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The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5

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Page 1: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

The Middle Colonies:

Chapter 2 Section 5

Page 2: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

The 13 Colonies: New England

Colonies

Middle Colonies

Southern Colonies

Page 3: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

1) New Netherlands:

A) New Amsterdam: • 1609: The Dutch began trading furs with the

N.A.s along the Hudson River. • To protect their trade they built New

Amsterdam on the tip of Manhattan Island.– One of the best harbors in the colonies.

• Like the English colonies, most colonists were middle class and poor – Came in families

Page 4: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

The Hudson:

New Amsterdam:

Page 5: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

1) New Netherlands:

B) Government• The Dutch West India Company appointed a

governor• Did not allow an elected assembly.• Tolerated various religious and ethnic groups. – Jews, French, Germany and Norway

Page 6: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

1) New Netherlands:

C) Push-and-Pull Factors:• 1660: Population was only 5,000– Chesapeake: 25,000 – New England: 33,000

• Pull Factors: Attract people to a new location– Promise of a better life, fertile soil, and your own

land

Page 7: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

C) Push-and-Pull Factors: (continued)

• Push factors: Motivate people to leave their home country– Netherlands has a booming economy and high

standard of living– Less religions trouble– Less reason for Dutch people to leave the

Netherlands

Page 8: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

Review Quiz:

• Why did New Netherlands have a diverse population?

• Why did New Netherlands struggle to attract colonists?

• Compare and Contrast the governments of New Netherlands with those in New England:

Page 9: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

2) The English Conquest:

• 1650s and 1660s the Dutch and English are rivals.– The English wanted New Amsterdam and its

shipping• The English attacked New Amsterdam• Faced with being destroyed, Dutch Governor

Stuyvesant surrendered to the English• The English made it a proprietary colony and

renamed it New York

Page 10: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

Peter Stuyvesant, in 1664, standing among residents of New Amsterdam who are pleading with him to surrender to the

British who have arrived in warships to claim the territory for England

Page 11: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

3) William Penn’s Pennsylvania:

A) Debt:• 1680: King Charles II

gave William Penn the land west of the Delaware River to pay for debt

• Named it Pennsylvania – Means Penn’s Woods

Page 12: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

3) William Penn’s Pennsylvania:

B) Quakers:• Penn was a Quaker• Quaker beliefs: – People should follow their “Inner Light” to help

understand the Bible– Pacifists: avoid violence– Women and men were equal spiritually– Tolerant of other faiths

Page 13: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

3) William Penn’s Pennsylvania:

C) Proprietary Colony:• William Penn as governor• Appointed three commissioners:– Instructed them to be “just and courteous” to all N.A.s

• Buy land• Fair price for fur• Sit down and talk

• Established Philadelphia as the capital.– “City of Brotherly Love”

Page 14: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

• Penn planned Philadelphia to include wide streets, parks and hospitals

Page 15: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

3) William Penn’s Pennsylvania:

D) Growth:• 1682: Penn arrives with 23 ships and 2,000

colonists– Mostly middle class families

• Temperate climate, fertile soil, navigable rivers, and better relations with N.A.s– 1700: 18,000 colonists

Page 16: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

William Penn dealing fairly with the N.A.s

Page 17: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

4) Diversity in the Middle Colonies:

• Greater diversity than New England and the Southern colonies

• No religious denomination or ethnic group was a majority

• Proved that political order did not depend on ethnic or religious uniformity

• Basis for America’s future.

Page 18: The Middle Colonies: Chapter 2 Section 5. The 13 Colonies: New England Colonies Middle Colonies Southern Colonies

Homework

• Assignment 1: #1,2,4• Assignment 2: #4-6• Assignment 3: #3,5,6

Which one to

choose?