Lecture ch05
Lecture ch05
Part One
Introduction
Part Two
Part Three
Indian America
Indians showed capacity to adapt and change by participating in the commercial economy, using metal tools, and building homes of logs as frontier settlers did. But, Indians also became dependent on European trade goods. Diplomatically, Indians played colonial powers off against each other. The major concern of Indians was the phenomenal growth of the colonial population in the British coastal communities. Simultaneously, Indian populations continued to decline.
New England
Puritan congregations governed local communities.
Mix of freedom and repression
Attempts to introduce religious toleration failed as other denominations practiced their faith openly by 1700. New England towns grew rapidly and the expanding population pressed against available land. By the mid-eighteenth century New England was reaching the limit of its land supply.
The Backcountry
Map: Spread of Settlement: Movement into the Backcountry, 17201760 Backcountry was a distinctive region where rank was often of little concern.
Most pioneers owned little or no land. Big men held large tracts and dominated local communities. Men were warriors; women domestic workers
Conflicts between settlers and Indians made the backcountry a violent region.
The South
The South was a triracial society of Europeans, Africans, and Indians. Large plantation homes dominated the Upper and Lower South. Small tobacco farms were widely found in the Upper South. White males dominated southern society. The Anglican Church was present in the South but had little power. In the Upper South, well-developed neighborhoods created a sense of community and white solidarity.
In the colonies, everyday life revolved around the family and kinship, the church, and the local community. Americans were attached to their regional cultures which were based on oral transmission. Community needs outweighed those of the individual. The majority of rural Americans were self-sufficient farmers who practiced diverse agriculture and engaged in crafts on the side. In cities, artisans were organized according to the European craft system. Women had few career opportunities.
Part Four
The Spanish feared depleting their population at home. The French blocked Protestant Huguenot immigration.
Social Class
Colonial America was more egalitarian than Europe. In New Spain status was based on racial purity. In New France and New Spain hereditary ranks and styles from the Old World prevailed. In the British colonies, the elite was open and based on wealth.
Social mobility was present and common. The large middle class was a new social phenomena. There was also a large lower class.
Part Five
Widespread literacy helped spread Enlightenment ideas. Traditional views also had strong popular appeal.
Colleges held to a mixture of traditional and enlightened views.
Part Six
Conclusion