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Early American History Unveiled

This document provides a summary of the early history of America, beginning with Christopher Columbus' arrival in 1492 and the encounters with native peoples. It then discusses the various European explorers who followed, including those seeking riches and a route to Asia for Spain, England, and France. The establishment of the Jamestown colony by the English in 1607 is described, noting the early hardships, use of indentured servants and shift to tobacco agriculture that allowed it to survive. The introduction of slavery with the arrival of enslaved Africans in 1619 is also mentioned.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
380 views8 pages

Early American History Unveiled

This document provides a summary of the early history of America, beginning with Christopher Columbus' arrival in 1492 and the encounters with native peoples. It then discusses the various European explorers who followed, including those seeking riches and a route to Asia for Spain, England, and France. The establishment of the Jamestown colony by the English in 1607 is described, noting the early hardships, use of indentured servants and shift to tobacco agriculture that allowed it to survive. The introduction of slavery with the arrival of enslaved Africans in 1619 is also mentioned.

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Lucanezul
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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The Beginnings of American History and Literature A New World.

The First Americans On the morning of August 3 1492, an Italian adventurer named Christopher Columbus set sail from Spain to find a new wa from !urope to Asia" #is aim was to open up a shorter trade route between the two $ontinents and return with sil%s, spi$es and gold, and sail ba$% to !urope a ri$h man" Columbus first sailed south to the Canar Islands" &hen he turned west a$ross the un%nown waters of the mid'Atlanti$ O$ean" On the morning of O$tober 12, he stepped ashore on the bea$h of a low sand island whi$h he named the island San Salvador ( #ol Savior )in the $entral part of the *ahamas, in the Carribean+" Columbus believed that he had landed in the Indies, for this reason he $alled the friendl , brown's%inned people who greeted him -los Indios. ( Indians" In fa$t, Columbus had not rea$hed the India, but the shores of a new $ontinent" !uropeans would soon name the new $ontinent Ameri$a, but for man ears the went on $alling its inhabitants Indians" Onl re$entl have these first Ameri$ans been des$ribed more a$$uratel as -native Ameri$ans. or Amerindians" In north of /e0i$o, in what is now the 1nited States and Canada the were organi2ed in tribes" Some were hunters, some were farmers" Some were pea$eful, others warli%e" &he spo%e over three hundred separate languages, some of whi$h were as different from one another as !nglish is from Chinese" !uropeans $alled Ameri$a -the 3ew 4orld". *ut it was not new to the Amerindians" &heir an$estors had alread been living there for ma be 56,666 ears when Columbus stepped on to the bea$h in San Salvador" 4e sa -ma be. be$ause nobod is $ompletel sure" S$ientists believe that the distant an$estors of the Amerindians $ame to Ameri$a from Asia" &his happened, the sa , during the earth7s last I$e Age" At that time a bridge of i$e 8oined Asia to Ameri$a a$ross what is now the *ering Strait" #unters from Siberia $rossed this bridge into Alas%a" 9rom Alas%a the hunters moved south and east a$ross Ameri$a, following herds of $aribou and buffalo" Tribes of native Americans ' the :ueblo ' the Apa$he ' the Iro;uois ' the <a%ota or the Siou0 ' the #aida &he Amerindian peoples of 3orth Ameri$a developed widel varied wa s of life" All suited the natural environments in whi$h the tribes lived, and the lasted for man $enturies" *ut the arrival of !uropeans with their guns, their diseases and their hunger for land would eventuall destro them all" E !lorers from Euro!e If ou as% -4ho dis$overed Ameri$a=., the answer that ou will usuall re$eive is -Christopher Columbus". *ut did he= 4e have seen that the Asian an$estors of the Amerindians arrived in Ameri$a long before Columbus" 4as Columbus the ne0t to arrive= In the $enturies after 1492 stories and legends grew up about other adventurous seamen having rea$hed the 3ew 4orld long before Columbus" One legend tells how a *uddhist mon% named #oei'Shin sailed from China to /e0i$o in 459" Another legend $laims that an Irish mon% named *rendan the *old landed in Ameri$a in 551" >et another sa s that the first !uropean to rea$h the 3ew 4orld was ?eif !ri$son, -?u$% ?eif,. a @i%ing sailor from I$eland" And as re$entl as 1953 a pla;ue was set up at /obile *a in the modern Ameri$an state of Alabama whi$h readsA -In memor of :rin$e /ado$, a 4elsh e0plorer who landed on the shores of /obile *a in 11B6 and left behind, with the Indians, the 4elsh language". All these stories have their supporters" *ut onl in the $ase of the @i%ings have modern s$holars found firm eviden$e to support the old legends" In the 19C6s ar$haeologists un$overed tra$es of @i%ing settlements in both 3ewfoundland and 3ew !ngland" It was the Spanish who began the lasting !uropean o$$upation of Ameri$a" 4hen Columbus returned to Spain he too% ba$% with him some 8ewelr that he had obtained in Ameri$a" &his 8ewelr was important be$ause it was made of gold" In the ne0t fift ears thousands of treasure'hungr Spanish adventurers $rossed the Atlanti$ O$ean to sear$h for more of the pre$ious metal" It was a lust for gold that led #ernan Cortes to $on;uer the A2te$s in the 1526s" &he A2te$s were a wealth , $it 'building Amerindian people who lived in

