The history of Chesapeake colony started with Jamestown. “The first “enduring” English colony was established in the Chesapeake Bay area at Jamestown in what is now the state of Virginia. The colony was founded in 1607 as a corporate colony by the Virginia Company of London. The settlers named the settlement Jamestown in honor of James 1, King of England. The early years were difficult with very high mortality rates. During one winter, known as the “starving time”, rumors of cannibalism circulated and colonists were reduced to eating the carcasses of dead animals in order to survive. The profits that the company had anticipated did not materialize and had it not been for the talents of John Rolfe the colony would probably have been abandoned.” …show more content…
John Rolfe is a scientist and also a farmer who is also the husband of Pocahontas an Indian princess and the daughter of the chief of the nearby Powhatan tribe named Powhatan. Rolfe and Pocahontas has a son together until the death of Pocahontas in 1616.
To Jamestown, the year 1619 is significant for the following reasons: The Virginia Company adopted the Headright System, the first meeting of the House of Burgesses was held this year, and the first 20 African slaves were brought to the colony. The indentured servants worked on contracts for their sponsors on wages for 4-7 years to have passage to Virginia. “Indentured servants were poor immigrants who could not pay for the cost of transportation to Virginia. The indentured servants began the practice of representative government, electing individuals to represent a certain region, borough or burgess. The House of Burgesses met for the first time in 1619 and was the first representative assembly in the English colonies. While these bodies were not meant to supplant Parliament, they took care of local needs in a Parliamentary manner- becoming the important agency for community activities- business standards and common defense. In 1619, the first African slaves were brought to the colony. The introduction of slavery in 1619 affirms that “African slavery was present early in colonial history.” Maryland is also a part of the Chesapeake colony and was founded in 1634 on the Chesapeake Bay north of …show more content…
Virginia. The settlers also planted tobacco. They also have the headright system of land ownership which was adopted. Maryland had a unique factor about it, it was the first proprietary colony. Later in 1649, Maryland adopted the Act of Toleration which granted religious freedom to Christians, thereby allowing Catholics and Protestants to worship freely in the colony. Over the years, Chesapeake population has grown rapidly which is a blend of rural and urban centers and provide cultural facilities with strong leadership.
The founders of the New England colonies had a different mission from the Jamestown settlers. The real goal of the New England settlers was spiritual. They decided to recreate a society they believed that God truly intended for it to be designed. The Pilgrims and Puritans both believed in the teachings of John Calvin. But John Calvin said “Neither the teaching of the Catholic nor the Anglican Churches addressed God’s will.” The history of New England was originally occupied by an indigenous people, who are the English pilgrims who settled at Plymouth Plantation and the Puritans who settled the rest of the colony. The Pilgrims and the Puritans were religious rebels within the Church of England. “The Puritans were mainstream reformers who wanted to “purify” their church”. The Pilgrims are also known as the ‘separatists’ because of their desire to separate from the Anglican Church. They concluded that “their church could not be “purified.” Later, “a group of Puritan businessmen from the London area formed a company for the purpose of founding a colony as a business
venture.” The reason for founding New England: New England colonies includes: Connecticut colony, colony of Rhode Island, Massachusetts Bay colony and province of New Hampshire. The first permanent settlement was Plymouth colony which was established by Pilgrims who came to the New World on the Mayflower in 1620 to establish their own religion. They decided to follow John Calvin’s teachings. Later on, the Puritans who is a similar religious group arrived north of Plymouth and established Massachusetts bay. The Puritans wanted to purify the Anglican Church, not separate from it, this is not what the Pilgrims wanted. The Chesapeake region includes Virginia, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The colony was founded in 1607 as a corporate colony by the Virginia Company of London. New England was also founded for economic reasons because they have less agriculture and more industry. The reasons for founding Chesapeake started with Jamestown which is now the state of Virginia who made their fortune through the cultivation of tobacco. Virginia did set a pattern for Maryland and the Carolinas. The Virginia Company was formed and set out to establish a permanent English settlement.
