The New World was an uncharted venture that was full of potential for the European countries. People of any type of station, the wealthy, poor and servants could find the chance to make a new life for themselves. American history between the 1600’s and 1750’s was emanating with opportunity for those under religious persecution, the poor who sought wealth and servants that dreamed of freedom. The New world offered the needed opportunities that the British subjects and other ethnicities wanted to obtain so they could seek a better life for themselves. The New World increased these new prospects for those in need for religious freedom, for others to gain wealth and expand their power and wealth. Colonization of the New World started off on
Nation States were instrumental in funding voyages and improving the human condition during the age of exploration. England, a Nation State, helped bridge the New World and Old World together. Together they created an array of wealth and opportunity, which as a result bettered the lives of both the people in England, and the settlers of the New World. England’s colonization of the New World was beneficial to the English, but detrimental to the lives of the poor and natives of the New World. Despite the negatives, England as a Nation State vastly improved the human condition of the English people.
Being the first two well-known places in which the English would set out to colonize in 1607 and 1620, Jamestown, Virginia and Plymouth, Massachusetts hold very separate set of beliefs, standards, and outlooks on life then and the future to come. While paving the way for things such as slavery, taxes, ownership of land, inclusion of women, tobacco and government assemblies, John Smith and the people of Jamestown became a classical foundation for new life and economic growth for the new world that is, the United States. On the other hand, William Bradford and his people began to realize the intentions of the Church of England were unholy and had strayed away from God’s teachings from the Bible. With this in mind, the Pilgrims set on a voyage to the new world to seek religious freedom. As we know it, the Pilgrims sought for peace and a new way of living that was fair, just and free from religious corruptions.
The American countries were built out of the countries that conquered it and rebuilt over the constitution that they started. As the other countries expanded to the west, the west became a country itself and as a country, a country wants to expand. As the British, Spanish, and French empires expanded they also lost the lands, conveying the fact that the U.S. expanded slowly and made sure that none of the areas that they conquered would declare war over them for their safety and own laws. When the U.S. expanded they wanted to be sure that history doesn't repeat itself against themselves as they did. I argue that the American expansion was doing whatever a country should do, expand and upgrade, improve the culture, religion, and technology.
Since the settlement of colonial American and the migration of individuals from different ethnicities and backgrounds, the United States of America has been as a melting pot. After the immigration of former Europeans, to colonial Americans, citizens felt displaced with the lack of national identity from 1810 to 1840. Politically, the United States lacked a problem of representation within their government. As former members of Great Britain, Americans were only aware of what they did not want, a monarchy, which led to their dismissal. Voting, Americans could not justify a system that allowed everyone to feel satisfied with.
1. When did the “Aroostook War” occur & what was its cause? An explosive controversy of the early 1840s involved the Maine boundary dispute. The St. Lawrence River is icebound several months of the year, as the British, remembering the War of 1812, well knew.
Although all the colonists all came from England, the community development, purpose, and societal make-up caused a distinct difference between two distinct societies in New England and the Chesapeake region. The distinctions were obvious, whether it be the volume of religious drive, the need or lack of community, families versus single settlers, the decision on minimal wage, whether or not articles of agreements were drawn for and titles as well as other social matters were drawn, as well as where loyalties lay in leaders. New England was, overall, more religious than the Chesapeake region. Settlers in New England were searching relief for religious persecution in Europe. Puritans, Quakers, and Catholics were coming in droves to America searching for an opportunity to have religious freedom.
In Ecological Imperialism, Alfred Crosby discusses how European species impacted the indigenous flora and fauna of regions settled by European settlers. The most drastic changes were experienced by North America and Australia. Species such as horses, cattle, and pigs had a prodigious effect not only on the ecosystems they spread to, but upon the livelihoods of indigenous populations. Weeds, fruit-trees, and of course various cash crops would find a home in both continents. Domesticated European animals reproduced rapidly, given the ability to run free on vast terrain that held copious amounts of food.
As Western states industrialized and made significant scientific and technological developments, previously prominent industries of handmade goods were transformed to highly profitable industries of goods manufactured from technology as mass production put forward the economic idea of capitalism which established extreme economic prosperity for middle-class people such as factory owners and merchants. As Western states industrialized, there was an increasing need for raw materials to supply the technologies of industrialization, and thus European powers looked toward less developed countries, many of which were in non-Western areas to provide sources of raw materials and often cheap labor that could facilitate the extraction and/or processing
Religion and Colonization In the New World was oportunity for all Europe, Spaniards, English, Portuguese, and even French. This new continent was able do give them gold, silver, wood, even a commercial trade route to China, or just an equality on their societies. But there was too many ways to atach the success way, those ways were in fact leaded by the religion.
American imperialism many believe began in late 1700’s with the proclamation line across the Appalachian Mountains. Others believe that it began in 1803 with the Louisiana purchase. Frederick Jackson Turner’s thesis was that the frontier which is the constant expansion to the west is what defined American democracy. Manifest Destiny was the belief that the United States not only could, but was destined to, stretch from coast to coast. Turners thesis along with manifest destiny are proofs of American imperialism going back to the founding of America.
The Spanish colonization of the Americas was a complex and lengthy process that involved a wide range of strategies and institutions. One of the pivotal rudiments of this process was the establishment of presidios, which were military strongholds used by garrisons of varying sizes to cover and protect Spanish homes and populations from external risks. The presidios were constantly located in remote regions. The garrisons that occupied these strongholds consisted of legionnaires known as dragones de cuera, brave soldiers trained for frontier warfare. Meanwhile, the Spanish carried out different missions to convert the indigenous populations to Christianity, for which they reckoned on religious institutions.
Something that had one of the biggest impacts on the world as it is today is colonization. There’s no way that the world we live in would be the same without it. From colonization, a multitude of good things came out of it, such as wealth for many nations, new land discovered, and colonies established. However, all of those things came at a price to others. The negatives of colonization affected the Native Americans (North, South, and Central America) and the Africans.
The arrival of the first Europeans in the Americas is dramatically captured through the many writers who attempted to communicate what they saw, experienced and felt. What is more, the very purposes of their treacherous travel and colonization are clearly seen in their writings; whether it is poetry, history or sermons. Of the many literary pieces available today, William Bradford and John Winthrop’s writings, even though vary because the first is a historical account and the second is a sermon, stand out as presenting a clear trust in God, the rules that would govern them and the reason they have arrived in the Americas. First of all, William Bradford provides an in-depth look into the first moment when the Puritans arrived in the Americas. In fact, he chronicles the hardships they face on their way to Plymouth, yet he includes God’s provision every step of the way.
The Mayflower Compact and the Arbella Covenant. During the 1600’s many people had standards of how one should act to be seen as godly. Both the Pilgrims and Puritans had their own set of ideologies of what was seen as good and what was seen as bad. The New World was a chance for spiritual freedom and new opportunities.
In these letters De Crevecoeur addresses how America is a new type of person. This new type of person De Crevecoeur refers to are the individuals who came to America during the frontier. These individuals came from all over and hold different beliefs. De Crevecoeur finds that “Diverse nationalities and faiths, he said, might well ‘melt’ into a more peaceful, justice-loving, and prosperous original, and it should be the envy of the world” (Horwitz 23). The frontier brought about a whole new race of individuals who could bring a whole new perspective.