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Chapter 3, Section 3

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Chapter 3, Section 3 The Middle Colonies New York and New Jersey New Netherland was founded in 1613 as a trading post with the Iroquois Town of New Amsterdam on the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 3, Section 3


1
Chapter 3, Section 3
  • The Middle Colonies

2
New York and New Jersey
  • New Netherland was founded in 1613 as a trading
    post with the Iroquois
  • Town of New Amsterdam on the island of Manhattan
    was the center
  • General land grants and religious toleration
    brought Jews, French Huguenots, Puritans, and
    others to the colony
  • Peter Stuyvesant led the colony beginning in 1647

3
New York and New Jersey
  • New Amsterdam was captured by the English in 1664
    and renamed New York
  • New Amsterdam was renamed New York City
  • Sir George Carteret and Lord John Berkeley were
    made proprietors of New Jersey by the Duke of
    York
  • This colony occupied lands between the Hudson and
    Delaware Rivers
  • Diverse population Dutch, Swedes, Finns, and
    Scots
  • Fur trade was very important to the colonies of
    New York and New Jersey

4
Penns Colony
  • Quakers
  • Also called Society of Friends, made up one of
    the largest religious groups in New Jersey
  • Did not follow formal religious practices
  • Dressed plainly
  • Believed men and women were equal before God
  • Supported nonviolence and religious toleration
  • Their beliefs were shocking and they were
    persecuted in Europe and America

5
Penns Colony
  • William Penn
  • Proprietor of the New Jersey colony and a Quaker
  • Wanted to create a larger colony under his own
    control as a refuge for Quakers
  • 1681, King Charles II granted William Penn a
    charter to begin a colony west of New Jersey and
    Pennsylvania was born

6
Penns Colony
  • Pennsylvania
  • Grew rapidly
  • Penn limited his own power and created an elected
    assembly
  • Promised religious freedom to all Christians
  • Made Pennsylvania an important example of
    representative self-government
  • A government that reflects the will of the people
  • Penn named the capital Philadelphia which means
    city of brotherly love

7
The Economy of the Middle Colonies
  • Combined characteristics of the New England
    colonies and the Southern Colonies
  • Good climate and rich soil allowed farmers to
    grow staple crops
  • Crops that are always needed
  • Included wheat, barley, oats
  • Also raised livestock

8
The Economy of the Middle Colonies
  • Slaves were somewhat more important in the middle
    colonies than in the New England colonies.
  • Worked in cities as skilled laborers
  • Worked on farms
  • Most labor needs were filled by indentured
    servants
  • 1700-1775, about 135,000 indentured servants came
    to the middle colonies

9
The Economy of the Middle Colonies
  • Trade
  • Colonial goods exported to markets in Britain and
    the West Indies
  • Women
  • Important to the economy of the Middle Colonies
  • Ran farms and businesses
  • Practiced medicine
  • Colonial laws limited their economic
    opportunities
  • Most worked in the home
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