+ All Categories
Home > Documents > THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

Date post: 16-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: carol-oneal
View: 216 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
28
THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4
Transcript
Page 1: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

THE M

IDDLE

AND

SOUTHERN C

OLONIE

S

CHAPTER 3

, SECTI

ON 3 A

ND 4

Page 2: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

MIDDLE COLONIES

The middle colonies were made up of:

1. New York

2. Pennsylvania

3. Delaware

4. New Jersey

Page 3: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

NEW YORK

• Between the areas controlled by England were lands owned by the Dutch.

• The main settlement of the Dutch was called New Amsterdam which was located on Manhattan Island.

• Manhattan Island was bought (from Native Americans) by the Dutch for beads, cloth and other goods. The price was about $24.00 in today’s world.

• Because it had a good seaport, New Amsterdam became a center for shipping to and from the Americas.

Page 4: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

ENGLAND TAKES CONTROL

• England did not like the fact that the Dutch had settlements between their northern and southern colonies….They also envied the good harbors that the Dutch controlled.

• In 1664 the English sent a fleet of ships to attack New Amsterdam (Manhattan Island). Because New Amsterdam was unprepared for battle, they quickly surrendered to the English forces.

Page 5: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

ENGLAND TAKES CONTROL

King Charles gave the acquired colony to his brother the Duke of York (also called the Duke of Yorkshire)…..to celebrate himself he renamed the colony New York.

Page 6: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

PENNSYLVANIA

• In 1680 a wealthy English gentleman by the name of William Penn set up a new colony called Pennsylvania (which was appropriately named after himself.)

• Little known fact: Pennsylvania

is almost the size of the

entire country of England!

Page 7: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

PENNSYLVANIA

• How was William Penn able to acquire Pennsylvania?

• King Charles II of England had borrowed lots of $$$$$$ from William Penn’s family. As repayment he gave William, Pennsylvania.

• Penn belonged to a Protestant group known as the Quakers.

• Penn saw Pennsylvania as a “holy experiment” where Quakers practiced toleration and equality.

Page 8: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

PENNSYLVANIA

• In 1682 Penn sailed to America to personally supervise the building of Philadelphia. Even today Philadelphia is known as the “city of brotherly love”.

• Many people came from Europe to live in Pennsylvania. By 1683 people from England, Ireland, Germany and Sweden all resided in Pennsylvania.

Page 9: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

PENNSYLVANIA

• In 1701, Penn created the Charters of Liberties which granted colonists the right to elect government representatives.

• In 1704, the southern part of Pennsylvania broke away, and functioned separately. Delaware.

Page 10: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

SOUTHERN COLONIES

1.Maryland

2.Virginia

3.North Carolina

4.South Carolina

5.Georgia

CLIMATE: WARM AND HUMID

Page 11: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

SOUTHERN COLONIES:

• In the Southern Colonies large plantations flourished. Plantations grew tobacco, wheat, fruit, vegetables and corn.

• As colonies and plantations grew, so did the need so did the need for capable workers.

• Not all people came to work in the colonies of their own free will. Many who came to work in the colonies were English criminals as well as Scottish and Irish prisoners. Others were African slaves brought to America by European slave traders.

Page 12: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

MARYLAND

• Maryland was founded by a man named Sir George Calvert also called Lord Baltimore. Calvert established Maryland as a safe place for Catholics being persecuted in England.

Page 13: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

MARYLAND

• Maryland colonists used tobacco as their main crop.

• Lord Baltimore was a clever fellow. He declared that all tobacco planters had to grow or raise an additional crop or farm item. This included various vegetables, fruit and livestock.

Page 14: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

THE MASON-DIXON LINE

• For years there was a land dispute between the Calvert’s (Maryland) and the Penn’s (Pennsylvania).

• To stop the argument, the two families hired two surveyors, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, to lay out boundary stones dividing the land…..this was known as the Mason-Dixon Line.

Page 15: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

VIRGINIA EXPANSION• While other colonies were

just starting out Virginia was expanding.

• As Virginia began to expand, many settlements became established on Native American land. Many settlers became angry that the government (military) was not protecting them from Native American raids.

Page 16: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

BACON’S REBELLION

• In 1676, Nathaniel Bacon led angry settlers in attacks on Native American villages. Bacon was not finished! He actually took his raiders all the way to Jamestown. If not for his sudden death due to illness, he may have taken charge of Virginia!

Page 17: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

THE CAROLINAS

• In 1663 King Charles II of England created a colony called Carolina which means “Charles’s Land”.

• By 1680, however, the people of Carolina would go their separate way creating North and South Carolina.

Page 18: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

NORTH CAROLINA

• The northern part of Carolina was settled mostly by farmers from Virginia’s backcountry.

• They grew tobacco and sold forest products such as timber and tar.

Page 19: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

SOUTH CAROLINA• The southern part of Carolina was

more prosperous than the north due to fertile farmland and good harbors.

• South Carolinas main crops were tobacco and rice but also traded in lumber and beef.

Page 20: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

CAROLINAS

• Many enslaved Africans who arrived in the Carolinas worked in the rice fields. Growing rice and tobacco required a great deal of labor from African Slaves.

• By 1708 more than half the population in the Carolinas were enslaved Africans.

Page 21: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.
Page 22: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

GEORGIA

Georgia was the last of the British colonies to be established. Georgia was founded with two things in mind.

1. English debtors (people in debt) or English poor could come to Georgia and get a fresh start

2. Georgia would be used to protect the northern colonies (military barrier). Spain had colonies in Florida at the time.

Page 23: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

GEORGIA

• Originally, the farms in Georgia were to remain small and no slavery was permitted.

• OH NO…..WHAT HAPPENED! It came to be that Georgia ended up with more non-British settlers than any other British colony in the Americas.

• Soon Georgia had to increase land holdings, allow slavery so the farms could grow.

Page 24: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

13 ORIGINAL COLONIES

Massachusetts ConnecticutRhode Island New HampshireNew York DelawareNew Jersey PennsylvaniaVirginia Maryland North Carolina South Carolina Georgia

Page 25: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.
Page 26: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

FRANCE AND SPAIN

The British were not the only Europeans who were colonizing North America.

France: Founded Quebec (in Canada) in 1608. They were mainly concerned with fishing and fur trapping. They soon built forts and trading posts.

In the Southern part of North America France founded New Orleans.

Important point: As French colonies grew slowly they did not always push Native Americans off their land.

Page 27: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.
Page 28: THE MIDDLE AND SOUTHERN COLONIES CHAPTER 3, SECTION 3 AND 4.

FRANCE AND SPAIN

During this time Spain had a foothold in Florida. They still controlled what is today Mexico, Central and South America.

Spain began to settle New Mexico, current day Arizona, Texas and California.


Recommended