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US history
Course: US history > Unit 2
Lesson 3: Colonial North America- Society and religion in the New England colonies
- Politics and native relations in the New England colonies
- Puritan New England: Plymouth
- Puritan New England: Massachusetts Bay
- The Middle colonies
- Lesson summary: New England and Middle colonies
- The Navigation Acts
- The Enlightenment
- The Great Awakening
- The consumer revolution
- Developing an American colonial identity
- Colonial North America
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The Middle colonies
The Middle colonies consisted of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and Delaware. Located in the middle of the Atlantic seaboard, their economies combined the industry of the North with the agriculture of the South. They were unusual, however, for their degree of religious toleration and their wide range of ethnic diversity.
Want to join the conversation?
- Are the Penn Quakers related to this video?(2 votes)
- From the author:As in the university's mascot? I think so!(12 votes)
- what were some motivations of the middle colonies(2 votes)
- If you are talking religious wise then they allowed more religions to live there and they had more freedom. But if you are talking about economically then they had good weather for farming, lots of trees, and nice soil. I hope this helps sorry if it doesn't.(6 votes)
- did the religion affect the middle class in the middle colonies?(3 votes)
- Did the brand quaker get their name from this?(1 vote)
- "The name was chosen when Quaker Mill partner Henry Seymour found an encyclopedia article on Quakers and decided that the qualities described — integrity, honesty, purity — provided an appropriate identity for the company's oat product."(2 votes)
- at, how did William Penn bargain with the king of England and got him to agree to let him have land in the new world and allow him to convert to the Quaker religion and taking more of the king's subjects to the new to practice a different religion from the state religion 1:21(1 vote)
- The King of England, King Charles II, owed William Penn's father £16,000, but he died before he could receive the payment; so the King instead gave William Penn the land of Pennsylvania to pay off the debt. William Penn didn't have to negotiate anything.
As for why Pennsylvania could practice a different religion from the state religion -- technically, they didn't. The overarching religion was the same, the only thing that was diverse was their interpretation of the religion. The ethnic groups that came later: German, Scots-Irish, Scots, and French settlers--mostly practiced a brand of Christianity disfavored by the government of their homeland.(3 votes)
- Did religion affect the middle class in the middle colonies?(1 vote)
- Yes, in the sense that the extreme exclusiveness of the Anglican churches in the South and o the Puritans in parts of New England encouraged them to be "religiously tolerant" as the instructor in the video said.
I hope this helps :)(3 votes)
- Does any one know why almost every male in this time period name was JOHN.
I don't know why but it always makes me mad(2 votes)- I would venture to suggest that your sample is too small. Perhaps it is not "almost every male", but "those who wrote the history only emphasized people named" John. Think of it that way.(1 vote)
- What was so important about the middle colonies?(2 votes)
- Isn't that covered in the lesson? I recommend that you listen again.(0 votes)
- What was the debt the king owed Penn. Ad why did the king owe the debt in the first place?(1 vote)
- William Penn's father had used his own money to help the British Navy, so the king owed £16,000 pounds, which approximately converts to $3,915,794.29 in today's money.(2 votes)
- Were the colonies divided by class? I saw a pattern.(2 votes)
- No, but they were at different levels of modernization. For example the middle colonies were more developed than the Southern Colonies, although the southern colonies had a lot of wealthy white plantation owners(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] Over
the course of the 1600s the English continued to settle along the eastern seaboard of North America. Now we've already talked about
the settlements at Virginia and those of Massachusetts and a little bit about the
settlement of New York, which was first founded by the Dutch as New Amsterdam in 1624. In this video I want to talk a little bit more about the Middle Colonies. These colonies that were here kind of on the center of the eastern seaboard, south of Massachusetts and north of the Southern Colonies of Virginia, particularly Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and this little, tiny purple
colony right here, Delaware. Now what's unique about
the Middle Colonies compared to the northern
or southern colonies is not just that they were kind of in a central location, but also that they were
proprietary colonies, which means that they were the property of individual owners. So unlike Jamestown, for example, which was founded by a
company, the Virginia Company, the colony of Pennsylvania
was founded by one man, William Penn, who was granted his land
by the king of England in exchange for a debt that the king had owed his father. So in the early years of
these proprietary colonies, they were kind of the playgrounds of the people who owned them. They could set their own
rules for the most part. And that freedom resulted in colonies that were more ethnically diverse and more religiously tolerant than their neighbors
to the north or south. So let's look at the
colony of Pennsylvania as an example. So Pennsylvania was
founded by William Penn, and Penn was a English aristocrat from a very good family who'd converted to the Quaker religion. Although the real name for Quakers was the Religious Society of Friends, they got the nickname Quaker because they seemed to quake when they
