Colonial Beginnings (Continued) Flashcards

1
Q

What was the Virginia House of Burgesses?

A

The Virginia House of Burgesses was the first English lawmaking body in the New World.

Twelve years after the founding of the Jamestown Colony, the Virginia Company sought to encourage colonization in Virginia by establishing a lawmaking body, which allowed the populace to govern itself.

The current lower house of Virginia’s General Assembly is a direct descendant of the original House of Burgesses.

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2
Q

How did tobacco influence the Chesapeake colonies?

A

John Rolfe introduced tobacco to Virginia, which created a virtual boom economy in the Chesapeake region. The labor-intensive cultivation of tobacco led to the growth of slavery in the Chesapeake colonies.

A tobacco blend developed by John Rolfe and his wife, Pocahontas, proved particularly popular in England.

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3
Q

Who founded the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies?

A

The Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies were founded by Puritan Separatists. The English allowed the troublemaking Puritan Separatists to settle in the New World as an easy means of getting them out of the way.

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4
Q

As the second governor of the Plymouth Bay Colony, _____ _____ guided the colony through its early years.

A

William Bradford

Bradford led the Plymouth Bay Colony as its governor for a period of almost thirty years. Bradford composed a history of the colony, Of Plymouth Plantation.

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5
Q

Who were the Puritans?

A

The Puritans sought to “purify” Christian religious practices, and constituted a threat to the Church of England. A subset of these Puritans, known as Separatists, sought to leave the Church of England entirely.

The Church of England had been founded by English monarch Henry VIII, so that he could divorce his wife, free from papal interference. As the religious embodiment of the King, any threat to the Church of England was a threat to the King himself.

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6
Q

What was the governing document of the Plymouth Colony?

A

Aboard the Mayflower, the Puritan Separatists signed the Mayflower Compact (1620), which established majority rule and self-government for the Plymouth Colony.

Historians typically refer to these Puritan Separatists as “Pilgrims,” because their trip was religiously motivated, and thus was a pilgrimage.

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7
Q

What was the Great Migration?

A

The Great Migration was the first large-scale influx of settlers to the New World. Fleeing a civil war in England, Puritans under John Winthrop established numerous settlements in Massachusetts, including Boston.

The influx of new settlers led to an expanded government for what was now the colony of Massachusetts.

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8
Q

What was John Winthrop’s vision for the Puritan colonies of Massachusetts?

A

Winthrop viewed the new community “city upon a hill,” watched by the world and blessed by God for living in godly manner.

Winthrop’s sermon gave rise to the widespread belief that the United States of America is God’s country, an early example of American exceptionalism.

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9
Q

After the Great Migration, how did democracy function in Massachusetts?

A

All male members of the Puritan church had the right to elect the governor, the governor’s assistants, and a representative assembly.

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10
Q

Describe relations between the English settlers and the Indians.

A

Initially, the English settlers and Indians coexisted peacefully. The Indians taught the English farming methods and introduced them to new crops, and the English traded tools and weapons with the Indians for furs.

However, as the English sought more land, they began to view the Indians as primitive. Many believed that God had destined them to take territory from the Indians.

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11
Q

How were royal colonies governed?

A

Royal colonies were governed directly by the King of England.

New Hampshire was a royal colony. Virginia too became a royal colony after the Virginia Company (a joint-stock company) declared bankruptcy.

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12
Q

What were corporate colonies?

A

Corporate colonies were colonies operated by joint-stock companies under a charter from the King of England.

Prior to the bankruptcy of its joint-stock company, Jamestown was a corporate colony.

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13
Q

How were proprietary colonies administered?

A

Proprietary colonies were privately administered by individuals who received a charter from the King.

Maryland was a proprietary colony of Lord Baltimore, who received a charter from King James I. Pennsylvania was William Penn’s proprietary colony.

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14
Q

What was the headright system?

A

Under the headright system, Virginia provided 50 acres of land to any landowner who paid an immigrant’s passage, or to any immigrants who paid their own passage.

The headright system was designed to offset a severe labor shortage in colonial Virginia, but was not entirely successful. Many Virginia farmers turned to slavery to provide the needed labor.

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15
Q

What was Bacon’s Rebellion?

A

After Virginia’s governor, William Berkeley, failed to respond to Indian attacks on the frontier, impoverished farmer Nathaniel Bacon led a group of former indentured servants and blacks in an attack on Jamestown in 1676, burning it to the ground.

Bacon and his followers were aggrieved that political power in the colonial government was in the hands of a few wealthy landowners. The rebellion collapsed when Bacon died of dysentery.

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16
Q

How did slavery develop in Virginia?

