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US history
Course: US history > Unit 2
Lesson 2: Chesapeake and Southern colonies- Early English settlements - Jamestown
- Jamestown - John Smith and Pocahontas
- Jamestown - the impact of tobacco
- Jamestown - life and labor in the Chesapeake
- Jamestown - Bacon's Rebellion
- Jamestown
- The West Indies and the Southern colonies
- Lesson summary: Chesapeake and Southern colonies
- Slavery in the British colonies
- Slavery in the British colonies
- Lesson summary: Slavery in the British colonies
- Slavery in the British colonies
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The West Indies and the Southern colonies
Plantation agriculture, and slave labor, united the British colonies in the West Indies and the southern part of the eastern seaboard. In this video, Kim discusses the sugar islands of the Caribbean and how their reliance on enslaved Africans for labor defined plantation society throughout the British colonies.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why is sugar SUPER important back then?(9 votes)
- It wasn’t important so much as it was a social symbol of wealth. Like silk, it was very desired in England. Also, plantations planted sugar because it was very expensive, and since demand was high, it could probably bring in some money. Though it took a lot of labor to grow, of course the plantation owners had a steady labor force of enslaved Africans.(18 votes)
- why was sugar such a big thing to the people back then(4 votes)
- It was a luxury... Just think how much we use sugar today because it's so accessible, but back then it was harder and more expensive to get, so that's why it was such a big thing(6 votes)
- Where in Asia was the sugar plant originally from?(4 votes)
- Warm regions of Asia as a wild plant.
New Guinea as a crop.
http://www.sugarhistory.net/sugar-making/sugarcane/(5 votes)
- How did sugar help in the production of alcohol? I was taught that rum from the caribbean was the motivation for enslavement, moral degradation, and genocide in the 17th and 18th centuries.(4 votes)
- Fermentation is the process where yeast consumes sugar to make alcohol. I agree that rum was one of the commodities that lead to increased slavery in the western hemisphere.(6 votes)
- Is there a set reason that North and South Carolina split?(4 votes)
- Southern Carolina's economy consisted of rice and sugar plantations, with hundreds of white plantation owners and tens of thousands of African slaves as labour.
North Carolina composed of the regions discontented mass, with former indentured servants owning small tobacco plantations as well as slavery for labour.
People from Virginia and the southern part of Carolina looked down upon them, and so the differing inhabitants and geographies led to a separation in 1712.
reference: https://www.ushistory.org/us/5c.asp
I don't know if what @jennifer.catoe said is true since it's not given on this particular website.(2 votes)
- what was Spain doing all these time when the brits were setting up their colonies? Didn't they find it a competition and take some steps to compete over the brits?(3 votes)
- The Spanish certainly found British colonialism a threat. Indeed, the mid-18th century saw the War of Jenkin's Ear, which was a major conflict between the United Kingdom and Spain.
The Colony of Georgia, as an example of the vicious back-and-forth before the aforementioned war, was originally an anti-slavery colony--the Governor, Oglethorpe, was an abolitionist and was allowed to keep Georgia a slaveless colony because of the fear that Spaniards would help slaves overthrow the colonial government.(4 votes)
- Was the Chesapeake colonies a part of the Southern colonies?(3 votes)
- The lesson you'll find here https://www.arcgis.com/apps/MapJournal/index.html?appid=e211830605324062ace0e10148ffd6e4 locates Maryland and Virginia in the "southern" and Delaware in the "middle".(2 votes)
- At, what does codify mean? 5:45(3 votes)
- "codify" means to make something part of stated rules.(2 votes)
- So the timeline shown at the bottom of this video says that Lord Baltimore founded Maryland in 1634 but the Lesson Summary: Chesapeake and Southern colonies says that happened in 1632. Which is it?(3 votes)
- What happened to the proprietary colony? Did the owners just give up their control or was it forced by the people?(3 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] When we
think of British colonies in the Americas before 1776 we tend to think of the 13 colonies. Those colonies that were located
along the eastern seaboard of North America and which rebelled as a group in the American Revolution. But if you were standing in London, say 1770, and you were thinking about British colonies in the New World, it's more likely that your thoughts would have turned to the Caribbean, what they called the West
Indies and the sugar islands of Jamaica or Barbados, than say the colony of New Jersey. Because even though this was quite a gigantic swath of territory, these tiny little islands in the Caribbean were incredibly profitable
for English investors. Because sugar was a commodity that fetched very high prices in the Colonial Era. In this video I want to focus
on the southern colonies and the British colonies in the Caribbean, which although they were
somewhat separated in land. Got them next to each other here, but kinda imagine that
this is the tip of Florida. So that belongs down here, and all these little
islands in the Caribbean are far to the south of
mainland North America. So what united these colonies, even though they were
divided in geography, is that they were plantation colonies. They were in southern or tropical regions, which meant that they
had long growing seasons that made them ideal
for planting cash crops. That is crops that are
specifically grown to be sold. Now we've already talked
a little bit about the crops of Virginia,
which would be tobacco, but in this video I want to talk a little bit more about two other crops. Sugar, which was grown in the Caribbean, and rice, which was
grown in the Carolinas. Growing these cash crops for export was the main focus of these colonies, and their social structures were organized around producing those cash crops. So let's talk bout sugar. Now we hardly think about consuming sugar in our tea or coffee today, but in the Colonial Era it
was an incredible luxury and it commanded very high prices. One of the reasons for this is because sugar was extremely
