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  1. Jul 19, 2024 · By the 17th Century, early settlements transitioned into permanent settlements, leading to the development of distinct social, economic, and political systems. These systems were all shaped by the culture and ethnicity of the people living in each of the three regions of the American Colonies. Europeans, Africans, and Indians contributed to ...

    • Religion & Superstition
    • Social Classes
    • Homes & Education
    • Family, Clothing, Food & Leisure
    • Crime & Punishment
    • Conclusion

    The colonists, whether the so-called pilgrims of Plymouth or the Anglicans of Jamestown, were deeply religious Christians who regarded the Bible as God’s Word and understood they were supposed to live their lives according to its strictures. Belief in the reality of a supernatural deity, angels, and evil spirits encouraged the development of extra-...

    Although the social hierarchy was more relaxed in the colonies, it still existed and descended from top to bottom: 1. Upper-class Landowners 2. Merchants and Clerics 3. Farmers, Artisans, & Laborers 4. Indentured Servants 5. Native Americans 6. Slaves People of different classes were identified by the clothing and accessories they could afford, and...

    Colonial homes also reflected one’s social status. The earliest houses of Jamestown and Plymouth were wood-framed buildings insulated with wattle and daub (sticks, straw, and mud) with thatch roofs. A wooden frame, often of lashed saplings, would be raised with horizontal sticks tied between the saplings and then vertical sticks woven between these...

    The family was the fundamental unit of the community, and marriage was encouraged. Most men married in their early to mid-20s while girls could be married as young as 15 years old. Men outnumbered women in the colonies which gave rise to the Jamestown Bridesprogram between 1620-1624, which sent young women from England to Jamestown to be married. T...

    For those who overindulged at the fair, or anywhere for that matter, and broke with accepted social norms, swift punishment followed and most often took the form of public humiliation. Public drunkenness and breaking the sabbath (working on a Sunday or not attending church), for example, were punished by a certain time in the stocks – wooden braces...

    Between c. 1614, when the tobacco crop at Jamestown had become the first successful cash crop of the colonies, through c. 1763, when the English colonists defeated the French in the French and Indian War, a whole new culturedeveloped which was based on the concept of individual effort, strength of character, and adherence to the Christian vision le...

    • Joshua J. Mark
  2. American Life in the 17th Century. 1607-1692 . The Unhealthy Chesapeake. Half the people born in early Virginia and Maryland did not survive past age 20 due to widespread disease. At the beginning of the 18 th Century, Virginia was the most populous colony with 59,000 people.

  3. 1600-1754: Lifestyles, Social Trends, and Fashion: Overview. Old World Customs. European colonists came to America with assumptions about what constituted a good house, family, farm, community, food, and entertainment. They drew these ideas from what they had known in the Old World, and they poured all of their energy into re-creating that ...

  4. Nov 16, 2020 · Major Problems in American Colonial History By: Karen Ordahl Kupperman. Liberty and Authority: Early American Political Ideology, 1689-1763 By: Lawrence H. Leder. The Social Structure of Revolutionary America By: Jackson Turner Main. The World They Made Together: Black and White Values in Eighteenth-Century Virginia By: Mechal Sobel

  5. Mar 18, 2020 · Everyday Life in Colonial America. When North America was first discovered, almost every imperial European power began to settle this New World. Initially, British settlers arrived in the regions of New England, the Chesapeake area, and what is now considered the South, while French holdings included areas west of the Mississippi River such as ...

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  7. More APUSH Chapter Outlines. Chapter 2: The Planting of English America, 1500-1733; Chapter 3: Settling the Northern Colonies, 1619-1700; Chapter 4: American Life in the Seventeenth Century, 1607-1692

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