what is toda /e0i$o" &he growing wealth of Spain made other !uropean nations envious" &he be$ame eager to share the ri$hes of the 3ew 4orld" In 149B Ding #enr @II of !ngland hired an Italian seaman named Eohn Cabot to e0plore the new lands and to loo% again for a passage to Asia" Cabot found no gold and no passage to the !ast" *ut his vo ages were valuable for the !nglish" In later ears !nglish governments used them to support their $laims to own most of the $ast $oast of 3orth Ameri$a" &he 9ren$h also sent e0plorers to 3orth Ameri$a" 9irst an Italian sailor, Fiovanni @erra2ano )for the same purpose as Columbus and Cabot ( to find lands ri$h in gold and a new sea route to Asia+" &hen Ea$;ues Cartier who rea$hed the site of the present'da $it of /ontreal" #e failed to find the wa to Asia that he was loo%ing for, but he gave 9ran$e a $laim to what would later be$ome Canada" Claiming that ou owned land in the 3ew 4orld was one thing" A$tuall ma%ing it ours was something ;uite different" !uropeans $ould onl do this b establishing settlements of their own people" * the seventeenth $entur plent of people in !urope were read to settle in Ameri$a" Some hoped to be$ome ri$h b doing so" Others hoped to find safet from religious or politi$al perse$ution" In the hundred ears after 1C66, !uropeans set up man $olonies in 3orth Ameri$a for reasons li%e these" "irginian Beginnings On /a 26, 1C6B the !nglish sailors tied their ships to trees on the ban%s of a broad and deep river in @irginia" &he named the river the Eames, in honor of Eames I, %ing of !ngland, the $ountr from whi$h the had set sail five long months before" Eust over a hundred men went ashore" &he built rough shelters for themselves, but unfortunatel b the end of the ear two out of ever three of them were dead" *ut their little group of huts be$ame the first lasting !nglish settlement in Ameri$a, named Eamestown" &he site the had $hosen was low'l ing and malarial" &he failed to grow enough food to feed themselves be$ause the were too bus dreaming of gold" &he settlers had been sent to Eamestown b a group of ri$h ?ondon investors representing the @irginia Compan " Its purpose was to set up $olonies along the Atlanti$ $oast of 3orth Ameri$a, between 34G and 3HG north latitude" &he investors paid the $osts of its e0peditions and in return were given the right to divide up an profits it made" &he Eamestown settlers were emplo ees of the @irginia Compan " &he Compan 7s dire$tors hoped that the settlers would find pearls, silver, or some other valuable produ$t in @irginia and so bring them a ;ui$% profit on their investment" &he $olonists eagerl obe ed the Compan 7s orders to sear$h for gold" * doing so the hoped to be$ome ri$h themselves" And then the $olonists began to die ( in ones, in twos, finall in do2ens" Some died in Amerindian atta$%s, some of diseases, some of starvation" Of the 566 $olonists living in the settlement in O$tober 1C69, onl si0t were still alive in /ar$h 1C16" >et new settlers $ontinued to arrive" &he @irginia Compan gathered homeless $hildren from the streets of ?ondon and sent them out to the $olon " &hen it sent a hundred $onvi$ts from ?ondon7s prisons" &he Spanish ambassador in ?ondon told of three $ondemned $riminals who were given the $hoi$e of being hanged or sent to @irginia" &wo agreed to go, but the third $hose to hang" Some @irginia emigrants sailed willingl , however" Some !nglish people during the seventeenth $entur de$ided that it was worth ris%ing the possibilit of hardships in @irginia to es$ape from povert and starvation at home" 9or @irginia had one great attra$tion that !ngland la$%edA plentiful land" &his seemed more important than the reports of disease, starvation and $annibalism from the new $ontinent" In !ngland, as in !urope generall , the land was owned b the ri$h" In @irginia a poor man $ould hope for a farm of his own to feed his famil " 9or a number of ears after 1C11, militar governors ran @irginia li%e a prison $amp" &he enfor$ed stri$t rules to ma%e sure that wor% was done" *ut it was not dis$ipline that saved @irginia" It was a plant that grew li%e a weed thereA toba$$o" !arlier visitors to Ameri$a, li%e Sir 4alter Ialeigh, had brought the first dried leaves of toba$$o to !ngland" In @irginia a oung settler named Eohn Iolfe dis$overed how to dr , or -$ure,. the leaves in a new wa , to ma%e them milder" ?ondon mer$hants paid high pri$es be$ause of its high ;ualit " Soon most of the @irginia settlers were bus growing toba$$o" &he $leared new land along the rivers and ploughed up the streets of Eamestown itself to plant more" &he even used it as mone " &he possibilit of be$oming ri$h b growing toba$$o brought wealth men to @irginia" /ost of the wor%ers on these earl plantations were -indentured servants. from !ngland" &he promised to wor% for an emplo er for an agreed number of ears ( about seven was average (in e0$hange for food and $lothes" At the end the be$ame free to wor% for themselves"

