Putting Down Roots Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society CHAPTER 3.

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Putting Down Roots Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society CHAPTER 3

Transcript of Putting Down Roots Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society CHAPTER 3.

Page 1: Putting Down Roots Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society CHAPTER 3.

Putting Down Roots Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society

CHAPTER 3

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Life Expectancy in the Colonies

New England• Came over in families which

led to a high reproduction rate and low mortality rate that strengthened social stability

• Church membership and education was highly valued

Chesapeake • Came over with mostly

males (sex ratio was 6 to 1)• High death rate and lack of

nuclear families led to a social instability

• Mortality rates so high that without immigration, population would have declined

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Women

New England• Women’s roles

– Farm labor, although not necessarily same tasks as men

– Went to church more then men (2 to 1)

• Women could not control property

• Divorce difficult• Both genders accommodated

themselves to roles they believed God ordained

Chesapeake • Scarcity gave some women

bargaining power in marriage market

• Female indentured servants vulnerable to sexual exploitation

• Childbearing extremely dangerous (shorter life expectancy by 20 yrs compared to NE)

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Social Structure

New England• Absence of very rich created a

new social order• New England social order:

– Large population of yeomen loyal to local community

– Small population of landless laborers, servants, poor

– Local gentry of prominent, pious families

• Only moderate disparities of wealth

• Servitude was more an apprenticeship

Chesapeake • Tobacco based economy led

to Large landowners who controlled much of labor

• Great planters create social order:– Invested in workers– Amassed huge tracts of land – Gentry become colony’s elite

leaders• Greater disparities of wealth• Servitude was more like

slavery

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Race and Freedom in British America

• Indians decimated by disease• European indentured servant pool waned

after 1660• Planter class in Chesapeake and Carolina’s

need labor• Enslaved Africans to fill demand for labor

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Origins and Destinations of African Slaves, 1619-1760

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African American Identities

• All Africans participated in creating an African American culture (part African + part American)

• Widespread resentment of debased status • Armed resistance such as South Carolina’s

Stono Rebellion of 1739 a threat– This led to slave owners to increase their power

over their slaves

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Rise of a Commercial Empire

• “Mercantilism” – One country’s gain is another country’s loss

• English leaders ignored colonies until 1650s• Navigation Acts passed in 1660– Generated revenue for the crown– Planters hurt by Navigation Acts (Increased prices of

goods)– New England merchants skirted laws – After revisions, Navigation Acts eventually benefited

colonial merchants

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All products going to the colonies had to first go through England where the products were taxed

spices

tea

spices

tea

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Civil unrest in the Colonies

• English colonies experienced unrest at the end of the seventeenth century

• Winners gained legitimacy for their rule• Examples– Bacon’s rebellion – King Philips War– Glorious Revolution

• The American colonies were all part of Great Britain but had little to do with each other