From A+ Club Lesson Planner & Study Guide
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| '''US History timeline & concept chart: American colonies 17th & mid-18th centuries''' | | '''US History timeline & concept chart: American colonies 17th & mid-18th centuries''' |
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| ''article under construction''
| | {{US History timeline & concept chart introduction template}} |
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| Objective: | | == Objective == |
| * covering regional, economic, and demographic aspects of colonial expansion | | * covering regional, economic, and demographic aspects of colonial expansion |
| * timeline up to the French-Indian War (1754) | | * timeline up to the French-Indian War (1754) |
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| [[category:US History]]
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| [[category:AP United States History]]
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| [[category:US History timelines & concept charts]]
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| * [[US History]]
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| * [[AP United States History]]
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| '''Main page'''
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| * [[US History timeline & concept chart: periods, events & themes| US History timeline & concept chart: periods, events & themes main page]]
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| '''Previous timelines''':
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| * [[US History timeline & concept chart: early North American colonization]]
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| '''Next timelines''':
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| * [[US History timeline & concept chart: French-Indian War to the American Revolution]]
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| * [[US History timeline & concept chart: U.S. History Decade-by-decade timeline, 1890s-1900]]
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| == Colonial America growth == | | == Colonial America growth == |
Revision as of 00:42, 2 June 2021
US History timeline & concept chart: American colonies 17th & mid-18th centuries
Objectives:
- to help students to
- associate timelines with events, persons, themes & concepts
- associate presidents with timelines, themes & concepts
- identify timelines with BIG IDEAS across periods of US history
- find connections and common themes across US history
- easily find relevant details for larger comprehension
- to help teachers to
- quickly review US History content for lesson planning
- provide students with easy and complete reference source for US history
Click EXPAND for a note for mobile phone users (already shows on mobile)
- these timeline & concept charts use tables in order to connect ideas, timelines, and major concepts
- tables are not mobile-friendly (they do not wrap to a single column)
- when these charts are complete, we will in the future convert the charts to mobile-friendly format as an alternative file
- we encourage you to use a tablet or larger monitor in order to see the charts here
Index
Page structure & format guide
U.S. History course pages:
- covering regional, economic, and demographic aspects of colonial expansion
- timeline up to the French-Indian War (1754)
PERIOD / TIMELINE
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Major Events, Concepts & Themes
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Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events
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- 1578 Foribsher expedition to find Northwest Passage
- failed but spurred British interest in North America
- 1634 Maryland founded by Catholic George Calvart
- 1681, William Penn granted charter for Pennsylvania
- 1614 Tobacco 1st shipped to England
- 1642 English Civil War
- 1651 British Navigation Act
- 1676 Bacon's Rebellion
- 1692 Salem Witchcraft Trials
- 1721 British policy of "Salutary Neglect"
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- 1530-1680: 200,000 immigrants to colonies
- increasing diversity of migrants from England, Scotland, Ireland, Germany
- diverse origins, religions, and motives
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
- John Rolfe planted seed from Trinidad in Virginia
- 1614 fist tobacco shipment to England
- spurred colonial projection
- 1634 Maryland founded
- by Catholic George Calvert, Lord Baltimore; granted by English King Charles I
- first prioprietary colony = owned and governed by an individual
British governance of early colonies[edit | edit source]
- up until 1763, Britain largely ruled the colonies indirectly
- events leading up to and after the English Civil War occupied British attentions outside of the colonies
- English Civil War
- Glorious Revolution
- Restoration
- the primary method of governance was through charters, grants and trade regulations
- King James II's 1686 attempt to impose more direct rule of the colonies by revoking existing charters of most northeastern colonies into the "Dominion of New England" failed (see below)
Royal charters & mercantilism[edit | edit source]
- colonial reorganization
- in order to control the colonial possessions, the British government/ King created or reorganized colonial charters
- Plymouth colony, for example, never received a Royal charter and thus lacked legal standing after dissolution of the Dominion of New England in 1689
- and the Massachusetts Bay Colony's charter was revoked by James II
- the British "Lords of Trade" incorporated them in 1691 into Province of Massachusetts Bay along with coast islands and most of modern Maine (but without New Hampshire)
- in response to colonial resistance of the Navigation Acts, as well as in order to more directly rule the region
- in 1686 King James II reorganized various New England and Mid-Atlantic colonial entities into the Dominion of New England
- the proprietary colonies of Delaware and Pennsylvania were excepted
- especially targeted was the Massachusetts Bay Colony and Boston merchants for resisting the Navigation Acts
- colonial resistance:
- resented the revocation of their charters
- and feared that the English King was trying to impose the Church of England
- the 1689 Boston revolt and Leisler Rebellion (in New York) resisted Dominion rule
- the Dominion was dismantled in 1689 and new charters were granted after the Glorious Revolution under William & Mary
- mercantilism
- European political and economic policy of forcing colonial possessions to trade directly with the home country and not others
- Navigation Act of 1651
- required that all trade to/from colonies had to be conducted on English ships
- designed to force American colonists to trade directly with England
- was mostly targeted at colonial trade with the Dutch, which the English wanted to halt
