America Pathway Tto The Present Chp2-3
1. (A) Reformation- a new complication arose in the early 1500s, when a
powerful religious movement, the Reformation, brought bitter divisions to
Europe. During the Reformation, a new Christian faith, called Protestantism,
developed in protest against what was seen as the corruption and inadequery of
Catholic Church. Because the English were Protestant and the Irish were
Catholic, the Reformation also heightened the conflict between the English and
the Irish. (B) Joint Stock Company-They called the new village Jamestown in
honor of their king, James I. The land itself they called Virginia, after their
last ruler, Elizabeth, who had never married and bore the title “Virgin Queen.”
The 104 adventures who started the colony were shareholders in the Virginia
Company, a joint stock company established in London in 1606. Investors, or
shareholders, who each contributed money to the cots of an enterprise, and
expected a share of profit, organized joint stock companies like the Virginia
Company. Most of the investors in Virginia Company remained in England. But
young men could earn a share by simply paying their way to Virginia. At first
the colony was made up exclusively of men; women and children eventually
followed. (C) Indentured Servants- To produce tobacco, planters needed people to
work the fields. During the first sixty years after the founding of the colony,
they turned primarily to indentured servants from England. These were people who
had to work for a master for a period of time, usually seven years, under a
contract called an indenture. In return for their work, their master paid the
cost of their voyage to Virginia and gave them food and shelter. Some indentures
promised a piece of land to the servant at the end of the indentured period.
Historians estimate that between 100,000 and 150,000 men and women came as
servants to work in the fields of Virginia and Maryland during the 1600s. Most
of them were eighteen to twenty-two years of age, unmarried, and poor. Few of
the indentured servants lived long enough to claim their land at the end of
their service. Exposure to the climate and diseases of the Chesapeake Bay killed
them in horrendous numbers. (D) Enclosure Movement- Land owners had found that
they could make more money from raising livestock than they could collect rent
from tenant farmers. The landowners forced their tenants to leave and turned
fields into pasture, or enclosed them. Many people in Europe lost their homes as
a result of this enclosure movement. Thus, England was swarming with young
people in search of food and work. Called, “masterless” men and women because
they had no master, or employer, they had few other choices besides signing
indentures to work for land in Virginia. 2. (A) Powhatan- Most of them
recognized the authority of one powerful group, the Pamunkey people. They
particularly honored the Pamunkey leader, Powhatan. Paying him tribute- =a kind
of tax-in skins, beads, and food. Within weeks of the first attack on the
English, several Englishmen traveled to neighboring Native American villages to
offer tribute of their own and to persuade the Native American that their
intentions in settling in the area were good. Powhatan had every reason to
distrust those intentions. The Spanish had captured Powhatan’s brother,
Opechancanough, in the 1560s. Doubtless Opechancanough and Powhatan understood
well that the settlement was a threat to their people’s way of life. (B) John
Smith- The Adventures had migrated to Virginia to become wealthy by living off
the work of others. In Europe wealthy landowners did little physical work. When
me who were or wanted to be gentlemen came to Virginia, their leader John Smith
found it difficult to get them to work at all. Even when they were starving,
many men simply refused to compromise their image of themselves as gentlemen by
growing corn. In 1608 smith warned them: You must obey this now for a law, that
he that will not work shall not eat… for the labors of thirty or forty honest
and industrious men shall not be consumed to maintain a hundred and fifty idle
loiterers. 3. The English based their pattern of conquest on their experiences
in Ireland, the island nation off their western coast. For centuries, English
rulers had been trying to assert control in this neighboring land, and the Irish
people and steadily resisted. A new complication arose in the early 1500s, when
a powerful religious movement, the Reformation, brought bitter divisions to
Europe. During the Reformation, a new Christian faith, called Protestantism,
developed in protest against what was seen as the corruption and inadequacy of
Catholic Church. Because the English were Protestant and the Irish were
Catholic, the Reformation also heightened the conflict between the English and
the Irish.
The English put down Irish resistance to this invasion with stern
measures, repeatedly taking land away from the native Irish. During this
colonizing effort, the English developed a harsh attitude toward conquered
peoples. In their experience, it was best to remake completely any cultured
conquered. They did not practice the forced blending of European and Native
American societies that was taking place across the Atlantic in the colonies of
the Spanish. For the English, conquest would be all—or nothing. This is one
reason why people descended from Native Americans make up only a small part of
the population of the United States today. 4. In its first decade, starvation
was common; the settlers even resorted to cannibalism. One particularly
difficult period from October 1609 to March 1610 was remembered as the Starving
Time. Disease, too struck the English hard. Because they lived near and drew
their water from swamps and pools of standing water where disease-carrying
mosquitoes bred, the colonists suffered from dysentery, typhus, and malaria. The
Adventures had migrated to Virginia to become wealthy by living off the work of
others. In Europe wealthy landowners did little physical work. When me who were
or wanted to be gentlemen came to Virginia, their leader John Smith found it
difficult to get them to work at all. Even when they were starving, many men
simply refused to compromise their image of themselves as gentlemen by growing
corn. In 1608 smith warned them: You must obey this now for a law, that he that
will not work shall not eat… for the labors of thirty or forty honest and
industrious men shall not be consumed to maintain a hundred and fifty idle
loiterers. 5. In 1676 one planter, Nathaniel Bacon, raised an unauthorized force
to drive the Native Americans farther west and take their land. He and his
followers were frustrated because the best tobacco land had been already taken
by the wealthy. The Virginia governor William Berkeley gathered an army to stop
Bacon. When this happened, Bacon changed his plans and attacked Jamestown
instead. In a manifesto, or statement of newly rich planters a “cabal,” or
secret conspiracy, acting against the best interest of the public. 6.
Words: 1151
|