The most notable political system of the Chesapeake region was the House of Burgesses in the Virginia colony. The House of Burgesses was a representative democracy that was formed in 1619. It favored the rich, as only rich white males were represented in government. It was often called a “planter aristocracy”, as the rich, white planters were the only people that participated in government. As a result of this, there was almost no social mobility, which was also an effect of slavery. This political system emerged largely in part due to the economic system, as farmers were already in power. Even though this system was democratic, it resembled an aristocracy more than a
In the early stages of North American colonization by the English, the colony of Jamestown, Virginia was founded in 1607 (Mailer Handout 1 (6)). Soon after the Massachusetts Bay Colony was founded in 1629 (Mailer Handout 2 (1)). These two colonies, although close in the time they were founded, have many differences in aspects of their lives and the way they were settled. The colonies have a different religious system, economic system, political system, and they have a different way of doing things; whether that be pertaining to making money, practicing religion, or electing governors. Along with the differences, there are also a sameness between these two colonies. Each colony has been derived from England and has been founded by companies
The settlers of the Jamestown were members of the great Anglican Church, which was the official Church of England while the Pilgrims were dissenters from the Church and established the Puritan faith. Due to the Jamestown settlers being a part of the Anglican faith, they were not under any fear of religious persecution. They remained loyal to their superiors. The Puritans were separatists, which was considered an act of treason at the time. They believed that the Church was still too connected to the old ways.
The Crusades of the middle ages introduced much innovative and formerly unheard of merchandise into Western Europe; however the scarcity of these luxury goods instilled Europeans with drive to find easier access to the Far East. Although desired "Northwest Passage" never was found, joint-stock companies, like the Virginia Company of London, settled colonies in the New World for untapped resources such as silver and other tradable goods. Many more corporations followed suit, settling mainly in the Chesapeake Bay area, their small settlements eventually developing into the Chesapeake colonies. The Chesapeake colonies were focused primarily on profitable enterprises. At the same time, the New England colonies were being settled with a whole different set of initiatives, principally religious freedoms and family. Governing bodies were established, with their success dependent on the quality of the settlers the colony attracted. The different motives for settlement affected the routine events in such a way that the New England and Chesapeake colonies differed very greatly from one another even though they were both mainly settled by the English.
Looking at the early English colonies in the Chesapeake Bay region, it’s clear that the English had not learned any lessons from their experiences at Roanoke. Poor planning, a bad location, unrealistic expectations, flawed leadership, unsuccessful relations with the local Indians, and no hope of finding the mineral wealth the Spanish found in Mexico, all contributed to failure. The first colonists in the Chesapeake region were not only ignorant, lazy and unambitious, but their attempts were hampered before they had begun. However, a solution to these problems was found in a single plant: tobacco. Nevertheless, this cash crop ultimately created numerous problems for the colonists. The ignorance and indolent acts of the Chesapeake colonists to unsuccessfully restore the colony by themselves led to the demise of the colony as a whole especially regarding the planting of agricultural goods for food.
When the Mayflower sailed over to the New World, on the boats were Puritans that were looking for a change in the way that their religion was practiced where the Chesapeake settlers came over for gold. Alongside the Puritans were the Separatists who wanted everything their way and wanted to perfect the ways of the Puritans. When they landed in New England, they immediately settled down because they didn’t have an economic reason for coming. Both sets of religions ventured overseas so that they could create a new religion that would work for them in their favor and not be prosecuted for practici...
New England was north of the Chesapeake, and included Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Haven (which soon became part of Connecticut). The New Englanders were largely Puritan Separatists, who sought religious freedom. When the Church of England separated from Catholicism under Henry VIII, Protestantism flourished in England. Some Protestants, however, wanted complete separation from Catholicism and embraced Calvinism. These "Separatists" as they were called, along with persecuted Catholics who had not joined the Church of England, came to New England in hopes of finding this religious freedom where they would be free to practice as they wished. Their motives were, thus, religious in nature, not economic. In fact, New England settlers reproduced much of England's economy, with only minor variations. They did not invest largely in staple crops, instead, relied on artisan-industries like carpentry, shipbuilding, and printing.
The colonists had different reasons for settling in these two distinct regions. The New England region was a more religiously strict yet diverse area compared to that of the Chesapeake Bay. The development of religion in the two regions came from separate roots. After Henry VIII and the Roman Catholic Church broke away from each other, a new group of English reformers was created called the Puritans. The Puritans came from protestant backgrounds, after being influenced by Calvinistic ideas. When their reforms were thwarted by King James I of England, they fled to the New World in what is now known as the "Great Migration". The Puritans were then joined by Quakers, Protestants, and Catholics in the religiously diverse New England area. These diverse religious factions were allowed to live freely but under the laws of New England. It was due to this religious freedom that these people came to escape religious persecution back home. The New Englanders had a religion-based society and religion was based on family. As the Bible highly regarded family, it condemned adultery. Adultery was considered a punishable crime. Adulterers were marked as impure by a letter "A" stitched on their clothing, as in the book "The Scarlet Letter" by Nathaniel Hawthorne. As religion was a very high priority in New England, it was very much less severe in the Chesapeake Bay region. The one established church in the region, the Anglican Church of Jesus Christ, was only then established in 1692, more than 70 years after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock.
