• A response to Russian settlement– Built a chain of missions
and presidios• 1769 San Diego, first one• 1770 Monterey-made the
capital• 1776-San Francisco
– Eventually 20 missions
• San Jose and Los Angeles:– Founded as civil
communities to supply food to soldiers
Outpost Clusters
• Survived because they were similar to Spain or Mexico in some way
• Adaptations were made in all– Adobe instead of timber– Changes in crops and in animals
• Each were connected to Mexico City, but not to each other (until New Mexico and San Francisco)
French Settlement
Map of New France, by Samuel de Champlain (1567?-1635): 1612
Migrant Fishing
• Begins in the early 1500’s around Newfoundland
• English, French, Basque, Spanish, and Portuguese are all fishing there– World’s greatest shallow
water fishing ground• Southern Labrador to
Northern New England
Migrant Fishing
• These fisherman came, fished, and went home.
• If they got out of their boats, they stayed close to shore. – Many never left their
boats.– They were not trying to
start colonies at this point, just fishing.
Jaques Cartier• 1534: King Francis I
sends Cartier to explore between Labrador and Newfoundland.
• Wanted him to discover “certain islands,” gold and other precious things.– Hoping for another Aztec or
Inca Empire• Sailed almost to present
day Quebec on the St. Lawrence River– His voyages were
considered a failure.– He didn’t find riches,
plantation crops wouldn’t grow, and he didn’t find a route to Asia.
16th Century• Settlements along the
northeast coast were seasonal migratory work camps.– Fishing– Furs
• There was contact between the French and the Native people.
• Even though there was not a successful attempt at colonization until 1604, European diseases were spreading through Native populations and they were dying in great numbers because of them.
17th Century
• First successful settlement founded on the St. Croix River at the Bay of Fundy in 1604.– It was moved across
the bay and by 1607 it was known as Port Royal.
– This showed the French that settlement was feasible.
Samuel de Champlain: The Father of New France
• 1608: Went down the St. Lawrence River and founded Quebec.
• The valley that was chosen for Quebec was depopulated. – The Native people that had
been there had died.
• These were the same people that Cartier had encountered.
Samuel de Champlain: The Father of New France
• A talented map maker and explorer• Opened North America to trade with France
– He was on the St. Lawrence in 1603 and made a map– He was at the Port Royal settlement until 1607– 1605 and 1606 he was exploring the New England coast
Map of New France, by Samuel de Champlain (1567?-1635): 1612
Samuel de Champlain: The Father of New France
• To make alliances with the local natives, (Huron, Algonquin, Montagnais, and Etchemin), Champlain had to promise to make war with the Iroquois who lived to the south.
• This set the tone for French Iroquois relations for the next 100 years.
Etienne Brule• Was sent to live with the
Huron by Champlain.– Champlain also spent time
with the Huron in the winter of 1615-16 when he was injured attacking a village south of Lake Ontario.
• The French were acquiring geographical information from the natives as well as learning their ways, especially the birch bark canoe.
Étienne Brûlé at the mouth of the Humber
Settlement
• France had to order companies to bring settlers
• 1627 the Company of New France was created– It was supposed to bring 4,000
settlers to New France in 15 years
• By 1654 only about 30 families lived in and around Port Royal– This was the base for
Acadian growth– Almost no women came
from France• Native-French
intermarriage
Settlement
• There was not much interest in settlement.
• Hardly any women came and the French had to resort to sending prisoners to bring people in.
• Often who came were Protestants because of religious wars at home, which created a disconnect.
• This does NOT mean that the population of New France did not grow. – Population growth was higher
than in France.
18th Century• By 1700, less than 20,000 French people were in North America
from Newfoundland to the Mississippi• Settlement patterns were influenced by the fur trade and cod fishing• For the fishery, most ships, crews, and profits returned to France
– This did not require large settlements– The French areas associated with the fishery remained small
• The fur trade was different because it had to go farther and farther inland– Towns were required to supply the fur trade– Montreal and Quebec were connected to the fur trade and were
larger than the fishing villages.
• By 1700, the French were also having trouble with the English who had set up trading posts west of the French in the Hudson Bay area.