- the Act contributed to the Anglo-Dutch war of 1652-54 (impacted colonial trade but no battles in North America)
- Navigation Acts of 1651, 1660 & 1696
- targeted specific goods that were to be transported only on English ships
- including: sugar, tobacco, fabric, indigo (dye), ginger
- required that ships trading with American colonies must first stop at British ports for inspection and taxes
- the 17th century Navigation Acts were largely unenforced in the American colonies
- "salutary" = "producing good effects," usually as result of something unwanted
- lax British control of the colonies up until 1763 (after the French-Indian War)
- Britain governed through granting or reorganization of land and colonial charters, taxes on imports into England and occasional enforcement of "Navigation Acts"
- British fiscal policy 1721 followed the idea of "salutary neglect":
- Robert Walpole, British Lord Commissioner of the Treasury in 1721:
- sought to increase taxes on colonies by reducing them, which would allow for greater economic activity
- Walpole wrote: " “if no restrictions were placed on the colonies, they would flourish”
- which would lead to an increase in trade with the colonials, and, thus, higher tax receipts on duties on that trade
- the term "salutary neglect" was coined in 1775 by Edmund Burke, a pro-colonial Irish-British politician
click EXPAND for excerpt from Burke's speech to Parliament in 1775:
“That I know that the colonies in general owe little or nothing to any care of ours, and that they are not squeezed into this happy form by the constraints of watchful and suspicious government, but that, through a wise and salutary neglect, a generous nature has been suffered to take her own way to perfection; when I reflect upon these effects, when I see how profitable they have been to us, I feel all the pride of power sink, and all presumption in the wisdom of human contrivances melt, and die away within me.”
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Southern colonial economies & demographics[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE
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Major Events, Concepts & Themes
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Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events
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- 1660–1677 Governor Sr. William Berkely in office
- 1660s settlers encroach upon Indian lands along "Northern Neck"
- land between Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers
- 1666 colonists declare war upon Native Americans in Northern Neck region
- 1675-76 Bacon's Rebellion
- 1680s significant growth in slavery
- 1730s rice economy
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BIG IDEAS
- plantation economy
- social/ economic stratification
- frontier settlements & conflict with Native Americans
- Bacon's Rebellion
- expansion of slavery
- by early 1700s VA & MD planters switch from indentured servants to slaves
DETAILS
- cash crops:
- tobacco in NC, VA and MD
- rice/ indigo in SC
- plantation economy
- demographics
- stratification of southern society
- Southern gentry
- large estates
- gentry lifestyle, including hunting, horse racing, gambling, dancing
- coastal or Tidewater elites based on plantations and ports
- indentured servants and "backcountry" farmers:
- half of indentures servants died in colonies before earning freedom
- yoeman farmers owned their land, engaged in subsistence farming
- many former servants become tenent farmers (rent not land ownership) due to costs of land surveys, fees, farming equipment & animals, etc.
- general trend is towards small-farm ownership and westward expansion in search for new lands to farm
- rice economy
- 1730 Parliament removed rice from mercantalist restrictions, freeing sale directly to other nations
- rice economy rose/fell with wars
- when price was high benefited freeholders and not large plantations
Bacon's rebellion
- background:
- Governor Sr. William Berkely
- controlled House of Burgesses via political patronage and favors among elites
- exempted himself and ruling "governor council" members from taxes
- restricted right to vote to property ownership (cut vote rolls by half)
- growing conflict with Native Americans over colonial encroachment on frontier lands
- 1675 war between Native Americans and frontier settlers
- coastal elites did not want war with Indians
- Nathaniel Bacon
- = wealthy landowner, buys frontier land, attacked by Indians
- member of the governor's council
- but sides with frontier farmers on war with Native Americans
- Bacon leads his own militia to fight Native Americans
- Gov Berkeley calls for new election
- but new legislators back Bacon and authorize militia
- known as "Bacon's Laws"
- also restores vote to all free men and removed Berkeley's tax exemptions
- Bacon still opposes Berkeley regime, with small army takes over capital at Jamestown and charges Berkeley with corruption
- Berkeley flees, raises his own army and battles Bacon's army
- Bacon escapes but dies while hiding in a swamp and his army disintegrate
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PERIOD / TIMELINE
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Major Events, Concepts & Themes
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Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events
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- 1619 first Africans colonial America
- 1638 Maryland legally recognizes slavery
- 1705 Virginia slave code enacted
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
- 1619: first African slaves brought to British colonies by Dutch merchants
- British entry to slave trade via Royal African Company (1672)
- 1680s growth in central / south colonies
slavery & slave culture
- growth in slavery in 1680s
- after Bacon's rebellion wealthy planters increased reliance on slaves instead of indentured servants
- expanding frontiers, especially in Pennsylvania, had diminished flow of indentured servants
- increase in transatlantic slave trade, including by British under the Royal African Company starting 1672
- slave culture
- maintain oral traditions, songs
- mixture of African and colonial cultures
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New England colonial expansion[edit | edit source]
PERIOD / TIMELINE
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Major Events, Concepts & Themes
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Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events
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BIG IDEAS
- coastal economy
- townships
- frontier
- Indian Wars
DETAILS
- coastal economy
- King George's War spurred adventurism and privateerism
>> see Taylor on 1/4th of Boston freeman had ownership of a ship
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PERIOD / TIMELINE
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Major Events, Concepts & Themes
