Title: Eighteenth-Century America
1Eighteenth-Century America
2Overview Colonial Society in 1700
- Not a homogeneous society
- Ethnic and religious diversity
- Free and unfree
- No national identity
- No common culture
- French vs. English
- battle for control
3Labor in the Colonies
- Plantation economy depended upon manual labor.
- Indentured Servants (debt slavery)
- Worked 4 to 7 years.
- Accounted for half the white settlers in all
colonies outside New England. - Slavery (chattel slavery) (1619 Jamestown)
- Increased staple crops for commercial markets.
- Mortality rate improved.
- Racist rationalization based on color differences
or heathenism. - Perpetual black slavery became the custom and the
law of the land.
4The Middle Passage
- About 21 million people captured in West Africa
between 1700 and 1850. - Millions died during the Atlantic crossing and as
many as 7 million remained slaves in Africa. - Slaves were captured by other Africans within the
interior, brought to the coast, sold to
Europeans. - Packed together in slave ships and subjected to a
4 to 6 week passage. So brutal that 1 in 7 died
en route. - Once in America they were thrown indiscriminately
together and treated like work animals.
5The Atlantic Slave Trade (Middle Passage)
6 7Slavery in British North America
- Great Ethnic Diversity in Slave Population.
- Before 1750 Slave importation.
- 17th century Brazil Caribbean
- 18th century Directly from Africa
- After 1750 Native-born population.
- Distinctively African-American culture
- 20 of colonial population. (40 in south)
- British North America bought less than 5 percent
of the total slave imports to the Western
Hemisphere (1500-1800). - 400,000 out of 9.5 million however, had a better
chance for survival.
8The Slave Family and Community
- The differences among blacks lessened as slave
importation tapered off and the black population
grew through natural increase. - Black families remained vulnerable.
- Slave marriages had no legal status and family
members were often separated by deaths or debts
of masters.
9Slave Societies in the Eighteenth-Century South
- Tense and embattled regions.
- Salve resistance
- More frequent
- More successful
10Slave Societies in the Eighteenth-Century South
- Slavery and Colonial Society in French Louisiana
- Natchez Revolt (1729)
- Africans challenged French control / importation
of slave stopped - Greater freedom for blacks in Louisiana
- Freedom granted to those who served in French
militia. Became the core of Louisianas free
black community. - Slave Resistance in 18th-Century British N.
America - The Stono Rebellion (1739) (South Carolina)
- The largest slave revolt of the colonial period.
- Nearly 100 slaves killed several whites before
being caught and killed by the white militia.
11The Enlightenment
- A scientific revolution that swept through Europe
during the 17th century. - Assumptions
- The world is an orderly place. (Natural Law)
- Humans can understand order.
- Influence in America
- Diets God made world and then left alone
- Skepticism Questioned everything
- Laws of nature
- John Locke and tabula rosa (people can be
corrupted) - Reason and virtue
12The Great Awakening
- Causes
- Challenges to religion (Enlightenment), competing
denominations, westward expansion - Changes in society and tradition
- Revivals (1730s) A wave of evangelism that
swept through the colonies. - Jonathan Edwards
- George Whitefield Emphasized new birth
13Jonathan Edwards(1703-1758)
- Congregationalist minister from Massachusetts.
- Feared religion had become too intellectual and
had lost its animating force.
- The God that holds you over the pit of hell,
much as one holds a spider or some other
loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you and is
dreadfully provoked. - Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
14The Great Awakening
- Influence on Colonists
- Old Light (structure)
- Intended the Great Awakening to bolster church
discipline and order. (Edwards Whitefield) - New Light (emotion)
- Radical evangelists that attacked the established
clergy and appealed to the lower classes. - Short term results
- New religious groups and the split of more
Calvinistic churches Baptists, Methodists, etc. - New England Puritanism fragmented
15The Great Awakening
- Long term results
- American style evangelism and revivalism
- Denominational colleges
- Undermining of state-sponsored churches
toleration of dissent - Individual judgment Fewer willing to defer to
the ruling social and political elite. Emphasized
popular resistance to established authority.
16The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening
- Both emphasized the power and right of individual
choice and popular resistance to established
authority. - Both aroused hopes that America could become the
promised land. - Fewer and fewer people were willing to defer to
the ruling social and political elite.
17Society
- Population Growth
- Doubled every 25 years
- Cities
- Small and isolated from one another.
- Education
- Rapid expansion.
18The Settlement of the Backcountry
- Isolation of the backcountry
- Frontier women
- Social Conflict on the Frontier
- The Paxton Boys (1763)
- Regulation movements (1760s)
- Ethnic conflicts
- Germans, Scots-Irish, etc.
- Boundary Disputes and Tenant Wars
- Green Mountain boys (1760s)
19Eighteenth-Century Seaports
- Increasingly sharp class stratification
- The commercial classes
- Free and bound workers
- Women in cities
- Urban diversions and hazards
- Plays, taverns, private social clubs, fraternal
societies. - Problems of traffic, fire, and crime
- Social Conflict in Seaports
- Religious tension
- Class resentment
20Politics
- Royal colonies
- British crown responsible for defense.
- British crown regulated external trade.
- Elected lower houses
- Home rule
- Self-government in the colonies became first a
habit, then a right.
21Economy Mercantilism (self-sufficient)
- Worlds gold and silver supply fixed.
- Nations could gain wealth only at the expense of
another country by seizing its gold and silver
and dominating its trade. - Colonies were part of an empire.
- Source of raw materials.
- Market for finished goods.
22AtlanticTrade
- Growing economy
- Unfavorable balance
- of trade
- Shortage of
- hard money
- Ton of debt
23Navigation Acts (1651, 1660, 1663)
- Terms
- All imported goods to be shipped in English
vessels. - Enumerated articles could only be shipped to
England or other English colonies. - All goods imported by the colonies come through
England. - The Imperial System before 1760
- The benefits of benign neglect