Section 2.3
Section 2.3
Section 2.3
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MAIN IDEA
English Puritans came to
North America, beginning
in 1620.
Puritans
John Winthrop
Separatist
Plymouth Colony
Massachusetts
Bay Colony
Roger Williams
Anne Hutchinson
Pequot War
Metacom
King Philips War
Anne Dudley Bradstreets book of poetry, The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung
Up in America, is regarded as one of the first important works of
American literature.
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When Anne Bradstreet and her family boarded the Arbella, the flagship of the Puritan expedition to America, the English settlement at
Jamestown was still struggling to survive. Unlike the profit-minded
colonists at Jamestown, however, the Puritans emigrated in order to
create a model new societywhat John Winthrop, their first governor, called a City upon a Hill.
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PURITANS AND PILGRIMS Puritanism had its origins in the English Reformation.
After King Henry VIII (14911547) broke with Roman Catholicism in the 1530s,
his daughter, Elizabeth I (15331603) formed the Anglican church, or the Church
of England. Although the Anglican church was free of Catholic control, some
church members felt that it had kept too much of the Catholic ritual and tradition. These people were called Puritans because they wanted to purify the
Anglican church by eliminating all traces of Roman Catholicism. Puritans
embraced the idea that every worshipper should experience God directly through
faith, prayer, and study of the Bible. Puritans held ministers
in respect as a source of religious and moral instruction, but
they objected to the authority of Anglican bishops.
HISTORICAL
Some Puritans felt they should remain in the Church
of England and reform it from within. Other Puritans did
not think that was possible, so they formed independent
congregations with their own ministers. These
Separatists, known today as the Pilgrims, fled from
England to escape persecution, first to Holland and eventually to America. In 1620, this small group of families
founded the Plymouth Colony, the second permanent
English colony in North America. A
S P O TLIG H T
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CHAPTER 2
A. Answer
Separatists
wanted to separate from the
Anglican
church, the
state church of
England. Other
Puritans wanted
only to reform
the Anglican
church from
within.
MAIN IDEA
Contrasting
A How were
the Separatists
different from
other Puritans?
B. Answer
Some Puritans,
such as the
Pilgrims, left
to break with
the church of
England. Other
Puritans left to
escape political,
social, and economic turmoil.
MAIN IDEA
Analyzing
Motives
B Why did the
Puritans leave
England?
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vious expeditions to North America. Eventually, Plymouth Colony was incorporated into the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
C. Answer
Stockholders
in the
Massachusetts
Bay Company
and all adult
males who
belonged to the
Puritan church.
MAIN IDEA
Analyzing
Issues
C Who could
vote in the
Massachusetts
Bay Colony?
Winthrops vision, however, did not stem from a belief in either social equality or political democracy. Explained Winthrop in his shipboard sermon, God had
decreed that some must be rich, some poor, some high and eminent in power
and dignity, others mean [common] and in subjugation.
Although Puritans made no effort to create a democracy, political power was
spread more broadly than in England. The Massachusetts Bay Company extended the right to vote to not only stockholders but to all adult males who belonged
to the Puritan church, roughly 40 percent of the colonys men. This was a large
electorate by the standards of Europe in the 1630s. These freemen, as they were
called, voted annually for members of a lawmaking body called the General
Court, which in turn chose the governor. C
History Through
Central to virtually every Puritan
headstone was the image of the
winged skull. The skull itself was
meant to symbolize the physical
reality of death. The wings
represented the soul and the
possibility of immortality.
The winged skull motif persisted into the 18th century, when the
winged skull was either modified to resemble a cherub or was
replaced with a carved portrait of the deceased.
PURITAN HEADSTONES
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Vocabulary
stocks, pillory:
devices in which
an offender was
shackled and held
on public display
as a form of
punishment
D. Answer
Separation of
church and
state and religious freedom.
MAIN IDEA
Contrasting
D What two
principles did
Providence
guarantee that
Massachusetts
Bay did not?
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E. Answer
Native
Americans
believed that
land treaties
were agreements to share,
not own, the
land, and for a
limited period
of time.