were in religious ecstasy. Like the Puritans, Quakers faced religious persecution in England
because they did not follow the Church of England, which was a form of
rebellion against the king who was the head of the Church of England. But in addition to the
Quakers' strange ideas about religion, they also
had some strange ideas for the time period about social status. Quakers believed that all people had the light of God in
them and therefore were more or less equal in stature. So for example, women
could preach in church, as you see in this image right here. So when William Penn
converted to the Quaker faith, Penn had a really rough time of it. So he came upon an idea that perhaps he could make a haven for Quakers and for religious dissenters more broadly in the New World. So he negotiated with the king who owed his father a debt, and in exchange for this debt, the king granted Penn
land in North America, which was named Pennsylvania, sylvania being Latin for forest. So kind of Penn's forest, Penn's woods. And Penn decided to extend
his religious tolerance not just to Quakers, but
really to all people. All Protestants, no matter what their particular sect, could have citizenship, run for office, vote, and Catholics and even Jews were welcome in Pennsylvania, although they did not have the right to vote or hold office. This was incredibly
radical for the time period when it was common for nations to have a state religion and to persecute those who didn't follow that religion. Penn advertised for his new colony and particularly hoped
that industrious people, people with skills like carpentry or blacksmithing, would
come to Pennsylvania and make it a prosperous colony. And they did. The ease of getting citizenship, the religious tolerance, and the plentiful and
cheap land of Pennsylvania drew many settlers to the colony such that its principal
city, Philadelphia, was the largest city in North America before the Revolution, with about 40,000 inhabitants. Because Quakers were pacifists, that is they did not
believe in violence or war, they even lived peacefully
with Native Americans in the early years of
Pennsylvania settlement. But as more immigrants of different faiths came to Pennsylvania
and began pushing west, that short era of peaceful
co-habitation ended. Likewise, because Quakers believed in the innate equality of all human beings, they were not fond of slavery. The environment in the Middle Colonies was not so cold as it was in the north, not so hot as it was in the south, it was kind of middling. And so it was a very
good place for farming, particularly cereal crops like wheat. You can see this print here shows wheat growing in this field. And just as the name suggests, Pennsylvania had a lot of wood, so it was also a good place for timber. And the excellent ports at Philadelphia and New York City made it an excellent place for trade. Because it was such a
good place to grow food, the Middle Colonies got the nickname the Breadbasket Colonies. And the patterns of land
ownership reflect this. Since the soil was good, your average farmer owned more land than a New England farmer, but not as much as a Virginia farmer who would've had many
acres to grow tobacco. So much like the environment, the farms in the Middle Colonies were middling in size. In fact, if I had to
put the Middle Colonies on a spectrum, in many places I'd put
them right in the middle when it came to an economy that was more agrarian. The Middle Colonies had
a little bit of both, unlike the Chesapeake
and southern economies which were strongly agrarian. And unlike the New England colonies who began manufacturing quite early. Likewise, when it comes
to the distribution of wealth in the Middle Colonies, once again I'd put the Middle Colonies right here in the center. There were plenty of middling farmers, many indentured servants, and a handful of people
who became quite wealthy, unlike the Chesapeake where there were a handful of extremely wealthy landowners while most people lived at the bottom of the social scale, and unlike New England where small farming led to a fairly even middle class. So the Middle Colonies had a mixed economy of industry and farming, and a fairly balanced class structure with people at many different levels, putting them smack dab in the middle. But for all of the ways
that the Middle Colonies were middling, there were also a few ways that they were quite extraordinary. Well, we've already mentioned that the Middle Colonies had a
level of religious freedom that was virtually unmatched anywhere else in the world. For example, Pennsylvania
extended citizenship to all Protestants and tolerated Catholics and Jews. In comparison, the Chesapeake
and Southern Colonies required citizens to belong
to the Anglican faith, the Church of England, and religious tolerance
for the Catholic Church in Maryland and New Englanders
were extremely strict. For example, in Massachusetts Bay, anyone who was not Puritan was expelled or executed. Although there is of course the exception of Rhode Island, where
religious dissenters could find safe haven. The other extraordinary aspect of these middle colonies was just the sheer amount of ethnic diversity there was. By the time of the American Revolution, less than half, only about 49% of inhabitants were from England or had an English background. The rest were German, French, Dutch, Scotch-Irish. And just a few Africans as there was relatively little slavery. In comparison, New England was perhaps the least diverse of the colonies. Most people were English, with a handful of
remaining Native Americans and Africans. And the Chesapeake and Southern Colonies were largely African and English, with again just a few Native Americans. The people of the Middle Colonies spoke many languages, practiced many faiths, and had a strong possibility
of upward mobility economically since farms and businesses prospered and the Middle Colonies grew rapidly in population.