#owever, in August 1C19, a small <ut$h warship an$hored at Eamestown with twent $aptured bla$% Afri$ans on board" &he ship7s $aptain sold them to the settlers as indentured servants" &he bla$%s were set to wor% in the toba$$o fields with white indentured servants from !ngland" *ut there was a ver serious differen$e between their position and that of the whites wor%ing beside them" 4hite servants were indentured for a fi0ed number of ears" &heir masters might treat them badl , but the %new that one da the would be free" *la$% servants had no su$h hope" &heir indenture was for life" In fa$t the were slaves ( although it was ears before their masters openl admitted the fa$t" #lossary Indenture ' )esp" in the past+ to offi$iall agree that )someone, often a oung person+ will wor% for someone else, esp" in order to learn a 8ob $uritan New England -:ilgrims. are people who ma%e a 8ourne for religious reasons" *ut for Ameri$ans the word has a spe$ial meaning" &o them it means a small group of !nglish men and women who sailed a$ross the Atlanti$ O$ean in the ear 1C26" &he group7s members $ame to be $alled the :ilgrims be$ause the went to Ameri$a to find religious freedom" Sometimes Ameri$ans $all them the :ilgrim 9athers" &his is be$ause the see them as the most important of the founders of the future 1nited States of Ameri$a" &he !urope that the :ilgrims left behind them was torn b religious ;uarrels" 9or more than a thousand ears Ioman Catholi$ Christianit had been the religion of most of its people" * the si0teenth $entur , however, some !uropeans had begun to doubt the tea$hings of the Catholi$ Chur$h" &he were also growing angr at the wealth and worldl pride of its leaders" !arl in the $entur a Ferman mon% named /artin ?uther ;uarreled with these leaders" #e $laimed that individual human beings did not need the :ope or the priests of the Catholi$ Chur$h to enable them to spea% to Fod" A few ears later a 9ren$h law er named Eohn Calvin put forward similar ideas" Calvin $laimed that ea$h individual was dire$tl and personall responsible to Fod" *e$ause the protested against the tea$hings and $ustoms of the Catholi$ Chur$h, religious reformers li%e ?uther and Calvin were $alled -:rotestants". &heir ideas spread ;ui$%l through northern !urope" 9ew people believed in religious toleration at this time" In most $ountries people were e0pe$ted to have the same religion as their ruler" &his was the $ase in !ngland" In the 1536s the !nglish %ing, #enr @III, formed a national $hur$h with himself as its head" In the later ears of the si0teenth $entur man !nglish people believed that this Chur$h of !ngland was still too mu$h li%e the Catholi$ Chur$h" &he disli%ed the power, of its bishops" &he disli%ed its elaborate $eremonies and the ri$h de$orations of its $hur$hes" &he also ;uestioned man of its tea$hings" Su$h people wanted the Chur$h of !ngland to be$ome more plain and simple, or -pure". *e$ause of this the were $alled :uritans" &he ideas of Eohn Calvin appealed parti$ularl strongl to them" 4hen Eames I be$ame Ding of !ngland in 1C63 he warned the :uritans that he would drive them from the land if the did not a$$ept his ideas on religion" #is bishops began fining the :uritans and putting them in prison" &o es$ape this perse$ution, a small group of them left !ngland and went to #olland" #olland was the onl $ountr in !urope whose government allowed religious freedom at this time" &he people of #olland wel$omed the little group of e0iles" *ut the :uritans never felt at home there" After mu$h thought and mu$h pra er the de$ided to move again" Some of them ( the :ilgrims ( de$ided to go to Ameri$a" 9irst the returned briefl to !ngland" #ere the persuaded the @irginia Compan to allow them to settle in the northern part of its Ameri$an lands" On September 1C, 1C26, the :ilgrims left the !nglish port of :l mouth and headed for Ameri$a, aboard the Mayflower" &he were a$$ompanied b a number of other emigrants the $alled -Strangers". In 3ovember 1C26, the rea$hed Cape Cod, what is now the state of /assa$husetts, but the en$ountered diffi$ulties, $onse;uentl , the de$ided to find a better pla$e, namel :l mouth" -&he season it was winter,. wrote one of their leaders, -and those who %now the winters of that $ountr %now them to be sharp and violent with $ruel and fier$e storms". &he :ilgrims7 $han$es of surviving were not high" &he fro2en ground and the deep snow made it diffi$ult for them to build houses" &he had ver little food" *efore spring $ame, half of the little group of a hundred settlers were dead" *ut the :ilgrims were determined to su$$eed" &he fift survivors built better houses" &he learned how to fish and hunt" 9riendl Amerindians gave them seed $orn and showed them how to plant it" It was not the end of their hardships, but when a ship arrived in :l mouth in 1C22 and offered to ta%e passengers ba$% to !ngland, not one of the :ilgrims a$$epted" Other !nglish :uritans followed the :ilgrims to Ameri$a" &en ears later a mu$h larger group of