While residing in England, the Puritans and faithful Catholics faced prosecution, which led to their immigration to the New World. Most left England to avoid further harassment. Many groups and parishes applied for charters to America and, led by faithful ministers, the Pilgrims and Puritans made the long voyage to North America. Their religion became a unique element in the New England colonies by 1700. Before landing, the groups settled on agreements, signing laws and compacts to ensure a community effort towards survival when they came to shore, settling in New England. Their strong sense of community and faith in God led them to develop a hardworking society by year 1700, which Documents A and D express through the explanation of how the Pilgrims and Puritans plan to develop...
The Chesapeake region and New England colonies greatly differed in their development of their two distinct societies. The Chesapeake region was a loosely fitted society with little connection with each plantation while the New England colonies had tightly knitted communities with a sort of town pride. The difference in unity and the reason for this difference best explain the significant disparity between the dissimilar societies.
New England was a refuge for religious separatists leaving England, while people who immigrated to the Chesapeake region had no religious motives. As a result, New England formed a much more religious society then the Chesapeake region. John Winthrop states that their goal was to form "a city upon a hill", which represented a "pure" community, where Christianity would be pursued in the most correct manner. Both the Pilgrims and the Puritans were very religious people. In both cases, the local government was controlled by the same people who controlled the church, and the bible was the basis for all laws and regulations. From the Article of Agreement, Springfield, Massachusetts it is ...
The Puritans were mainly artisans and middling farmers by trade and in the wake of the reformation of the Church of England, left for the colonies to better devout themselves to God because they saw the Church of England as a corrupt institution where salvation was able to be bought and sold, and with absolutely no success in further reforming the Church, set off for the colonies. English Puritans believed in an all-powerful God who, at the moment of Creation, determined which humans would be saved and which would be damned (Goldfield 45).
Introduction The Chesapeake Bay is a large estuary located on the east coast of the United States. The bay is over 200 miles long and goes through Delaware, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. The bay has much to offer the locals. Many locals have made a career out of harvesting the bay's sea food.
In 1630, the Massachusetts Bay Company set sail to the New World in hope of reforming the Church of England. While crossing the Atlantic, John Winthrop, the puritan leader of the great migration, delivered perhaps the most famous sermon aboard the Arbella, entitled “A Model of Christian Charity.” Winthrop’s sermon gave hope to puritan immigrants to reform the Church of England and set an example for future immigrants. The Puritan’s was a goal to get rid of the offensive features that Catholicism left behind when the Protestant Reformation took place. Under Puritanism, there was a constant strain to devote your life to God and your neighbors. Unlike the old England, they wanted to prove that New England was a community of love and individual worship to God. Therefore, they created a covenant with God and would live their lives according to the covenant. Because of the covenant, Puritans tried to abide by God’s law and got rid of anything that opposed their way of life. Between 1630 and the 18th century, the Puritans tried to create a new society in New England by creating a covenant with God and living your life according to God’s rule, but in the end failed to reform the Church of England. By the mid 1630’s, threats to the Puritans such as Roger Williams, Anne Hutchinson, and Thomas Hooker were being banned from the Puritan community for their divergent beliefs. 20 years later, another problem arose with the children of church members and if they were to be granted full membership to the church. Because of these children, a Halfway Covenant was developed to make them “halfway” church members. And even more of a threat to the Puritan society was their notion that they were failing God, because of the belief that witches existed in 1692.
Chesapeake colonies of Virginia and Maryland were settled in the early 17th century. It was a difficult live for the first colonist; they had limited labor and were constantly raided by Native Americans. Colonist tried to use the Native Americans as a source of slavery. Most of the colonist’s farms were by forest areas so Native Americans would just leave in to the woods. Colonists were afraid of pressuring them from the fear of getting ambushed by gangs of Native Americans. Another reason Native Americans men made bad slaves was because the women in the tribes did the agricultural work in the Native American villages.