Chesapeake Bay

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    importance of communication not only between the armies but between the Navy as well. In doing so, we were able to pin down our adversaries with nowhere to run or sail to. Keeping in communications with the French Navy and having then blockade the Chesapeake Bay, shut down the British logistics, which enabled them to receive food, supplies, or more Soldiers. In doing this, we gained land control, and worn down our opponents who became weak from no food and under strength due to their…

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    Chesapeake Incident The Chesapeake incident took place prior to the war of 1812. It was an act committed against a US sailing vessel, the Chesapeake, by the British close to the shores of Virginia. The British stopped the vessel, attempting to search for supposed deserters and when the US refused they seized the vessel and forced several US citizens to join the British military. The practice of forcing “British citizens” to join the military was known as Impressment.The British were often low…

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    With the arrival of many Europeans onto Indian soil in the new world. The Indians learned to adapt to changes in their culture, and their way of life changed. Trading networks were established between the two groups which was beneficial for both parties. With the arrival of the Europeans, the indigenous land of the Indians was invaded, for example the Indians were separated into several main groups which comprised of the eastern woodlands, the great plains, and western tribes. After the…

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    INTRODUCTION The naval battle of Valcour Island took place on Lake Champlain in the fall of 1776. The battle was fought between Benedict Arnold’s small fleet against Sir Guy Carleton’s superior British naval force. After gaining British naval superiority on the Lake Champlain, Carleton halted the British invasion and returned to Canada. Carleton himself cited in a letter to Lord Germain on October 14, 1776, “The season is so far advanced…whether any thing further can be done this year” as a…

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    development of both the New England and Chesapeake regions occurred naturally due to the initial intentions of the first settlers. These differences stem from many factors. The natural resources available affect what industries formed and what crops were grown. Culturally, the northern colonies were formed for religious purposes unlike the profit seeking southern colonies. One key difference that led to a divide in values and beliefs between the New England and Chesapeake regions was the…

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    England colonies inhabited North-East America and the Chesapeake colonies inhabited present day Maryland and Virginia. This difference in settings affected community life in both areas. Though the east coast of North America was settled by the same people of the same ethnicity, the areas developed into two diverse societies due to different religion and economic practices. The New England colonies were very religious based unlike the Chesapeake colonies. In England, the Puritans and Pilgrims’…

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    With the loss of jobs and lost hope of acquiring any land, the British set their sights on the New World. Many journeyed across the Atlantic to populate a variety of areas, ranging from the West Indies to Virginia and Massachusetts’s Bay. Although both the Chesapeake and New England regions were settled by the white English, by 1700 both evolved into distinct societies due to economic,…

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    New England and the Chesapeake region were both settled by people largely of English origin. However by 1700 both regions had evolved into their own distinct societies, drastically differing from one another. Although the settlers of these two regions may have all come from English origin, contrasting motives of the settlers resulted in the creation of two societies independent of one another. These regions developed into two distinct societies due to the difference in their founders motives.…

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    America were Jamestown, founded in 1607, and Massachusetts Bay, founded in 1630. The New England and Chesapeake regions were settled mostly by people of English origin, both evolved into two distinct societies due to the purposes of the colonies, the people who populated the colonies, and the principles of the colonists. The reasons for the colonization of Jamestown varied greatly from the reasons for the colonization of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Jamestown was established for economical…

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    New England and the Chesapeake. These two areas were built along the Atlantic Coast, housing hundreds of European settlers. However, as the people of New England and the Chesapeake began to construct societies of their own, the differences between the two colonies escalated. The differences between the European societies were due to the contrasting reasons for settlement in the Americas. This prompted the two colonies to establish differing societies. New England and the Chesapeake colonies…

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