Main Idea: Following Spain’s example, England, France, and the Netherlands set out to establish colonies in North America



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US History

Fort Burrows

3.3 Colonizing North America

READ pgs 81 – 86

Main Idea:

Following Spain’s example, England, France, and the Netherlands set out to establish colonies in North America.
Vocabulary:

Northwest Passage – shorter waterway through or around North America

Protestant Reformation – Christians that protested a Catholic teaching and

began a new church; Protestants

Note: The Catholic church taught that a human could go to heaven by performing good works or ‘deeds’ while on earth. A German monk named Martin Luther, taught that you needed to be ‘saved by faith’ in GOD. The Lutheran church was named after him due to his religious teachings. This concept split Europe’s religious community and eventually was the basis for all other Protestant churches.

coureur (courier) de bois (koo RYOOR duh BWAH) – runners of the woods

missionary – person who tries to convert other people to accept their religious beliefs

alliance – agreement between nations to aid and protect one another
Setting the Scene:

The court of King Henry VII of England buzzed with excitement in August 1497. Italian sea captain, Giovanni Caboto, and a crew of English sailors had just returned from a 79-day Atlantic voyage.

Caboto, called John Cabot by the English, cut a swaggering figure on the streets

of London. He dressed himself in fine silks and made such a stir that ordinary Londoners ‘ran after him like madmen,” reported one observer. Cabot appeared before King Henry to announce that he had reached a “new-found island’ in Asia where fish were plentiful.

Cabot was one of many Europeans who explored North America between the 1400s and 1600s. England, France, and the Netherlands all envied Spain’s new empire. They wanted American colonies of their own.

Search for a Northwest Passage

Magellan found a sea-route to Asia around the tip of South America. Most Europeans wanted a shorter route; a new way to reach the riches of Asia, a northwest passage. Many tried to find it. Cabot’s ‘new-found land’ was actually not Asia but East Canada.
Exploring for France

  • 1524, Italian Giovanni da Verrazano (vehr rah TSAH noh) sailed past the Carolinas up to Canada


1534, Jacques Cartier (kar tee YAY) traveled half way up into the St. Lawrence river which connects the Great lakes and the Atlantic Ocean
Sequence the individuals and significant events that were part of the search for a northwest passage. Look on Pages 81 thru 84

Date

Country

Explorer

Event

1497

English







1524

French







1534

French







1609

Netherland (Dutch)







1610

English







1673

French







1678

French






Henry Hudson



  • 1609, for Netherlands, Henry Hudson found the New York harbor

  • 1610, for England, he sailed into, explored, and died in the bay that took his name; mutiny

Failure and Success

¿¿ Why were nations eager to start colonies in America ? ______________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Rivalries Among European Nations
Religious Divisions

  • up to 1500s, the only religion in Western Europe was Roman Catholic, lead by the Pope

  • 1517, German Martin Luther, challenged the Catholic church and began the Protestant Reformation

  • France and Spain – Roman Catholic

  • England and Netherlands - Protestant

Rivalries in the Americas



  • Europeans come to America

  • Protestant - Queen Elizabeth encourages RAIDS on Catholic - Spanish colonies and ships

  • Protestant England versus Catholic France for LAND

  • Protestant England versus Protestant Netherlands for LAND


New France

Economy of New France



  • 1605, Samuel de Champlain (sham PLAYN) founded Port Royal, 1st permanent French settlement in North America

  • 1608, he built a trading post on the St Lawrence called Quebec

  • no gold or silver, but plenty of land, furs, and trading

  • French colonists known as coureurs de bois became skilled traders; trading knives and copper kettles for furs

  • the French did not try to conquer the Indians or build farms; they did not want to interfere with the Indians

Missionary Work



  • French missionaries traveled with fur traders and met Native Americans

  • they drew maps and wrote about the land they explored

Expansion to the Mississippi



  • Mississippi, Indian for ‘Father of the Waters’

  • French missionary, Father Jacques Marquette, with a fur trader named Louis Joliet explored Ole Man River from the Great Lakes down to about present day Memphis

  • Robert La Salle, the man, explored, mapped, claimed, built forts, and settled the lands from the Great Lakes down to the Gulf of Mexico

  • La Salle named Louisiana after his King Louis XIV

  • The French are credited with establishing Fort Detroit ( Detroit, MI) and New Orleans, LA

  • French brought many Africans to work their plantations; French slavery

Government of New France



  • French king governed the New France lands like the Spanish; he appointed the leaders

  • 1660, King Louis XIV sent a thousand farmers to New Orleans to increase population; ( sound like what the Spanish did in Texas ? )

  • by 1680, only 10,000 lived in New Orleans area; many had chosen to become entrepreneurs, coureurs de bois, to avoid government control


New Netherland

1626, Dutchman Peter Minuit (MIHN yoo with), bought Manhattan Island from local Indians and named it New Amsterdam. Other Dutch settlers claimed land further up the Hudson River and called it New Netherland; now called New York. The Dutch welcomed all peoples and religions. This helped them become a busy port.
Rivalry Over Furs

  • Dutch furriers sent 7,246 furs to the Netherlands in their very 1st shipment

  • Dutch and French became revivals and both sought an alliance with the Native Americans

  • Dutch and the Iroquois verses French and the Hurons (HYOO rahnz)

Dutch Ways in North America

  • ice skating, Saint Nicholas’ ( Saint Nick or Santa Claus fer ya Texians) birthday

  • Dutch words we use; boss for master, yachts for sailing, cookies for munching, sleighs for riding in the snow

Impact on Native Americans

  • DISEASES, over-trapping, almost wiped out the beavers around New York, Indians versus Settlers on the increase

  • Indians liked: copper kettles, knives, guns and gun powder, ALCOHOL

  • Alcohol was the most detrimental item brought to the new world and traded with the Indians

  • MORE FRENCH, MORE DUTCH, LESS LAND for the INDIANS

  • Indians move West due to extensive land loss to European migration


1. Why did England, France, and the Netherlands seek a Northwest Passage to Asia ?

______________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

2. How did the Protestant Reformation affect rivalries among European nations ?

______________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

3. How did rivalry develop between New France and New Netherland ?

______________________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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