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Life in the American Colonies

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Life in the American Colonies 1680-1775 VA, MA, PA, NC and MD: largest populations by 1775. Since 1760, the overall population had increased by almost 1 million ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life in the American Colonies


1
Life in the American Colonies
  • 1680-1775

2
  • VA, MA, PA, NC and MD largest populations by
    1775.
  • Since 1760, the overall population had increased
    by almost 1 million people largely because of a
    high birthrate.
  • It was not uncommon for a man to go through
    several wives because they often died in
    childbirth.
  • Most of this population lived in rural areas.

3
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4
Ethnic Composition of the Colonies
  • English largest ethnic group
  • Many Germans moved to Pennsylvania
  • Large number of Scotch-Irish lived along the
    frontier
  • Largest non-English group was African, most of
    whom were slaves. The vast majority of
    African-Americans lived in the South.

5
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6
Social Organization
  • Aristocrats including merchants, officials and
    clergymen
  • Lesser professionals
  • Yeoman farmers
  • Manual workers and hired hands
  • Indentured servants and criminals
  • African-American slaves

7
A New England kitchen. A hundred years
agoDigital ID (digital file from bw film copy
neg.) cph 3a05604 http//hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3
a05604 Reproduction Number LC-USZ62-1857 (bw
film copy neg.) Repository Library of Congress
Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
20540 USA
8
Sack Back Gown and Matching Petticoats. Brocaded
silk taffeta, linen bodice and sleeve linings,
made in England or Virginia by Elizabeth
Dandridge Aylett Henley.G1975-340.
9
Mrs. Gavin Lawson (Susannah Rose) by John
Hesselius. Oil on Canvas. Virginia, dated 1770.
Mrs. Lawson wife of a planter and merchant of
Stafford County, Virginia, wears a satin gown
with stomacher front, fine lace, and pearls.
1954-262.
10
Everyday Life
  • Medicine Bleeding was a common practice. Barbers
    and physicians practiced medicine.
  • Sanitation was poor. Smallpox was common. No
    running water or plumbing. Trash often thrown in
    the streets.
  • Transportation Poor system of roads making long
    distance communication difficult. Taverns along
    roads were important places for gossip and
    information.
  • Food was abundant. America provided fertile land
    and ample hunting grounds.
  • Amusement House raisings, quilting bees and
    other work opportunities allowed people to
    gather. Religion was very important and provided
    another gathering place.

11
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12
Leeches could ingest ten times their weight in a
patient's blood.
13
Instruments used for bloodletting were often
crude and unsanitary.
14
The eighteenth-century version of the universal
cure was bloodletting. The genuine physician and
the quack alike resorted to it in cases from
brain fever to broken legs, colic to cancer.
15
An early version of a hack saw was also used by a
surgeon.
16
Work
  • Most individuals were farmers. Land was cheap and
    abundant.
  • Lumbering was most important manufacturing
    activity.
  • Triangle Trade
  • Source Florida Virtual School

17
Religion
                                  
  • Two established religions (1775) - Anglican and
    Congregational
  • Roman Catholics were discriminated against.
  • Salem Witch Trials occurred in 1692
  • Great Awakening - This religious revival was
    America's first mass movement. Two clergymen who
    helped lead this mass wave of evangelism were
    Jonathan Edwards and Cotton Mather.

18
Education
  • New England Primary and secondary schools were
    established early so individuals could read their
    Bible.
  • South Mass education not common. Wealthier
    families used tutors.
  • New England College education important. Harvard
    University was founded in 1636 partially to train
    new clergy. Many families sent their children to
    England for study.

19
Art and Literature
  • Art was not a major concern in early America.
  • Architecture was modeled after England.
  • Literature was mainly theological in nature.
    Jonathan Edwards was one of the main authors.
  • Benjamin Franklin wrote Poor Richard's Almanack
    that was known for its pithy sayings like Waste
    Not, Want Not.
  • Franklin set up the first privately supported
    library in America.
  • Printing presses and newspapers were common.

20
Politics
  • By the Revolution, eight colonies had royal
    governors, three had proprietors who chose
    governors, and two elected their own governors.
  • Almost all colonies had a two-house legislative
    body.
  • London did not spend a lot of time administering
    the colonies. This was known as 'salutary
    neglect.'
  • Local government varied. In the South, counties
    ruled. In New England, the citizens participated
    in town meetings (direct democracy).
  • A tradition of self-rule became grounded in the
    colonies.
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