labor intensive to make. The sugarcane plant is
actually indigenous to Asia, but Europeans brought it to the New World with the hopes of turning
it into a cash crop. They planted it in the
tropical areas of the Caribbean and then they imported enslaved Africans to work on their sugar plantations. Now you can see a little
bit in these two prints of what sugar processing was like. You would have to grow the cane stalks, press the juice from them, boil the juice until it created crystals. Sugar processing happened 24/7, and unlike tobacco you
really had to be very wealthy to grow sugar because it required a huge capital investment upfront. You had to buy a lot of land
and grow a lot of sugarcane and get a lot of machinery if you hoped to produce enough to make a profit. So a handful of very
wealthy plantation owners, who mostly stayed in England
because the tropical diseases of the Caribbean were too
likely to kill them off. These sugar barons had
unimaginable wealth. The tobacco planters of Virginia were nothing compared to them. And they were ruthless
about turning a profit. In fact they thought that
it would be more profitable in the event of the
deaths of enslaved people from overwork or disease or some kind of accident in sugar processing, to just replace enslaved workers rather than make their
work less dangerous. Growing sugar was so profitable
that the Caribbean islands, which were so small, couldn't
even spare room to grow food. They imported all their
food from elsewhere so that every square inch of
arable land in the Caribbean could be used to grow sugar. Now with so many enslaved people
coming into the Caribbean, by the mid 1600s, enslaved
Africans in the Caribbean far outnumbered white people. And consequently the white slave owners became increasingly
fearful of slave uprisings. So plantation owners who were, of course, in control of
the colonial government began to crack down on enslaved people, codifying the racial status
of enslaved Africans. In 1661, Barbados passed a slave code that was incredibly harsh. I won't go into all of it
here but the gist of it was that the lives of
enslaved Africans were to be very closely monitored. They would require passes to travel. They had no legal rights. And if a slave owner maimed
or killed an enslaved person there would be no repercussions for that violence or death. We will see aspects of
the Barbados Slave Act in the statutes passed in the
southern mainland colonies, and later southern states
in the United states. And although we tend to
think of plantation slavery generally looking like
the slavery we would see later in Georgia or South Carolina, large cotton plantations, for the vast majority
of enslaved Africans, their experience would have been much more like what we saw in the Caribbean. In fact, 90 percent of all enslaved people were sent to the Caribbean
or South America. Only a little over 300,000 would be sent to mainland North America. So if you're looking for
the most typical experience of slavery from the point of view of the people who lived it, life on the sugar plantation
was a much more likely prospect than life on a cotton plantation. In fact it was English
planters in the Caribbean who decided that they might strike north to create a new plantation colony, which they called Carolina
after the English King Charles. Now Carolina was founded
as one big colony in 1670, but by 1712 it was
separated into two colonies, North Carolina and South Carolina. And the wealthy plantation
owners who founded Charles Town, also named after King Charles, brought most of the aspects
of plantation slavery they had picked up in
the Caribbean with them. The Pass System, the lack of legal rights, the lack of repercussions for whites. One main difference, however, was that in the Carolinas rice cultivation took the place of sugar cultivation as the main cash crop. Plantation owners quickly
discovered that many West Africans had worked on their own rice
farms before enslavement. And so they particularly wished
to purchase West Africans to work on rice plantations. This is an image here
of a rice plantation. Obviously, this a photograph, so it would be from a
couple hundred years after the settlement of the Carolinas, but I think it gives you a sense of what rice cultivation looked like. I want to finish by just
briefly talking about the colonies of Maryland and Georgia, which were also plantation colonies. But I've grouped them together because they were both founded
for altruistic reasons. They were proprietary colonies originally like Pennsylvania, for example, meaning that they were the
possessions of one person rather than a company or the crown. Maryland was founded in
1632 by an English catholic named Lord Baltimore who wanted to create a haven of religious freedom for Catholics in North America. In 1649, Maryland passed
the law concerning religion, also known as the Maryland
Act of Toleration, which extended religious
toleration to everyone who believed in Jesus. So all Protestants, all Catholics, but on the flip side
it prescribed death for anyone who did not believe in
Jesus like Jews or Atheists. Georgia was founded a
century later in 1732 by an English humanitarian
named James Oglethorpe. And Oglethorpe was
trying to reform prisons. In England people who
couldn't pay their debts were thrown into debtors' prison, which was kind of silly because
when they were in prison they didn't have the
opportunity to try to make money to pay back their debts. So Oglethorpe founded
the colony of Georgia with the idea that people
who were suffering from debt could go to this new
colony and work it off. And for that reason he
also outlawed slavery in the early years of Georgia's existence, but by about 1750 the
pressure to include slaves in the Georgia economy
so that it could keep up with South Carolina, for
example, grew too great. And so slavery was permitted. So although the colonies
of the West Indies and the southern part of North America were in different places and sometimes founded
for different reasons, they were all united by the fact that they relied on slavery, and in many cases had a much larger enslaved African population
than white population. And they focused for their economies on plantation agriculture. Now you'll notice that in this video I haven't spent much time talking about the experiences of
enslaved African people, and that's because I want to devote another video to that. So check out our video
on Atlantic slavery.