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Title: Bellwork


1
Bellwork
  • In an earlier lesson, we discussed that Virginia
    already began using indentured servants for
    labor. Do you think that using indentured
    servants may have affected the later use of
    slaves in the south? What do you think the
    difference between an indentured servant and
    slave is?

2
American History
  • Section 5, Unit 2
  • Southern Colonies

3
Objectives
  • Map where the southern colonies are located
  • Identify the cultural characteristics of these
    colonies
  • Explain how agriculture became the main economic
    force in these southern colonies
  • Identify why indentured servitude began to end
    and how slavery- along racial lines- formed after
    Bacons Rebellion.

4
The Chesapeake
  • Within 25 years of Jamestowns founding, Virginia
    was a thriving colony with a population of 2,500.
  • Tobacco fueled the colony, with production rising
    to about 50,000 lbs in 1618 to more than 1
    million lbs in the late 1630s.
  • The promise of huge profits led many wealthy
    Englishmen to establish a colony in the
    Chesapeake the land surrounding the Chesapeake
    Bay.

5
Chesapeake Bay
6
House of Burgesses
  • Within 25 years of Jamestown, the Virginia
    Company established the House of Burgesses. It
    was the first elected assembly of representatives
    in North America and its first meeting was in
    Jamestown.

7
House of Burgesses
  • It was established to encourage English craftsmen
    to settle in North America and to make conditions
    more agreeable for its current inhabitants.
  • Between the House and the beliefs of wealth,
    Virginia began to grow even more so overtime.

8
Cecilius Calvert
  • Cecilius Calvert became the owner and proprietor
    of millions of acres of the upper Chesapeake Bay
    thanks to Charles I.
  • He created a colony and named it Maryland, after
    Charles French wife, Henrietta Maria.
  • As proprietor, Calvert was free to dispose of the
    land and to govern within guidelines as he
    wished.

9
Calvert's Goals
  • Calvert wanted to create a haven for fellow Roman
    Catholics in a largely Protestant England and
    America.
  • However, he also hoped to make money.
  • Because there were not enough Catholic immigrants
    to America to make Maryland profitable, he opened
    his colony to Protestants.
  • Overtime, Protestants outnumbered Catholics in
    this once Catholic-only colony.

Question How do you think too many Protestants
would affect the colony?
10
Toleration Acts
  • In 1649, Calvert passed The Toleration Act of
    1649, which guaranteed religious freedom to all
    Christians.

...no person or persons...professing to believe
in Jesus Christ, shall from henceforth be anyways
troubled, Molested or discountenanced for or in
respect of his or her religion nor in the free
exercise thereof within this Province...
Maryland Toleration Act, 1649
11
Toleration Acts
  • The Acts created the first legal limitations on
    hate speech in the world.
  • It made it a crime for anyone to blaspheme the
    trinity or divinity of Jesus.
  • It allowed for the freedom of worship, but
    punished anyone who denied the divinity of Jesus.

12
Toleration Acts
  • The Toleration Act would set a precedent for
    future laws concerning Free Speech (such as the
    First Amendment) and separation of church and
    state.
  • While the Toleration Acts did not secure
    religious freedom and while it included severe
    punishments it was the first law to predate the
    Enlightenment that guaranteed at least some form
    of religious freedom.

13
Population
  • Catholic and Protestant settlers in Maryland
    began to follow Virginias lead and devoted much
    of their land to the production of tobacco.
  • As a result, the cultures of the areas became
    quite distinct in the Chesapeake.

14
Population
  • Most white colonists in the Chesapeake came as
    indentured servants.
  • Many came because they could not find work in
    England.
  • However, not all came willingly. Some people-
    including children- were kidnapped off the
    streets of London to meet the demand for labor.
  • By the 1700s, England also sent almost
    30,000-50,000 convicts to work in the Chesapeake.

15
Population
  • Of the colonists who came as indentured servants,
    some 75 were men or boys between 15-24 years
    old.
  • In 1704, Maryland had a population of men that
    was three times as large as women. Because of the
    population differences, most men were never
    married.

Indentured servant cutting wood.
16
Death and Population
  • High death rates also heavily affected the
    population. Throughout the 1600s, typhoid,
    malaria, and other diseases ravaged the colonies.
    Up to 55 of those born in the Chesapeake died
    before age 20.
  • However, life expectancy improved near the 18th
    century as the number of native-born colonists-
    with better immunity- began to increase.

17
Effects of high death rates
  • Question What effect might high death rates have
    on marriage in the Chesapeake?
  • The high death rates gave rise to family patterns
    very different than those in New England. New
    England had low death rates, meaning that most
    people only married once.