• There were many battles between the English (who were allied with the Iroquois) and the French.
• The French were also establishing forts in the South at Biloxi, Mobile, and on the Mississippi at this time.
The Treaty of Utrecht 1713
• Ended a long war between the French and English but there were still conflicts between them
• The French had to give up Acadia in 1755– Acadians had to leave– Some were taken back to England or France– Many ended up in New Orleans and the areas around it
• This is where ‘Cajun’ comes from• The Acadians who went to New Orleans had been in North America
for several generations already and were a mixture of French and Native American
– English had to agree to allow the French to continue fishing in the area
– Keep their French language– Keep their Catholic religion
After the Treaty of Utrecht
• France tried to strengthen its hold on the lower Mississippi
• 1710 New Orleans founded– Tried to establish an export staple
• Sugar didn’t work• Grains didn’t grow well in the hot, humid climate• Citrus, figs, and pineapples had no market• Cotton was not being ginned yet, so was not feasible
– Rice, Indigo, and Tobacco became the principal plantation products– Plantation is the key word– Plantation system had to be established because of the labor
intensiveness of growing those crops, which meant slavery– There were conflicts with the local natives too, who were often taken to
the islands and put into slavery on the sugar plantations
LegacyFrench language spread in theUnited States. Counties marked inyellow are those where 6-12% of the population speak French at home; brown, 12-18%; red, over 18%.
St. Martin Parish, Louisiana (pop. 48,583) - 27.44% French-speaking Evangeline Parish, Louisiana (pop. 35,434) - 25.71% French-speaking Vermilion Parish, Louisiana (pop. 53,807) - 24.89% French-speaking Aroostook County, Maine (pop. 73,938) - 22.37% French-speaking
Lafourche Parish, Louisiana (pop. 89,974) - 19.12% French-speaking Acadia Parish, Louisiana (pop. 58,861) - 19.04% French-speaking
Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana (pop. 41,481) - 17.64% French-speaking Assumption Parish, Louisiana (pop. 23,388) - 17.58% French-speaking St. Landry Parish, Louisiana (pop. 87,700) - 16.70% French-speaking
Coos County, New Hampshire (pop. 33,111) - 16.17% French-speaking Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana (pop. 31,435) - 16.15% French-speaking
Lafayette Parish, Louisiana (pop. 190,503) - 14.37% French-speaking
Androscoggin County, Maine (pop. 103,793) - 14.29% French-speaking
Roanoke Colony: The Lost ColonyThis was the first English colony in North America. It wasFounded in 1585 by Sir Walter Raleigh. It was set up to bringIn riches from the New World, and to launch attacks on theSpanish in America. It was a private venture. It was financedBy Raleigh, with permission of the Queen.
The colony failed. After 1587, English ships wereUnable to get back to the colony for threeYears. When they came back, no one Was there. The word “CROATOAN”Was carved into a tree. CroatanWas the name of a local tribe of
Native Americans. It is unknown whether the colonyWent with them willingly, however, there were no bodiesAt the colony, and it is rumored that years later when the Area was being explored, a tribe of Natives was foundAlready practicing Christianity. Other theories suggest thatThe Spanish wiped out the colony, the colony tried to return to England on their own and were lost at sea. One thing thatProbably had an impact was the weather. Evidence from tree Rings shows that the worst drought in 800 years struck whileThe colonists were waiting to be resupplied. This certainly madeLife very difficult for the new colony.
Jamestown
• Established in 1607– Most of the first settlers were aristocrats
• Picked an island that was swampy and not well suited for agriculture– It was picked because it was uninhabited
• The site was defensible– The water around the island was deep so it could be protected
by ships• Many colonists died
– England sent more• The first factories were established here
– England sent experts to establish them from Poland and Germany
– Glassware was exported
Dutch Settlement
• Began in 1609 at Ft. Nassau– Dutch government gave land grants to wealthy
nobles.– Settlers could not own land, another feudal system
like at home (similar to the French experience)– The first Jewish people came to America with the
Dutch– They also brought Africans, some slaves and some
servants.• Ended in 1664, taken over by England and
slowly anglicized.• Only real impact: some place names in NY
English vs. Native Worldviews
• The Native Americans viewed themselves as part of their environment. There was no separation between themselves and the natural world.