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Notes & connections: details of issues, concepts, themes & events
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BIG IDEAS
DETAILS
- PA land >> = decline in indentured servitude
- Quakers
- During King George's war European demand for food due to war and poor harvests increased demand for grain
- Chesapeake region conversion to diverse crops
- tobacco still largest export
- growth in central coast ports, especially Baltimore
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War Timeline
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Colonial name
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European name
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Consequence
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1675-1763
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"French & Indian Wars" include:
- King Philip's War
- King William's War
- Queen Anne's War
- King George's War
- French-Indian War
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BIG IDEAS
- the colonial "French & Indian Wars" were part of various European "dynastic wars"
- in French known as "Intercolonial wars"
- all of these wars were largely result of American colonial expansion, including:
- rising population
- frontier settlement, especially by small farmers'
- European political and religious dynamics deeply influenced British and French colonial interactions
- as well as among and between the British colonies
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1675–1678
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King Philip's War
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n/a - independent of European conflicts or involvement
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- early Pilgrims & Wampanoag chief Massasoit maintained friendly relations
- upon his death, his son, Metacom, accused colonists of violating agreements (land use)
- led raids on Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island and Connecticut villages & settlements
- colonial militia responded
- considered the most deadly of all colonial wars
- half of colonial towns attacked and 12 destroyed
- 1/10 colonial males killed
- 100s of Wampanaogs executed or enslaved
- Wampoaaogs lands entirely lost to them
- impact upon New England identity
- war conducted without British involvement or support
- created distinct identify and sense of independence from Britain
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1688–1697
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King William's War
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- War of the Grand Alliance
- War of the League of Augsburg
- Nine Years' War
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- started due to New England expansion into Acadia, a region of New France
- France aligned Wabanaki Confederacy opposed colonialists and their allied Iroquois Confederacy
- wiki: The Iroquois dominated the economically important Great Lakes fur trade and had been in conflict with New France since 1680.[15]:43 At the urging of New England, the Iroquois interrupted the trade between New France and the western tribes. In retaliation, New France raided Seneca lands of western New York. In turn, New England supported the Iroquois in attacking New France, which they did by raiding Lachine.
- also konwn as Second Indian War
- resulted in no changes in British of French colonial territories
- Wabanaki Confederacy" held off colonial American attempts to expand into southern Main
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1702–1713
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Queen Anne's War
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War of the Spanish Succession
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- War of Spanish Succession over death of Spanish King Charles II
- France and England wanted colonies to remain neutral
- existing colonial border tensions were enflamed by the European conflict
- included French, Spanish & British boundaries in
- Newfoundland & Hudson Bay
- Massachusetts & Maine
- Carolinas
- English colonial population 250,000
- French & Spanish populations were negligible, relying mostly on Indian allies
- outcome:
- British take Acadia, Newfoundland, Hudson Bay, and Saint Kitts
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1722–1725
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Dumner's War
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n/a - colonial war
- not part of European dynastic wars
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- series of conflicts between New England colonials and Wabanaki Confederacy
- William Dummer was governor of Massachusetts
- fought mostly in Maine and Nova Scotia
- source of conflict was ongoing British colonial settlements in Maine and (modern) Vermont
- the Wabanaki Confederacy had not been party to French and English settlement of Queen Anne's War
- and so did not adhere to the French-British agreement
- outcome was that New England colonials took over most of Acadia (Maine)
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1739
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War of Jenkin's Ear
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n/a - colonial conflict
- not part of European dynastic wars
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- a Spanish commander sliced the ear of a British merchant captain
- the conflict was largely in the Caribbean
- British colonials from Georgia attacked the Spanish St. Augustine, FL in 1740
- Spanish forces retaliated in 1742 with an attack upon the Georgia coast, which was repelled
- the conflict did not involve the French, but did morph into the larger European conflict in the War of the Austrian Succession
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1744–1748
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King George's War
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War of the Austrian Succession
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- New England colonists organized invasion of Nova Scotia
- led to heavy losses of colonial forces, 8% of males were killed
- the war energized New England ship building industry
- adventurism / privateers & investments in expeditions on Spanish ships & possessions in Caribbean
- European demand for food due to war and poor harvests increased demand for grain & rice
- conclusion of the war changed no boundaries and did not settle tensions
- may be considered as contributor to French-Indian War of 1754
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1754–1763
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French-Indian War
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Seven Years' War
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to be discussed in subsequent timeline & concepts chart
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