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Chapter 5 - Colonial “American” Society

Proprietors

  • If colonists were friends of the King or did exceptional service, they were given large tracts of land in the New World

  • Social reformers created sanctuaries for religious minorities (Quakers + Catholics)

  • Settlements created gov’ts + attracted colonists

  • Private property rights

Coastal Plain

  • Stretched from the Appalachian Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean

  • Contained fertile soil + rivers

Geographical Mobility

  • Freedom of westward movement

  • Once indentured servants completed their contracts, they moved west for their own land

  • Many indentured servants escaped before end of contract

  • Huge opportunity to climb social ladder + get rich with hard work

Social Mobility

  • Fluid social ladder

  • With geographical mobility + colonists’ intelligence, they were given many opportunities to prosper

  • However, if mistakes were made, fortunes could be reversed quickly

Demographics

  • Study of populations

  • Rapid growth during colonial era

  • Ethnic blend of colonists (60% English)

  • Young, mostly male, rural

Capital

  • Crucial to grow American society

    • Needed investment funds

  • London banks + joint-stock companies established American economic networks

Diversified Economy

  • 1700 - Settlements mostly concentrated in middle colonies + New England

  • Prevented unhealthy dependence on cash-crop economy

  • Economy consisted of furs, lumber, fish + whales, shipping

  • Flexibility to market trends

Middle Passage

  • Expanded colonial American economy

  • Trading in the African slave market resulted in traffic across Atlantic Ocean

  • Slave ships had very bad conditions + high death rate among slaves

Cash-Crop Economy

  • Middle colonies mostly grew grain

  • 1614 - Southern colonies committed to cash crops (tobacco, sugar, indigo, rice)

    • High dependence on chattel slavery

    • Uncooperative climate, little flexibility, market prices

    • CANNOT DIVERSIFY!

  • Northern colonies had more capital

Triangular Trade

  • 1632 - Provided licenses to transport African slaves

  • New England merchants built ships with lumber

  • Raw materials from Boston, New York, Baltimore were sold in England or traded for slaves

  • Slaves from Africa were brought to the Caribbean

  • Molasses from Caribbean was sold in Boston for rum

  • Benefited North (South depended on North)

Soil Depletion

  • Because tobacco + corn strip nitrogen from soil, it lost its fertility quickly

  • Colonists needed to clear more and more land to farm, resulting in conflicts w/ Native Americans

  • Legumes (alfalfa, clover, beans, peas) fix nitrogen into soil + helped restore it

  • Modern fertilizers

Franchise

  • Right to vote

  • Required land ownership

  • Higher % of males can vote in America than England

    • Expanded democracy

Anglican Church

  • Church of England founded by Henry VIII

  • Because of the English Reformation, Protestantism increased in England

  • Composed of Loyal Anglicans dedicated to Roman Catholicism

  • America was influenced by religious orthodoxy

  • After changing its name to Episcopal Church, the Anglican Church’s power decreased

High Church vs. Low Church

  • Liturgy was a style of worship

  • The Anglican Church was a High Church that ritualized worship

  • Puritans + evangelicals believed in simpler worship (preaching + singing) + egalitarian practices

Congregational Church

  • Descended from original Puritan churches

  • Believed in self-gov’t apart from influence of Anglican Church

Acts of Toleration

  • Passed in 1649

  • When the number of Protestants increased, the Acts of Toleration were passed

  • Religious toleration led to higher diversity + less religious conflict

  • Path to complete religious liberty

Half-Way Covenant

  • 1662

  • Compromise in Puritan churches

  • Even if believers wanted church membership BUT lacked faith, they were still able to join church

  • Resulted in churches filled with unbelievers

Jeremiad

  • Puritan ministers modeled after Jeremiah

  • Warned against worldliness of New England society

Scots-Irish

  • Presbyterian Scots fled persecution to Ireland

  • 1717 - Migrated to + welcomed into American colonies

  • Independent-minded + disliked Anglicans and revolutionaries

  • Settled in Appalachian Mts.

Germans

  • Because there were German kings on English throne + English is Germanic language, they were easily assimilated into colonies

  • “Pennsylvania Dutch” in Western Pennsylvania

First Great Awakening

  • Declining devotion to God

  • Revival of Christianity

  • Widespread conversions + missionary activity among Native Americans

  • 1730s-1740s

  • 1st unifying event among colonists

Arminianism

  • Counterpoint to Calvinism

  • Man’s free will, not divine decree, is key to salvation

  • Became more and more popular

Jonathan Edwards

  • Huge influence in 1st Great Awakening

  • 1737 - Publishes book during 1st Great Awakening

    • “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

  • Believed in rationality of faith + philosophy, mysticism

  • Missionary work of Native Americans, writing, Princeton University

George Whitefield

  • Arrived in America to preach in 1738

  • Huge influence in 1st Great Awakening

  • Evangelical + Calvinist Anglican

  • Urban + open-air gatherings

  • Popular

BIG PICTURE

  • Natural resources, geographical space, advantageous climate → American prosperity

  • Poor people found opportunities in America

  • Diversified Northern economy surpassed agrarian Southern economy

  • 2 intertwined colonial economies → War b/w Britain + America

  • Religious society w/ religious diversity + religious experiments

  • Georgia

    • Founded by James Oglethorpe

    • Provide defense against encroaching Spanish

    • Penal colony

  • Mercantilism

    • Backbone of British empire

    • Exclusionary - Only British ships + no foreign competition

    • Challenged by colonists → Groundwork for Revolution

JQ

Chapter 5 - Colonial “American” Society

Proprietors

  • If colonists were friends of the King or did exceptional service, they were given large tracts of land in the New World

