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Section 3-New England Chapter 2-Colonizing America

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Page 1: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

Section 3-New England

Chapter 2-Colonizing America

Page 2: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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Chapter ObjectivesSection 3: New England

• Discuss why John Winthrop founded Massachusetts and describe the kind of society the Puritans built there.

• Describe why Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson left the Massachusetts colony.

Page 3: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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to listen to the audio again.

Page 4: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

(pages 66–67)(pages 66–67)

The Pilgrims Land at Plymouth

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• Some Puritans, called Separatists, broke away from the Anglican Church to start their own congregations.

• The king viewed the act as a challenge to his authority and imprisoned them.

• In 1608 one group of Separatists, who became known as Pilgrims, fled to Holland.

• Unhappy there, they decided to immigrate to America.

Page 5: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

• The Pilgrims set sail for America on the Mayflower in 1620 and settled in Plymouth, near Massachusetts Bay.

• Under the leadership of William Bradford, the Pilgrims began constructing homes immediately after their arrival.

• A plague swept through the colony, killing many settlers.

The Pilgrims Land at Plymouth (cont.)

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(pages 66–67)(pages 66–67)

Page 6: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

• The remaining settlers survived in large part because of the assistance of a Native American named Squanto, who taught them how to use the environment to meet their needs.

The Pilgrims Land at Plymouth (cont.)

(pages 66–67)(pages 66–67)

Page 7: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

(pages 67–69)(pages 67–69)

The Puritans Found Massachusetts

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• Many Puritans stayed within the Anglican Church and worked for reform.

• Like the Separatists, these Puritans were also persecuted, and many were willing to leave England.

Page 8: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

The Puritans Found Massachusetts (cont.)

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• A depression in England’s wool industry caused high unemployment, particularly among Puritans.

• John Winthrop and other wealthy Puritans held stock in the Massachusetts Bay Company, which had received a charter from King Charles to establish a colony in New England.

(pages 67–69)(pages 67–69)

Page 9: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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(pages 67–69)(pages 67–69)

The Puritans Found Massachusetts (cont.)

• Winthrop used the charter to start a colony as a refuge for Puritans.

• In 1630 several hundred Puritans set sail for America and established the Massachusetts Bay Colony.

• As conditions in England worsened, increasing numbers of people left England in what was later called the Great Migration.

• By 1643 Massachusetts included about 20,000 settlers.

Page 10: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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(pages 67–69)(pages 67–69)

The Puritans Found Massachusetts (cont.)

• In Massachusetts, a General Court made the laws and elected the colony’s governor.

• The General Court was made up of “freemen”–the people who owned stock in the Massachusetts Bay Company.

• Eventually the General Court became a representative assembly.

Page 11: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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(pages 67–69)(pages 67–69)

The Puritans Found Massachusetts (cont.)

• The government of Massachusetts required all colonists to attend church, collected taxes to support it, and regulated people’s moral behavior.

• The government was intolerant towards differences in religious beliefs.

• Heretics, those whose religious beliefs differed from the majority’s, were considered a threat to the community.

Page 12: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

(pages 69–70)(pages 69–70)

Rhode Island and Religious Dissent

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• Roger Williams, a strict Separatist, challenged Puritan authority in Massachusetts.

• In 1635 the General Court banned him from the colony.

• Williams headed south, where he founded the town of Providence.

• The government there had no authority in religious matters, and religious differences were tolerated.

Page 13: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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(pages 69–70)(pages 69–70)

Rhode Island and Religious Dissent (cont.)

• Anne Hutchinson was declared a heretic and banished from Massachusetts for her challenge of Puritan practices.

• She and her followers also headed south and founded the town of Portsmouth.

Page 14: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

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(pages 69–70)(pages 69–70)

Rhode Island and Religious Dissent (cont.)

• Other Puritans were also banished from Massachusetts.

• They founded the towns of Newport and Warwick.

• These two towns joined with Providence and Portsmouth to become the colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.

• The colony’s charter included a total separation of church and state and religious freedom.

Page 15: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

(pages 70–71)(pages 70–71)

The River Towns of Connecticut

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• Reverend Thomas Hooker opposed the Massachusetts government’s policy of allowing only church members to vote.

• He and his followers left Massachusetts and founded the town of Hartford, in the Connecticut River valley.

• Hartford and two other towns in the region joined together to create their own General Court.

Page 16: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

• They adopted a constitution known as the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut–the first written constitution of the American colonies.

• Two Massachusetts traders were killed by the Pequot, a Native American group in the Connecticut River valley.

• A war between the colonists and Pequot developed.

• Hundreds of Pequot were killed, and many were sold into slavery.

The River Towns of Connecticut (con’t)

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(pages 70–71)(pages 70–71)

Page 17: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

(pages 71)(pages 71)

New Hampshire and Maine

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• Some Puritans moved north of Massachusetts.

• Much of this territory had been granted to two men.

• One claimed the southern part, named New Hampshire, and the other claimed the northern part, named Maine.

Page 18: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

• New Hampshire eventually became a royal colony, while Massachusetts bought back Maine, which remained part of Massachusetts until 1820.

New Hampshire and Maine (cont.)

(pages 71)(pages 71)

Page 19: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

King Philip’s War

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• The colonial governments’ demand that Native American follow English law angered the Native Americans, who believed that the English were trying to destroy their culture.

• In 1675 the Plymouth Colony tried and executed three Wampanoag for a murder, which led to attacks by the Native Americans against the colonists.

(pages 71)(pages 71)

Page 20: Section 3-New England Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: New England Discuss why

• The attacks marked the beginning of King Philip’s War.

King Philip’s War (cont.)

• The Wampanoag’s defeat by the colonists in 1678 was a turning point. After the war, few Native Americans were left in New England.

(pages 71)(pages 71)

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