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Colonial Era America

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Colonial Era America An Emerging Unity ... at least in the eyes of God DIFFERENCES BETWEEN COLONIAL REGIONS Thirteen British Colonies As we have seen, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Colonial Era America


1
Colonial Era America
  • An Emerging Unity

2
People Settling in the New World became known
as THE GREAT CONVERGENCE or migration The
values and institutions of European life took
root in the colonies.
3
England, Spain, and France Claim land because of
the natural geography that exists in the new
world. Which European countries border the 13
English Colonies?
4
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN COLONIAL REGIONS
Comparison of the South and New England
5
Thirteen British Colonies
  • As we have seen, all the colonies were very
    different from each other. Yet, some things are
    on the horizon that will help to unify the 13
    Colonies.
  • Developing similarities
  • Mercantilism
  • Forces in play to unify the 13 colonies in 18th
    century.
  • 1. The Enlightenment
  • 2. First Great Awakening


JOHN LOCKE
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
JONATHON EDWARDS
GEORGE WHITEFIELD
6
The Enlightenment in Europe
  • A movement among the intellectuals of Western
    Europe that emerged out of the Scientific
    Revolution.
  • Universe governed by physical laws
  • Society governed by natural laws
  • Philosophers attempted to determine what those
    laws were in an attempt to reform society.
  • Emphasis on rationality and reason.
  • Question tradition, including government and
    religious institutions.

7
John Locke
  • John Locke (1632-1704)
  • Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
  • Tabula rasa
  • Two Treatises of Government (1689)
  • Natural law and inalienable rights
  • Rulers are subject to the law
  • Political contracts

8
The American Enlightenment
  • American newspapers
  • Improved education in colonies
  • Numerous grammar schools in New England
  • Private tutors in the southern colonies
  • Six colleges established
  • Harvard College (1636), College of William and
    Mary (1693), and Yale College (1701) were the
    leaders in American higher education.
  • Enlightenment influence mainly among upper
    classes.

9
First Great Awakening
  • Religious revival that spread through all 13
    colonies from 1730s-1750s. Many people felt that
    young people were not embracing the religious
    faiths that had founded the 13 Colonies.
  • Prominent ministers Cotton Mather, Jonathan
    Edwards, George Whitefield

10
Government and Religion in the British Colonies,
1720
11
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
  • 1734, Massachusetts
  • God may cast wicked men into hell at any given
    moment.
  • The Wicked deserve to be cast into hell. Divine
    justice does not prevent God destroying the
    Wicked moment - do feel and bear the fierceness
    of His wrath.
  • At any moment God shall permit him, Satan stands
    ready to fall upon the Wicked and seize them as
    his own
  • If it were not for God's restraints, there are,
    in the souls of at any moment.
  • The Wicked, at this moment, suffer under God's
    condemnation to Hell.
  • The Wicked, on earth - at this very moment -
    suffer the torments of Hell. The Wicked must not
    think, simply because they are not physically in
    Hell, God (in whose Hand the Wicked now reside)
    is - at this very moment - as angry with them as
    He is with those miserable creatures He is now
    tormenting in hell, and who - at this very wicked
    men, hellish principles reigning which,
    presently, would kindle and flame out into
    hellfire,
  • Simply because there are not visible means of
    death before them, at any given moment, the
    Wicked should not, therefore, feel secure.
  • Simply because it is natural to care for oneself
    or to think that others may care for them, men
    should not think themselves safe from God's
    wrath.
  • All that wicked men may do to save themselves
    from Hell's pains afford them nothing if they
    continue to reject Christ.
  • God has never promised to save us from Hell,
    except for those contained in Christ through the
    covenant of Grace.
  • The wicked will not escape the wrath of God
    unless they repent.

Jonathon Edwards
12
Aftermath of Revival
  • Many people began leaving the established
    churches and joined other Protestant groups.
  • Churches gained 20,000 to 50,000 new members.
  • Colleges like Princeton were founded to train new
    ministers.
  • Sporadic conversions by African slaves
  • Encouraged ideas of equality and the right to
    challenge authority.

13
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ENLIGHTENMENT THINKER
14
Ben Franklin's Life
  • 1730 Ben marries
  • 1737 Poor Richards Almanac

Timeline
15
  • Benjamin Franklin was born on January 17, 1706 in
    Boston Massachusetts.
  • He only spent two years in the local school
    because of lack of money.

16
  • Ben Franklin began teaching himself the basics of
    geometry and algebra. He also studied and
    partially mastered many different languages.
  • At age 12, Ben began working at his brothers
    printing shop.

17
Benjamin Franklin the Printer
  • From 1723 to 1730, Ben worked as a printer.
  • He became partial owner of a print shop in 1728.
  • In 1729, Ben started The Pennsylvania Gazette.

18
  • In 1730 Ben married Deborah Read.
  • Benjamin had two sons named William and Francis.
  • Ben also had a daughter named Sarah.

19
Ben wrote Poor Richard's Almanac.
The Almanac contained the calendar, weather,
poems, sayings and astronomical and astrological
information that a typical almanac of the period
would contain. Franklin also included the
occasional mathematical exercise and plenty of
Franklins wisdom.
He that lives upon Hope, dies farting.
  • "Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man
    healthy, wealthy and wise.
  • "Snug as a bug in a rug."
  • Dont throw stones at your neighbours, if your
    own windows are glass.
  • The rotten Apple spoils his Companion.

20
Ben Franklin the Inventor
  • Bifocals
  • A Glass armonica
  • The Lightning Rod
  • An Odometer
  • Franklin Stove

21
Bifocals
  • Ben invented reading glasses called bifocals.
    Bifocals are eyeglasses that have split lenses.
    One half of the lens helps a person see close and
    one half of the lens helps a person see far away.

22
A Glass Armonica
  • Ben Franklin also invented a glass harmonica.
    Different size bowls with holes and corks in the
    center were put onto a spindle and rotated by
    foot pedal. Dampened fingers rubbed the edges to
    produce the beautiful sounds.

23
The Lightning Rod
Ben Franklin invented the lightning rod. It was
attached to a building, and would attract
lightning. Then the rod would direct lightning
down to the ground so that it wouldn't hit the
building.


24
An Odometer
  • Ben went out riding one day in his carriage
    to measure the routes. He needed a way to keep
    track of the distance. Ben invented an odometer
    and attached it to his carriage.


25
A Wood Stove
  • Ben Franklin invented an iron furnace stove.
  • It allowed people to safely warm their homes
    using less wood.

Franklin Stove
26
He died on April 17, 1790 at the age of 84.
  • The Epitaph of Young Benjamin Franklin
  • The body of B. Franklin, Printer (Like the Cover
    of an Old Book Its Contents torn Out And Stript
    of its Lettering and Gilding) Lies Here, Food for
    Worms. But the Work shall not be Lost For it
    will (as he Believ'd) Appear once More In a New
    and More Elegant Edition Revised and Corrected By
    the Author.
  • When Benjamin Franklin was 22 years old, he wrote
    the epitaph that he imagined might be carved on
    his tombstone. By the time he actually died at
    age 84, he had changed his mind.
  • Benjamin Franklin's Final Epitaph
  • Benjamin and Deborah Franklin 1790
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