almost a thousand $olonists settled nearb in what be$ame the *oston area" In 1C91, this *ostonian settlement $ombined with the :l mouth $olon under the name of /assa$husetts" The $uritan %nfluence &he ideas of the /assa$husetts :uritans had a lasting influen$e on Ameri$an so$iet " One of their first leaders, Eohn 4inthrop, said that the should build an ideal $ommunit for the rest of man%ind to learn from" -4e shall be li%e a $it on a hill,. said 4inthrop" -&he e es of all people are upon us". &o this da man Ameri$ans $ontinue to see their $ountr in this wa , as a model for other nations to $op " The $uritans& %dea of #overnment &he :uritans of /assa$husetts believed that governments had a dut to ma%e people obe Fod7s will" &he passed laws to for$e people to attend $hur$h and laws to punish drun%s and adulterers" !ven men who let their hair grow long $ould be in trouble" Ioger 4illiams, a :uritan minister in a settlement $alled Salem, believed that it was wrong to run the affairs of /assa$husetts in this wa " #e ob8e$ted parti$ularl to the fa$t that the same men $ontrolled both the $hur$h and the government" 4illiams believed that $hur$h and state should be separate and that neither should interfere with the other" After having been $hased and sent to be arrested, he es$aped along with his followers to set up a new $olon $alled Ihode Island" &he newl 'found area promised its $iti2ens $omplete religious freedom and separation of $hur$h and state" &o this da these ideas are still ver important to Ameri$ans" * the end of the seventeenth $entur a string of !nglish $olonies stret$hed along the east $oast of 3orth Ameri$aA :enns lvania )$olon of the Jua%ers and of the <ut$h+ 3orth Carolina South Carolina Feorgia

