What did the Puritans see as so dirty? Well, the natives did not
What did the Puritans see as so dirty? Well, the natives did not
I am going to explain to you two of the groups that involves the cultural and economic responses towards the Indians of North America before 1750. I will be explaining to you about the British and the French. Before 1750, The French helped out the Native Americans economically and culturally. Before 1750, The French helped them out economically. When the French first came to America they approached the Native Americans, in a cruel and a unjust manner.…
Faustino, Yeelena 1A 10/12/15 DBQ Influenced by the Puritans, from 1630 through the 1660’s the four New England colonies, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire , were experiencing large growth in their political, economic, and social systems. Socially, the Puritans impacted the colonies religious views and community. Economically they believed in thrift and godliness and politically they leaned towards a self-governing congregations groups. The puritans greatly impacted the social, economic, and political status of the New England colonies by making their community close together.…
During the late 16th and into the 17th century, there was much exploration into the New World. Europeans were becoming increasingly familiar with the new land that the Americas had to offer. There were two main areas that Europeans from England sent the majority of their people. These two regions were recognized as the Chesapeake and the New England Settlements. Ultimately these two regions would come together, but in the early stages of their development, their characteristics and motivations were completely different from each other.…
Mark Abramov Dr. David Houpt History 103 September 9th, 2015 John Winthrop’s Speech to the Massachusetts General Court In 1629, the Massachusetts Bay Colony was chartered by London merchants who, similar to the Virginia Company’s founders, yearned to turn a profit. But unlike Virginia, social unity was significantly more essential in Massachusetts. The Puritan settlers’ religious mission necessitated that the common good was put above the individual’s rights or needs, at least during the colony’s beginnings. Massachusetts’s governing body in 1645 was composed of men chosen by the eight shareholders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in addition to a group of deputies elected by freemen (landowning church members).…
New England colonies organized their society based on theocracy, which ensured their values and ideas had a significant impact on the economic, political and social development during the 1630s through the 1660s. The Puritans worked hard to prioritize the economic development of New England since their belief was that they were a model for humankind favored by God to succeed. Economic activity of the region, was secondary under the focus of religious concerns. Wealthy merchants made up the portion of Puritan settlers which created a merchant upper class at the top of the economic pyramid.…
Not all colonists in New England were Puritans but the Puritan religion was a major influence on the establishment of the colonies. Puritans were not satisfied with the Protestant Reformation and believed that the Church of England had to many Catholic rituals. They believed neither the church nor the nation were living up to their ideals. In order to seek the truth they urged the people to read the Bible and listen to their sermons. Puritans followed the teachings of John Calvin in which he taught that the world was divided between the elect and the damned.…
Early New England colonies built their foundation on puritan views and ideas. The puritans helped develop most of what we know today of the New England colonies. They influenced politics, economics, and the social lives of colonies In the New England territory, especially during 1630 through the 1660s. Puritans, mainly separatist Puritans, helped build up the New England colonies, especially politically. Puritans believed that people need to be united to efficiently work as a governing body.…
Because of this, the people of Plymouth were able to make an official peace treaty with the Natives very early on in their relationship with them. In addition to being peaceful, the Natives the Puritans dealt with were also quite willing to help the Puritans survive in their new home. They brought food to the Puritans and taught them how to live and grow their own food. The Natives also made a point to show that there should be harmony between the groups. The Natives did this by returning some tools that had been stolen from the Puritans before the two groups had officially met.…
Beginning in the 1630’s Puritans came to the colonies after facing persecution in England for their want to purify and reform the Church of England. The Puritans believed that the New World was similar to the Garden of Eden and that the New World was going to be the “city upon the hill”. The Puritans settled in the now known area of Boston, and held services in bare churches throughout the town. Three people who were principal to Puritan religion in the colonies were Richard Mather, a minister in Dorchester Massachusetts who drafted the Cambridge Platform, a description of the Congregational system.…
In the 1600s, there were two areas of land in the United States that encountered a problem between one another. The United States was then separated into the Northern and Southern colonies. As time went on, issues arose which started conflict between the two colonies. The two colonies continued to have many disagreements which shaped the United States today. After all, political and economic differences became a major issue between the two colonies.…
The Puritans argued that they could not have meaningful interactions with the Native Americans because the Puritans could not know if the Natives shared the same moral values as the Natives did not believe the same religion (The Simple Cobler of Aggawam, 206). Bradford describes the Natives as “savages” (Norton Anthology, 62) before he even meets them, alluding to their unconventional dress and language. Furthermore, while Bradford makes himself and his followers out to be the utmost followers of God and his teachings, Bradford has no qualms about the men in his party’s stealing beans and corn from the Natives’ stores, illuminating his lack of respect for the Natives as they are of such a different moral standing that he does not need to treat them with a normal amount of respect. Many years later into the establishment of the colonies, in 1637, when Bradford was Governor of Massachusetts, the Colonists surrounded and burned hundreds of Pequot Native men, women, and children to death in a scene that Bradford described as “a fearful sight to see them thus frying in the fire, and the streams of blood quenching the same… but the victory seemed a sweet sacrifice, and [us Puritans] gave the praise thereof to God,” (American Colonies, 195). Bradford’s illustrating that the Puritans “gave the praise thereof to God” exposes his and many…
In the 17th century, Puritans migrated to present day Massachusetts and established one of the first settlements in the new world, Salem. The Puritans adhered to a strict religious lifestyle. The puritanical ways they abided by resulted in the formation of a theocracy, a combination of church and state. This devout group expressed zero tolerance when accusations of impropriety were brought around. The Puritans’ uncompromising government led to many predicaments, especially those associated with individuality.…
Jamestown and Massachusetts Bay Colony both had great impacts for the thirteen colonies. Jamestown was the first surviving settlement for the English in the Americas. Jamestown’s survival caused more settlers to come to the Americas in the belief that they too could survive. The Puritans of Massachusetts Bay colony believed only Puritans should have a “voice” over the colony. Non-puritans left Massachusetts to start a new colony because they didn’t want to be pressured to follow the beliefs of the Puritans.…
The Colonists and Native Americans The relationship between the Colonists and Native Americans was a rocky one to say the least. Often times the focus of American history revolves around the war for independence and the beginning of the American government, but in reality American history began much sooner. Native Americans and early Colonists had once hoped to work together and mutually benefit one another, one can clearly see that this did not work. History shows us how and if violence could have been avoided, what the main causes of conflict were, and which party appeared to be most at fault. One thought provoking question that could be asked is whether violence could have been avoided, or if it was imminent.…
When the Puritans showed up the Indians then had another enemy. “The cry of the Indians was dreadful, especially when they saw their men run out of the rendezvous toward the shallop to recover their arms, the Indians wheeling about upon them” (Bradford lines 245-247). The Indian fought against the Puritans to protect their own territory. The Indians lives were changed now that the Puritans had became another enemy to…