PPT-3.2 Life in Colonial America
Author : yoshiko-marsland | Published Date : 2018-12-18
Angela Brown Focus Bellringer Ladies and Gentlemen What associations come to mind when you hear this phrase How do the images of ladies and gentlemen during colonial
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3.2 Life in Colonial America: Transcript
Angela Brown Focus Bellringer Ladies and Gentlemen What associations come to mind when you hear this phrase How do the images of ladies and gentlemen during colonial times compare with those of today. The Art of Colonial Trades. A . WebQuest. Designed for Grades . 4 & 5. by . Bethany Whelan bwhelan01@bellarmine.edu. Task. . Process. Evaluation. Conclusion. Introduction. Introduction. . You are a teenager in Colonial America. It has come time for you to choose a career. Your parents are encouraging you to become an apprentice and eventually take over the family wig-making shop, but you would like to explore your options.. Conquest by the Cradle. A Mingling of the Races. The Structure of Colonial Society. Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists. Workaday America. Horsepower and Sailpower. Dominant Denominations. The Great Awakening. outposts of control for Europe. Catholicism. is the major religion. Colonies mirror their . mother countries. Wealth gained through . Mining precious metals. Viceroys. – royal officials who rule. & Colonization of The Americas. I. The Spanish Caribbean. A. The indigenous Tainos or Arawaks . Taino Indians, Dominican Rep., 1500 CE. B. The . Encomienda. system. 1. subjugated by the Spanish to mine gold & silver. Ms. McLane. Ms. . Afshar. / Ms. Scott. Think about it…. Why do you speak Spanish?. Do Now. Guess the populations of the following places in the year 1500:. a. Paris . b. London . c. British Isles . Colonial and United States Review to 1820. a. Identify the reasons for colonization, evaluate its impacts, and analyze the success or failure of settlements in North America. b. Analyze religious development and its significance in colonial America (e.g., religious settlements, the Great Awakening). 1. . The men who owned and ran the taverns . which sprang . up in the . colonial . towns.. Pub is for Public house. 2. . . What was the Great Awakening? Give 2 examples of . people . who . had . 1700-1775. American Pageant Chapter 5. Conquest by the Cradle. Population growth. 1700. 300,000 people total. 20,000 of total-. -black. 1775 . 2.5 million people total. 500,000 . of total—black. 400,000 . . Hey! Hey!. Let’s discover…. today!. COLONIAL AMERICA. Vocabulary. colony. : a distant territory belonging to or under the control of a . nation.. Vocabulary. colonist. : a person who lives in a . Empire & Aftermath. February 2017. Introduction. Economic . development . – a . term used frequently in 20th century by economists, policymakers, intellectuals. Concept has a longer history, connected to ideas about modernisation, industrialisation, westernisation.. Revolution, 1700 . – 1775 . I. Conquest by the Cradle. By . 1775, Great Britain ruled 32 colonies in North America.. All . of them were growing by leaps and bounds.. By 1775, the population numbered 2.5 million people.. ). The Columbian Exchange. The . Columbian Exchange. refers to the transfer of peoples, animals, plants, and diseases between the New and Old Worlds. The Columbian Exchange. The . domesticated livestock and major agricultural crops of the Old World has spread throughout the New World. Students can use this volume as an excellent reference for compare-and-contrast skills. From Native American medicine to the early scourge of smallpox in crowded, unsanitary colonial hubs, students can see how far medicine has come since colonial times. Images of Algonquian medicine men and artifacts from a 17th-century surgeon\'s medical bag give students candid visual points of reference to reinforce the vast differences between colonial medicine and the safe, sterile, often high-technology practice medicine has become today. Students can use this volume as an excellent reference for compare-and-contrast skills. From Native American medicine to the early scourge of smallpox in crowded, unsanitary colonial hubs, students can see how far medicine has come since colonial times. Images of Algonquian medicine men and artifacts from a 17th-century surgeon\'s medical bag give students candid visual points of reference to reinforce the vast differences between colonial medicine and the safe, sterile, often high-technology practice medicine has become today.
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