18
Death rates
  • In the Chesapeake, however, one partner in most
    marriages died within 7 or 8 years of marrying
    and, most of the time, the surviving partner
    remarried.
  • As a result, most families included stepparents,
    stepsiblings, half siblings, and even orphans of
    dead relatives, which was very different from the
    New England-style family.

19
Rural Society
  • The vast majority of colonists in the Chesapeake
    lived on widely scattered farms and plantations.
  • They produced tobacco for export and grew or made
    many of the things they needed.
  • Away from the coasts, poor settlers mostly grew
    corn and vegetables, kept a some domestic
    animals, and hunted.

20
Society
  • Most large plantations were near the many rivers
    that flow into the Chesapeake Bay.
  • Originally, English trading ships stopped at the
    planters docks to collect tobacco and deliver
    goods.
  • However, Scottish traders began to set up stores
    elsewhere and would trade tobacco.

21
Towns
  • Because most traders/planters did not have to go
    to a central location to trade, towns did not
    grow as large.
  • By 1750, the only large town was Baltimore,
    Maryland.
  • Without towns, the Chesapeake was slow to develop
    a substantial class of independent artisans and
    shopkeepers.

22
Education
  • Because of the lack of towns, education was
    hindered.
  • Education was left to individual families who
    either taught their own children or hired tutors.
  • Wealthy families ensured their children were
    educated, but did not help support schooling for
    others.

William Berkeley
23
Education (cont.)
  • However, the culture of the Chesapeake may have
    had a role to play as well. In fact, in 1671,
    Virginia Governor William Berkley proudly claimed
    to English government that Virginia had no free
    schools nor printing, and I hope we shall not
    have these for a hundreds years.
  • Many of those in the Chesapeake believed that
    schools made ordinary people unfit for their
    station in life

24
Question
  • Who are indentured servants?
  • Did all indentured servants come to America
    willingly?

25
Free indentured Servants
  • A lack of schooling, however, did not stop
    colonists from questioning authority.
  • Virginia was home to an increasing number of free
    indentured servants, who would soon struggle to
    afford to live in the colonies.

26
Tobacco Prices stumble
  • In 1660, the prices of tobacco fell sharply and,
    because tobacco sold so low, most free indentured
    servants could not afford to buy their own land.
  • Many of them were forced to rent land or work as
    wage laborers for wealthy planters.
  • Landless laborers and small landowners grew
    increasingly discontented.

27
Violence
  • The workers were in debt, taxes were high, and
    they saw their legislature doing nothing to help
    them.
  • This discontent erupted in violence in 1675.
  • Many poor farmers and laborers, believing more
    land will help solve their problems, moved
    westward in Virginia to gain more land.
  • However, this land was guaranteed to the
    Powhatans in a 1646 treaty. However, the treaty
    did not stop settlers from moving onto Native
    lands.

28
Violence (cont.)
  • When the settlers moved onto Native lands, they
    killed a group of friendly Susquehannocks and,
    when no compensation was made, the Susquehannocks
    attacked outlying plantations.
  • The colonists made a call to Virginia Governor
    Berkeley and the House of Burgesses to go to war
    with the Natives.

29
Tension grows
  • When Berkeley refused to go to war with the
    Natives, farmers gathered around at the report of
    a new raiding party (a group who would attack the
    Natives).
  • They would soon be led to action by a man named
    Nathaniel Bacon.

30
Nathaniel Bacon
  • Nathaniel Bacon, a young planter and part of the
    governors council, believed it was necessary to
    attack the Natives in retaliation.
  • He formed a following and small militia, mostly
    made up of indentured servants, discontented
    laborers, and enslaved Africans.

31
Bacons Rebellion
  • Although Berkeley ordered that no one attack the
    Natives, Bacons group moved south and attacked
    the Susquehannock. They killed most of the
    villagers and burned the village.

32
Bacons Rebellion
  • When the group returned to Jamestown, they
    discovered that Berkeley had called for new
    elections in the Burgesses to better solve the
    Native problem.
  • The house had enacted a few new reforms (which
    Bacon did not attend), which limited the powers
    of the governor and restored suffrage rights to
    landless freemen (voting rights). However, the
    reforms did not quell Bacon and his men, who
    wanted more action against the Natives.

33
Bacons Rebellion (cont.)
  • After the passage of these laws, Bacon arrived
    with 500 followers to Jamestown to demand that he
    be allowed to lead a militia against the Native
    Americans.
  • The governor continued to refuse to yield.
  • When Bacon had his men aim their weapons at
    Berkeley, Berkeley bared his breast to Bacon
    and told Bacon to shoot him himself.

