Title: Colonial America
1Colonial America
- New England Colonies
- Middle Colonies
- Southern Colonies
English Settlement of the New World
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3New England Colonies
Colony Reason Founded Date founded
Massachusetts Religious freedom 1620
New Hampshire Trade/fishing 1623
Connecticut Religious freedom trade 1636
Rhode Island Religious freedom 1636
4Life in New England
- Climate in New England
- Rocky land made farming difficult. Most farmers
grew enough to feed their families. - Exporting timber became a major source of income
for New Englanders - Ship building and fishing
- Religious groups present Separatists, Puritans,
Church of England
5Life in the New England Colonies
- Education public schools towns with 50 or more
people had to hire a schoolmaster - Famous People John Winthrop (leader of the
Puritans), Roger Williams (founder of Rhode
Island to escape the Puritans) - Government towns and cities were centers of
government - Leisure time most of their time was spent in
Church. They had very little time for other
leisure activities.
6Middle Colonies
Colony Reason Founded Date Founded
New York Trade 1664
New Jersey Trade 1664
Delaware Trade 1664
Pennsylvania Religious and Political freedom 1682
7Life in the Middle Colonies
- Diverse population a large number of settlers
came from Ireland, Germany and Scotland most
free Africans lived in this area - Land was made up of rich farmland thus farms
produced enough food to feed many people in New
England and the South. - Farming, Mining and textiles were the mainstay of
their economy
8Life in the Middle Colonies
- Religious groups Quakers, Dutch Protestant,
Jewish - Education Private Schools Apprentices.
- Famous People William Penn, Benjamin Franklin.
- Government Counties were centers of local
governments because towns were too small. Each
state had a legislature. - Leisure time hunting for sport not food
9Southern Colonies
Colony Reason Founded Date Founded
Virginia Trade/farming 1607
Maryland Religious freedom 1634
North Carolina Trade/farming 1663
South Carolina Trade/farming 1663
Georgia Home for debtors 1732
10Life in the Southern Colonies
- 3 distinct areas mountains, piedmont, coastal
plain - Farms in the interior of the colonies tended to
be small due to heavy forests. - Large landowners were in the coastal plain
region. - Plantation system slaves, artisans, cash crops
11Life in the Southern Colonies
- Education wealthy people hired private teachers
or sent their children to European schools - Religious groups Catholic (MD), Jewish (GA),
Church of England - Leisure time fox hunting, horse racing, harvest
parties - Famous people Lord Baltimore (lived in
Maryland passed a law called the Act of
Toleration which guaranteed religious freedom)
James Oglethorpe - Government State legislatures white, male,
property owners that are 21 or older may vote
12Georgia
13Venn Diagram 3 Types of Colonies in North America
New England
Middle
Southern
14James Edward Oglethorpe
- Wealthy, member of House of Commons (British
Parliament). - Worked on prison reform in England especially for
people who could not pay their debts. - Oglethorpe and 20 other men proposed another
colony to King George II
15Reasons for settlement of GA
- Allow people of England who could not pay their
debts a new beginning in a new colony - Act as a buffer between the Carolinas and the
Spanish who controlled Florida - Produce items such as silk, cotton dyes and wine
all products that England had to import from
other countries
16Georgias Charter
- June 7, 1732 King George II granted a charter
making Oglethorpe and his group responsible for
settling GA and managing it for 21 years - No Catholics
- No slavery
- No liquor
- No lawyers
17Chief Tomochichi
- Settlers left London on the ship Ann
- Approximately 114-125 people were aboard Ann
- Before settling in Georgia Oglethorpe had to make
friends with the Yamacraw Indians through their
chief, Tomochichi - February 12, 1733 the passengers were allowed to
land on Yamacraw Bluff overlooking the Savannah
River
18Savannah
- Oglethorpe, Colonel William Bull and Noble Jones
designed the city of Savannah - The city was divided into squares. On the north
and south sides of each square were lots for
houses and small gardens the east and west sides
were set aside for buildings such a churches and
stores the middle of each square was for social,
political and religious meetings.
19Review of the Colony
- Very few debtors moved to GA
- In 1742 the colony allowed the trade of rum
- In 1750 the colony first allowed slaves
- In 1752 Georgia became a royal colony under the
rule of the King - Although the noble ideas on which Georgia was
founded were never fulfilled, the colony made
progress and survived
20Key Ideas, Terms and People
- Charter
- James Oglethorpe
- Chief Tomochichi
- Yamacraw Indians
- Savannah
- Proprietary colony
- Royal colony