A

Initially few blacks were imported into Virginia, and by 1650 there were only 400 slaves in the colony. Over the next few decades, however, Virginia landowners began growing rice and indigo in large quantities, which required large amounts of unskilled labor, and slavery increased.

17
Q

Which colony was established as a refuge for Catholics who refused to join the Church of England?

A

Maryland, a proprietary colony received by Lord Baltimore from King James I.

18
Q

Why did Lord Baltimore convince the Maryland Legislature to pass the Acts of Toleration (1649)?

A

Although Lord Baltimore designated Maryland a safe haven for Catholics, the number of Protestants quickly outnumbered the colony’s few Catholics. Baltimore convinced Maryland’s representative assembly to establish an Act of Toleration, which granted religious freedom to all Christians, whether Catholic or Protestant.

The Act of Toleration was the first legislative endorsement of religious freedom in the New World, although it did call for anyone who denied Christ’s divinity to be put to death.

19
Q

What was indentured servitude?

A

Under indentured servitude, a person’s passage to the New World was paid in advance and in exchange for several years of labor.

Colonists, primarily in Maryland and Virginia, used indentured servants to fill labor shortages. Most indentured servants died before obtaining freedom.

20
Q

Who founded Connecticut?

A

Connecticut was founded as a corporate colony by Puritans from Boston.

Connecticut was the result of the 1665 merger of two colonies; Hartford, founded by Thomas Hooker in 1636, and New Haven, founded by John Davenport in 1637.

21
Q

What were the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut?

A

The Fundamental Orders of Connecticut governed the Puritan colony at Hartford. Written in 1639, the Fundamental Orders represented the first written constitution in the New World, and provided a legislative body elected by popular vote on a secret ballot, which would in turn elect Hartford’s governor.

Many of the principles of the Fundamental Orders were contained in Connecticut’s Royal Charter, granted by King Charles II. For safekeeping, the Royal Charter was kept in a Hartford tavern.

22
Q

What religious group founded Pennsylvania?

A

Pennsylvania was a proprietary colony, granted from King Charles II to William Penn, a prominent Quaker, in 1681. Although designed as a refuge for Quakers, Penn established religious freedom in Pennsylvania.

Delaware was part of Penn’s charter, but was governed by a separate legislature.

23
Q

What was unique about the status of women in Pennsylvania?

A

As part of the Quaker ethos, William Penn insisted that women in the Pennsylvania colony be given equal rights with men.

In addition, Penn provided Pennsylvania a written constitution which limited the power of government, provided a humane penal code, and guaranteed many fundamental liberties.

24
Q

Who was Roger Williams?

A

Roger Williams dissented from Puritan preaching and advocated a separation of church and state. Asked to leave Massachusetts, Williams established Providence in 1636, granting his fellow colonists complete religious freedom.

25
Q

Why was Anne Hutchinson important?

A

Hutchinson preached that she had received revelations from God, which ran contrary to Puritan teaching. Banned from Massachusetts in 1638, Hutchinson founded Portsmouth.

A few years later, Hutchinson’s colony of Portsmouth and Roger Williams’s colony of Providence were united under Williams’s control and named Rhode Island.

Rhode Island’s full name, which it bears to this day, is Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, the longest name of any state.

26
Q

Why was New Hampshire established as a royal colony by King Charles II?

A

King Charles II wanted to increase the royal presence in the colonies and established New Hampshire by separating it from Massachusetts in 1679, and declaring it a royal colony. It was the last colony established in New England.

27
Q

Where did the Dutch place their colonies?

A

The Dutch placed their colonies along the Hudson River (named for Dutch explorer Henry Hudson, who discovered it). The primary Dutch colony was New Amsterdam, modern-day New York, and Albany, farther up the Hudson.

The Dutch also lay claim to much of what is today New Jersey.

28
Q

How did Dutch colonization of North America end?

A

King Charles II gave his brother James, Duke of York (later King James II), control over the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam if he could conquer it. The colony was captured by the English in 1664.

The colony, renamed New York, was governed as a royal colony once James II became king. Later, New York and New Jersey would be separately created out of the conquered territory.

29
Q

What type of colonies were the Carolinas?

A

Originally one colony, the Carolinas were a proprietary colony, with a charter granted to eight nobles who’d helped King Charles II regain the throne in 1663.

30
Q

What problems affected the Jamestown Colony?

A

Jamestown’s problems included:

disease: the colony was built in a low-lying, marshy area
food shortages: many settlers wanted to search for gold instead of growing crops or hunting
labor shortages: many former merchant settlers were unused to physical labor
Under John Smith’s policy of “no work, no food” Jamestown’s conditions improved for a while, but then deteriorated during the “starving time.”