34
Bacons Rebellion (cont.)
  • Because the governor could not be moved, Bacon
    instead had his men aim their guns at the
    assembled burgesses, who quickly granted Bacon
    the right to have his militia.
  • By 1676, Bacon and his army of settlers had begun
    to randomly attack Natives on the frontier land,
    but were still not fully satisfied.

35
Bacons Rebellion
  • In 1676, Bacon and his army issues the
    Declaration of the People of Virginia, which
    criticized Berkeleys administration in detail
    and accused him of
  • Levying unfair taxes
  • Appointing friends to high positions
  • And failing to protect frontier settlers from
    Natives
  • In response, Bacon began to attack Natives,
    wealthy plantations, and those who assisted the
    Natives.

36
Bacons Rebellion
  • After months of conflict with Berkeleys
    administration (and the English militia that was
    there), Bacons forces of 300-500 men moved to
    Jamestown.
  • They burned the colonial capital in late-1676.
  • Berkeley attempted to retaliate, but being
    outnumbered, Berkeley retreated across the river.

37
Bacons Rebellion
  • The English eventually sent extra forces to quell
    Bacons Rebellion, but by the time they arrived,
    the rebellion had ended with the death of Bacon,
    who died of dysentery a month after burning
    Jamestown.
  • The English would stem any further rebellion and
    ultimately ordered Berkeley to return to England.

38
Causes and Effects of Bacons Rebellion
  • Causes
  • Effects
  • High taxes
  • Unfair social standings (laborers and indentured
    servants could not pay off debts)
  • Low tobacco prices made paying off debts
    difficult
  • Reluctance of Virginias government to attack the
    Natives and expand westward
  • The House of Burgesses would quietly cut taxes
    and open Indian lands to colonists
  • Bacons Rebellion may have caused a hardening of
    racial tensions between whites and blacks.

39
Slavery
  • While Bacons Rebellion was short-lived, it had
    one far reaching effect it strengthened the move
    from indentured labor to slave labor.
  • More indentured servants ultimately meant more
    discounted freed servants (once they paid their
    debts).

40
Slavery
  • Slaves, however, did not pose this problem.
  • Slaves were property and could be freely traded
    between owners.
  • Slave status was also hereditary, meaning that
    the children of slaves were also slaves.
  • Unless a owner released their slaves (or a slave
    ran away), they normally could not become free.

41
Slavery
  • Slaves were becoming more plentiful around the
    late 17th century and they were cheaper than
    indentured servants.
  • As employment opportunities increased in England,
    fewer people were willing to become indentured
    servants.
  • However, slaves would soon replace the need for
    those servants.

42
Effect of Bacons Rebellion
  • The rebellion most likely hastened the hardening
    of racial lines associated with slavery.
  • The belief among planters at the time was that
    they may not be able to control poor white
    people, but they may be able to control poor
    blacks more easily.

43
Growth of Racism
  • This belief system would, overtime, soon turn
    into a full-fledged racist belief system of white
    superiority.
  • Consider this when you dehumanize a group long
    enough, it becomes easy to see how another group
    could see themselves as superior.
  • In another words, they might be slaves because
    they deserve it or are simply lesser.

44
Brief History of Slavery
  • The first Africans brought to the Chesapeake were
    indentured servants and, after they paid their
    debt, where free to work for themselves.
  • However, by 1640, some Africans were now becoming
    slaves rather than servants.
  • This trend would only increase overtime.

45
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • During the early years of the slave trade,
    African traders sold criminals and war captives
    to European colonists.
  • However, as the demand for plantation workers, in
    both Spanish America and British America
    increased, African raiders moved farther inland
    to capture slaves.
  • They would raid entire villages and move them
    from farther inland Africa to the western
    seaboard.

46
The Atlantic Slave Trade
  • Between 1500-1600, the Atlantic Slave Trade
    became a massive enterprise that transported
    nearly 300,000 slaves to the Americas. By 1870,
    that number rose to 9.5 million Africans shipped
    to the Americas.
  • Only about 5 of all slaves traded ended up in
    the United States.
  • Video Crash Course history on the Atlantic Slave
    Trade
  • Questions How did slavery change over time? How
    did Europeans begin to base slavery on skin
    color?

47
Middle Passage
  • African slave trading occurred in a triangular
    fashion.
  • The main leg of the trade, the Middle Passage,
    was the direct route of slaves to the Americas,
    primarily to the West Indies and the Chesapeake
    area.