  • Social reformers created sanctuaries for religious minorities (Quakers + Catholics)

  • Settlements created gov’ts + attracted colonists

  • Private property rights

Coastal Plain

  • Stretched from the Appalachian Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean

  • Contained fertile soil + rivers

Geographical Mobility

  • Freedom of westward movement

  • Once indentured servants completed their contracts, they moved west for their own land

  • Many indentured servants escaped before end of contract

  • Huge opportunity to climb social ladder + get rich with hard work

Social Mobility

  • Fluid social ladder

  • With geographical mobility + colonists’ intelligence, they were given many opportunities to prosper

  • However, if mistakes were made, fortunes could be reversed quickly

Demographics

  • Study of populations

  • Rapid growth during colonial era

  • Ethnic blend of colonists (60% English)

  • Young, mostly male, rural

Capital

  • Crucial to grow American society

    • Needed investment funds

  • London banks + joint-stock companies established American economic networks

Diversified Economy

  • 1700 - Settlements mostly concentrated in middle colonies + New England

  • Prevented unhealthy dependence on cash-crop economy

  • Economy consisted of furs, lumber, fish + whales, shipping

  • Flexibility to market trends

Middle Passage

  • Expanded colonial American economy

  • Trading in the African slave market resulted in traffic across Atlantic Ocean

  • Slave ships had very bad conditions + high death rate among slaves

Cash-Crop Economy

  • Middle colonies mostly grew grain

  • 1614 - Southern colonies committed to cash crops (tobacco, sugar, indigo, rice)

    • High dependence on chattel slavery

    • Uncooperative climate, little flexibility, market prices

    • CANNOT DIVERSIFY!

  • Northern colonies had more capital

Triangular Trade

  • 1632 - Provided licenses to transport African slaves

  • New England merchants built ships with lumber

  • Raw materials from Boston, New York, Baltimore were sold in England or traded for slaves

  • Slaves from Africa were brought to the Caribbean

  • Molasses from Caribbean was sold in Boston for rum

  • Benefited North (South depended on North)

Soil Depletion

  • Because tobacco + corn strip nitrogen from soil, it lost its fertility quickly

  • Colonists needed to clear more and more land to farm, resulting in conflicts w/ Native Americans

  • Legumes (alfalfa, clover, beans, peas) fix nitrogen into soil + helped restore it

  • Modern fertilizers

Franchise

  • Right to vote

  • Required land ownership

  • Higher % of males can vote in America than England

    • Expanded democracy

Anglican Church

  • Church of England founded by Henry VIII

  • Because of the English Reformation, Protestantism increased in England

  • Composed of Loyal Anglicans dedicated to Roman Catholicism

  • America was influenced by religious orthodoxy

  • After changing its name to Episcopal Church, the Anglican Church’s power decreased

High Church vs. Low Church

  • Liturgy was a style of worship

  • The Anglican Church was a High Church that ritualized worship

  • Puritans + evangelicals believed in simpler worship (preaching + singing) + egalitarian practices

Congregational Church

  • Descended from original Puritan churches

  • Believed in self-gov’t apart from influence of Anglican Church

Acts of Toleration

  • Passed in 1649

  • When the number of Protestants increased, the Acts of Toleration were passed

  • Religious toleration led to higher diversity + less religious conflict

  • Path to complete religious liberty

Half-Way Covenant

  • 1662

  • Compromise in Puritan churches

  • Even if believers wanted church membership BUT lacked faith, they were still able to join church

  • Resulted in churches filled with unbelievers

Jeremiad

  • Puritan ministers modeled after Jeremiah

  • Warned against worldliness of New England society

Scots-Irish

  • Presbyterian Scots fled persecution to Ireland

  • 1717 - Migrated to + welcomed into American colonies

  • Independent-minded + disliked Anglicans and revolutionaries

  • Settled in Appalachian Mts.

Germans

  • Because there were German kings on English throne + English is Germanic language, they were easily assimilated into colonies

  • “Pennsylvania Dutch” in Western Pennsylvania

First Great Awakening

  • Declining devotion to God

  • Revival of Christianity

  • Widespread conversions + missionary activity among Native Americans

  • 1730s-1740s

  • 1st unifying event among colonists

Arminianism

  • Counterpoint to Calvinism

  • Man’s free will, not divine decree, is key to salvation

  • Became more and more popular

Jonathan Edwards

  • Huge influence in 1st Great Awakening

  • 1737 - Publishes book during 1st Great Awakening

    • “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”

  • Believed in rationality of faith + philosophy, mysticism

  • Missionary work of Native Americans, writing, Princeton University

George Whitefield

  • Arrived in America to preach in 1738

  • Huge influence in 1st Great Awakening

  • Evangelical + Calvinist Anglican

  • Urban + open-air gatherings

  • Popular

BIG PICTURE

  • Natural resources, geographical space, advantageous climate → American prosperity

  • Poor people found opportunities in America

  • Diversified Northern economy surpassed agrarian Southern economy

  • 2 intertwined colonial economies → War b/w Britain + America

  • Religious society w/ religious diversity + religious experiments

  • Georgia

    • Founded by James Oglethorpe

    • Provide defense against encroaching Spanish

    • Penal colony

  • Mercantilism

    • Backbone of British empire

    • Exclusionary - Only British ships + no foreign competition

    • Challenged by colonists → Groundwork for Revolution