• The English saw wild landscapes as a reflection of wild people who were unwilling or unable to subdue them.– The English justified taking land from the Natives
based on use.– They deserved to have it because they were going to
put it to better use.
Tidewater Chesapeake World
• The English had to make adaptations in order to make this settlement area feasible.– The soil and climate were different than at home.
• One of the first adaptations that had to be made was the adoption of native foods: corn, beans, and squash. They also had to learn to grow these things in a different manner than they were used to farming.
– Seasoning was another adaptation. • The summers were much warmer than back home in
England. Arrival to the Tidewater area was timed so that settlers would arrive in Spring or Fall in order to avoid summer heat and diseases.
– In order to make the settlements profitable, tobacco was grown as a cash crop for the first time.
Tobacco
• Tobacco is a labor intensive crop.
• When it was decided to grow tobacco as a cash crop, the first solution to the labor shortage was to bring in large numbers of male indentured servants.
Plymouth Colony 1621• The area was surveyed by John Smith before settlement• It was formed by a group of English separatists called the Pilgrims
– They came to America looking for religious freedom– They DID NOT come to make a profit like in Jamestown
• They came to start a new society• The first colonists were aided by Squanto, a Native American• The tradition of Thanksgiving comes from Plymouth• The legend of Plymouth Rock comes from Plymouth• The Pilgrims came to Plymouth on The Mayflower• They were supposed to land in Newfoundland, but ended up at
Plymouth• The site chosen for Plymouth Colony was an abandoned Native
American Village– The reason it was abandoned was because disease had wiped out the
people who lived there before the English came
Squanto
The First Winter
• There were 104 original colonists.
• Only 53 were alive to celebrate the first Thanksgiving.
• They died for lack of shelter, disease, and on the ship before they even arrived.
• They would not have survived without the help of the Native Americans, especially Squanto.
Plymouth Rock
Plymouth Rock, described by some as "the most disappointing landmark inAmerica" because of its small size and poor visitor access.
The MayflowerAllerton, Isaac
Mary (Norris) Allerton, wife (Newbury, Berkshire)[1] Bartholomew Allerton, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Remember Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands) Mary Allerton, daughter (Leiden, Netherlands), the last survivor of the Mayflower company[2]
Bradford, William (Austerfield, Yorkshire) Dorothy (May) Bradford, wife (Wisbech, Cambridge)
Brewster, William (Doncaster, Yorkshire) Mary Brewster, wife Love Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands) Wrestling Brewster, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Carver, John Catherine (Leggett) (White) Carver, wife (probably Sturton-le-Steeple, Nottinghamshire)
Chilton, James (Canterbury)[2] Mrs. Susanna Chilton, wife Mary Chilton, daughter (Sandwich, Kent)
Cooke, Francis John Cook, son (Leiden, Netherlands)
Cooper, Humility - (probably Leiden, Netherlands) baby daughter of Robert Cooper, in company of her aunt Ann Cooper Tilley, wife of Edward Tilley[3] Crackstone, John (Stratford St. Mary, Suffolk)
John Crackstone, son Fletcher, Moses (probably Canterbury, Kent)
Fuller, Edward (Redenhall, Norfolk)[2] Mrs. Edward Fuller, wife Samuel Fuller, son
Fuller, Samuel (Redenhall, Norfolk) (brother to Edward) Goodman, John Minter, Desire (Norwich, Norfolk) Priest, Degory Rogers, Thomas (Watford, Northampton)
Joseph Rogers, son (Watford, Northampton) Sampson, Henry (Henlow, Bedford) child in company of his uncle and aunt Edward and Ann Tilley[3] Tilley, Edward (Henlow, Bedford)
Ann (Cooper) Tilley (Henlow, Bedford) wife of Edward and aunt of Humilty Cooper and Henry Sampson
Tilley, John (Henlow, Bedford) Joan (Hurst) (Rogers) Tilley, wife (Henlow, Bedford) Elizabeth Tilley, daughter (Henlow, Bedford)
Tinker, Thomas Mrs. Thomas Tinker, wife boy Tinker, son