DISPUTES OVER LAND Disputes between the Puritans and Native Americans
arose over land use. For every acre a colonial farmer needed to support life, a Native
American needed twenty for hunting, fishing, and agriculture. To Native
Americans, no one owned the landit was there for everyone to use. Native
Americans saw land treaties with Europeans as agreements in which they received
gifts, such as blankets, guns, iron tools, or ornaments, in return for which they
agreed to share the land for a limited time. Europeans, however, saw the treaties as
a one-time deal in which Native Americans permanently sold their land to new
owners. E
MAIN IDEA
Analyzing
Issues
E How did
Native Americans
view land treaties?
THE PEQUOT WAR The first major conflict arose in Connecticut in 1637, when
the Pequot nation decided to take a stand against the colonists. The colonists
formed an alliance with the Narragansett, old enemies of the Pequot. The result
of the Pequot War was the near destruction of the Pequot nation. The end came
in May 1637, when about 90 English colonists and hundreds of their Native
American allies surrounded a Pequot fort on the Mystic River. After setting the
fort on fire, the colonists shot Pequot men, women, and children as they tried to
escape or surrender. The massacre was so awful that the Narragansett pleaded,
Geography
Skillbuilder
Answers
1. Plymouth,
Massachusetts.
2. Bostons proximity to the sea
and good harbor
made it easily
accesssible for
ships carrying
supplies and
settlers.
MAINE
(Mass.)
Lake
Champlain
Ri v e
iver
ack R
NEW
YORK
Portland (1623)
r r im
Me
Connecticut
Claimed by
N.H.
and N.Y.
River
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
Deerfield (1669)
MASSACHUSETTS
Plymouth
(1620)
OCEAN
Cape Cod
Providence
(1636)
RHODE
ISLAND
Hartford (1635)
CONNECTICUT
New Haven
(1638)
Long
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER
1. Place What was the earliest major European
41N
73W
25
50 miles
25 50 kilometers
69W
Stonington
Island
43N
Salem (1626)
Boston (1630) ATLANTIC
son
H ud
Portsmouth (1624)
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This is evil, this is evil, too furious, too many killed. The colonists ignored
them, until all but a few out of about 500600 people in the fort had died. Later,
the Narraganset leader Miantonomo declared in a speech to the Montauk tribe,
KING PHILIPS WAR Deprived of their land and livelihood, many Native
Americans had to toil for the English to earn a living. They also had to obey
Puritan laws such as no hunting or fishing on Sunday, the Sabbath day.
Wampanoag chief Metacom, whom the English called King Philip, bristled
under these restrictions. In a last-ditch effort to wipe out the invaders, he organized his tribe and several others into an alliance.
The eruption of King Philips War in the spring of 1675 startled the
Puritans with its intensity. Using hit-and-run tactics, Native Americans attacked
and burned outlying settlements throughout New England. For over a year, the
two sides waged a war of mutual brutality and destruction. Finally, food shortages, disease, and heavy casualties wore down the Native Americans resistance,
and they gradually surrendered or fled.
Wampanoag casualties included Metacom, the victim of a bullet fired by a
Native American ally of the English. To commemorate their victory, the Puritans
exhibited Metacoms head at Plymouth for 20 years. With his defeat, Native
American power in southeastern New England was gone forever.
Still, the English paid a high price for their victory. All told, about one-tenth
of the colonial men of military age in New England were killed in King Philips
War, a higher proportion of the total population than would be killed in either
the American Revolution or the Civil War of the 1860s.
1. TERMS & NAMES For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
Puritans
John Winthrop
Separatist
Plymouth Colony
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Roger Williams
Anne Hutchinson
Pequot War
MAIN IDEA
CRITICAL THINKING
2. TAKING NOTES
Identify the effects of each of the
causes listed in the chart below.
3. DRAWING CONCLUSIONS
Why do you think Puritan leaders
viewed Anne Hutchinson as a threat
to their society? Use evidence from
the text to support your answer.
Think About:
Puritan beliefs
characteristics of Puritan society
Hutchinsons teachings
Cause
Persecution of
Puritans in England
Puritan belief in
hard work
Roger Williamss
dissenting beliefs
Rapid colonial expansion
in New England
Defeat of King Philip
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Effect
4. ANALYZING EFFECTS
What were the immediate effects of
King Philips War for Native
Americans and for the settlers?
Metacom
King Philips War
5. DEVELOPING HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVE
Imagine you have been called upon
to negotiate between the New
England colonists and Native
Americans. What would you tell each
side about the other to help them
overcome their misunderstandings?
Think About:
their views on land and religion
the Pequot War and King
Philips War