48
Slave Experience
  • Many captives killed themselves before actually
    being shipped off.
  • For those who did not, they often suffocated,
    died of disease, or experienced violence on the
    ships they were on
  • Conditions were generally horrific, as people
    were stacked on top of one another and could
    barely move during the entire trip.

49
Olaudah Equiano
  • Olaudah Equiano was a kidnapped African who
    experienced first hand the Middle Passage and
    its horrors.
  • (we will see this on the next slide)
  • Overtime, he did earn his freedom and became an
    early abolitionist of slavery.

50
Description of the Middle Passage
  • There I received such a salutation in my
    nostrils as I had never experienced in my life.
    With the loathesomeness of the stench and the
    crying together, I became so sick and low that I
    was not able to eat, nor had I the least desire
    to taste anything. I now wished for the last
    friend, Death, to relieve me Soon, to my grief,
    two of the white men offered me eatables and on
    my refusing to eat, one of them held me fast by
    the hands and laid me across the windlass and
    tied my feet while the other flogged me severely.
    I had never experienced anything of this kind
    before. If I could have gotten over the nettings,
    I would have jumped over the side, but I could
    not. The crew used to watch very closely those of
    us who were not chained down to the decks, lest
    we should leap into the water. I have seen some
    of these poor African prisoners most severely cut
    for attempting to do so, and hourly whipped for
    not eating.-- Equiano

51
Question
  • How would the cruelty of the Middle Passage been
    preparing captives for the life of slavery in the
    Americas?

52
Abolitionists
  • Equiano was not the only person to speak out
    against slavery.
  • Other blacks and some white colonists denounced
    slavery these people were referred to as
    Abolitionists (because they wanted slavery
    abolished).

53
Quakers
  • The abolitionist movement did not become a force
    until a sect of protestants- the Quakers (or
    Religious Society of Friends)- took a public
    stand against slavery in 1688.
  • They published an anti-slavery pamphlet called
    The Selling of Joseph, in which they described
    all men as equal, being the Sons of Adam.

54
Quakers
  • By the mid-1700s, most Quakers condemned
    slavery.
  • Quakers even urged that those who do not agree
    with slavery to no longer buy products made by
    slaves.
  • The belief was that with enough economic
    incentive, slaveholders would eventually stop
    using slave labor.

55
Slave Codes
  • Despite the protests, slavery was practiced in
    all English colonies.
  • As Africans became more numerous after 1660, they
    were required by law to be treated inferior to
    whites.
  • These would be known as the slave codes.

56
Purpose of Slave Codes
  • The slave codes were designed to prevent escape
    and discourage revolt.
  • The codes forbade slaves to meet together, leave
    the plantation, learn to read or write, or own
    weapons.
  • The codes even protected slave masters that
    killed a slave while correcting their behavior.

57
Effective of the Codes
  • The harsh rules did not entirely prevent
    rebellion
  • New slaves often ran away and there were some
    uprisings
  • In 1739, slaves killed some 30 whites before a
    militia quelled the uprising. The slaves who
    survived were put to death in harsh ways.
  • Uprsings often lead to harsher conditions for
    slaves and new methods of controlling the slaves.

58
The Colonies
  • Slavery would continue to be a issue surrounding
    the southern colonies for another century.
  • However, overtime, many colonies would soon
    become less dependent on slavery as their
    economies grew out of requiring agricultural work
    and instead focus on trade.

59
Review Objectives
  • Map where the southern colonies are located
  • Identify the cultural characteristics of these
    colonies
  • Explain how agriculture became the main economic
    force in these southern colonies
  • Identify why indentured servitude began to end
    and how slavery- along racial lines- formed after
    Bacons Rebellion.

60
Questions
  • If you have any questions, please ask now.

61
Next Lesson
  • In the next lesson, we are going to discuss
    post-restoration colonies.

62
Review
  1. What was the effect of Bacons Rebellion on
    slavery and racial tensions?
  2. What were conditions like for slaves while they
    were being transported to the Americas? Describe
    them.
  3. If the Chesapeake had more towns and required
    less agricultural labor, do you think they would
    still require slaves? Why or why not?
  4. Why did Bacons rebellion occur what were the
    protesters upset about?
  5. Name at least two benefits of slave labor that
    made it more feasible than indentured servitude.
    Explain each benefit.
  6. Why did the population of the Chesapeake have
    little formal education? How did wealthy families
    solve this for themselves?
  7. Why did the Quakers oppose slavery? What were the
    people who opposed slavery called as a whole?
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