Turner, John boy Turner, son boy Turner, younger son
White, William Susanna (Fuller) White , wife Resolved White, son Peregrine White, son (born in Provincetown Harbor)
Williams, Thomas, (Great Yarmouth, Norfolk) Winslow, Edward (Droitwich, Worcester)
Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow, wife
Planters recruited by London merchants
Billington, John (possibly Spaulding, Lincolnshire) Eleanor Billington, wife John Billington, son Francis Billington, son
Britteridge, Richard Browne, Peter (Dorking, Surrey) Clarke, Richard Eaton, Francis (Bristol, Gloucester)
Sarah Eaton, wife Samuel Eaton, son
Gardiner, Richard (Harwich, Essex) Hopkins, Stephen (Upper Clatford, Hampshire)
Elizabeth (Fisher) Hopkins, wife Giles Hopkins, son by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire) Constance Hopkins, daughter by first marriage (Hursley, Hampshire) Damaris Hopkins, daughter Oceanus Hopkins, born en route
Margesson, Edmund Martin, Christopher (Billericay, Essex)
Mary (Prower) Martin, wife Mullins, William (Dorking, Surrey)
Alice Mullins, wife Priscilla Mullins, daughter Joseph Mullins, son
Prower, Solomon (Billericay, Essex) Rigsdale, John
Alice Rigsdale, wife Standish, Myles (Chorley, Lancashire)
Rose Standish, wife Warren, Richard (Hertford, England)
Winslow, Gilbert (Droitwich, Worcester), brother to "Pilgrim" Edward Winslow but not known to have lived in Leiden Men hired to stay one yearAlden, John (Harwich, Essex) - considered as a ship's crewman but joined settlers Allerton, John, was to return to England to help the rest of the group immigrate but died in the winter, may have been relative of "Pilgrim" Allerton family Ely, --?--, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up English, Thomas, hired to master a shallop but died in the winter
Trevore, William, hired as seaman, returned to England after term was up
Family servants
Thirteen of the 18 people in this category were attached to Pilgrim families.Butten, William, age "a youth", servant of Samuel Fuller, only person who died during the voyage Carter, Robert, age unknown, servant or apprentice to William Mullins, shoemaker. --?--, Dorothy, maidservant of John Carver, married Francis Eaton within two years of arrival Doty, Edward, (possibly Lincolnshire) age probably about 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins Holbeck, William, age likely under 21, servant to William White Hooke, John, (probably Norwich, Norfolk) age 13, apprenticed to Isaac Allerton Howland, John (probably Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire), age about 21, manservant for Governor John Carver Lancemore, John (probably Shropshire or Worcestershire), age under 21, servant to the Christopher Martin Latham, William, age 11, servant/apprentice to the John Carver family Leister, Edward (Kensington), aged over 21, servant to Stephen Hopkins More, Ellen, (Shipton, Shropshire), age 8, indentured to Edward Winslow
Jasper More, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 7, indentured to John Carver Richard, (Shipton, Shropshire), brother, age 6, indentured to William Brewster Mary, (Shipton, Shropshire), sister, age 4, indentured to William Brewster
Soule, George, teacher of Edward Winslow's children Story, Elias, age under 21, in the care of Edward Winslow Thompson, Edward, age under 21, in the care of the William White family, first passenger to die after the Mayflower reached Cape Cod. Wilder, Roger, age under 21, servant in the John Carver family
DogsAt least two dogs are known to have participated in the settling of Plymouth. In Mourt's Relation Edward Winslow writesthat a female mastiff and a small springer spaniel came ashore on the first explorations of what is now Provincetown. There may have been other pets on the Mayflower, but none are mentioned.
Indentured Servants
• Also called a bonded laborer• A laborer under contract to work for an
employer for a specific amount of time– Usually 2 to 7 years
• They were not paid. Employers were supposed to feed them and shelter them
• The system of power it created was often an opening for physical, sexual, and verbal abuse, as well as legal abuses of contract.