'olonial Beginnings and American Literature &he stor of Ameri$an literature begins in the earl 1C66s, long before there were an -Ameri$ans." &he earliest writers were !nglishmen des$ribing the !nglish e0ploration and $oloni2ation of the 3ew 4orld )Ameri$a+" *a$% in !ngland, people planning to move to @irginia or 3ew !ngland would read the boo%s as travel guides" *ut this was dangerous be$ause su$h boo%s often mi0ed fa$ts with fantas " &he writings of 'a!tain (ohn )mith )15H6'1C31+ probabl satisfied readers of both %inds" A real adventurer, in 1C6B, he helped found Eamestown, the first !nglish $olon in Ameri$a" True Relation of Virginia )1C6H+ and Description of New England )1C1C+ are fas$inating -advertisements. whi$h tr to persuade the reader to settle in the 3ew 4orld" &he :uritans, for instan$e, studied the latter boo% $arefull and then de$ided to settle there" #is General Historie of Virginia, New England, and the Summer sles )1C24+ $ontains the stor of his res$ue b a beautiful Indian prin$ess" &he stor is probabl untrue, but it is the first famous tale from Ameri$an literature" Almost from the beginning, as the !nglish settled along the Atlanti$ $oast of Ameri$a, there were important differen$es between the Southern and the 3ew !ngland $olonies" In the South, enormous farms or -plantations. used the labor of bla$% slaves to grow toba$$o" &he ri$h and powerful plantation owners were slow to develop a literature of their own" &he preferred boo%s imported from !ngland" *ut in 3ew !ngland, the :uritan settlers had $ome to the 3ew 4orld in order to form a so$iet based on stri$t Christian beliefs" ?i%e the :uritans in !ngland, who were fighting against the !nglish %ing, the believed that so$iet should be based on the laws of Fod" &herefore the had a far stronger sense of unit and of a -shared purpose." &his was one of the reasons wh $ulture and literature developed mu$h faster than in the South" #arvard, the first $ollege in the $olonies, was founded near *oston in 1C3C in order to train new :uritan ministers" &he first printing press in Ameri$a was started there in 1C3H, and Ameri$a7s first newspaper began in *oston in 1B64" &he most interesting wor%s of 3ew !ngland :uritan literature were histories" &o the :uritans, histor developed a$$ording to -Fod7s plan." In all of their earl 3ew !ngland histories, the saw 3ew !ngland as the -:romised ?and. of the *ible" &he $entral drama of histor was the struggle between Christ and Satan" !f "lymouth "lantation b William Bradford )1596'1C5B+ is the most interesting of the :uritan histories" It des$ribes the :uritans7 diffi$ult relations with the Indians" It also des$ribes their diffi$ulties during the first winter, when half of the small $olon died" &his is all told in the wonderful -plain st le. whi$h the :uritans admired" In order to present the -$lear light of truth. to unedu$ated readers, :uritan writers avoided elegant language" &he e0amples the used were drawn either from the *ible or from the ever da life of farmers and fishermen" The History of New England b (ohn Winthro! )15HH'1C49+ is also in the -plain st le." *ut it is far less $heerful" 4inthrop was the first governor of /assa$husetts *a Colon and, li%e most of the :uritan writers, was a minister all his life" #is writing st le is rather $old" #e rarel shows sho$% or sadness, even when he des$ribes s$enes of great unhappiness" ?i%e all of the :uritan historians, 4inthrop believed that most events $ould be seen as a sign from Fod" 9or e0ample, when a sna%e was found and %illed in a $hur$h, people saw this as the vi$tor of 3ew !ngland religion over Satan" &he first :uritans were not ver demo$rati$" !ver bod had to obe the $hur$h laws" *elievers in other forms of Christianit were $alled -sna%es." :uritan so$iet was a -theo$ra$ .A the laws of so$iet and the laws of religion were the same" &hose who bro%e the laws were punished severel " !ven in the earl da s, some writers were struggling hard against the :uritan theo$ra$ " 9or instan$e, Anne Hutchinson )1596'1C43+ and *oger Williams )1C63'1CH3+, both desired a freer religious environment" Iogers, who went off to establish his own $olon in Ihode Island, was espe$iall important" &o him, freedom was not onl -good in itself., it was a ne$essar $ondition for -the growth and development of the soul." &he 3ew !nglanders were ;uite su$$essful at %eeping the absolute puritan writers -purit . of :uritanism during the earl , diffi$ult da s of settlement" *ut when the Indians were no longer a danger, the dar% forests had be$ome farmland, and more $omfortable settlements had grown up, :uritan stri$tness began to rela0" * loo%ing at the earl histor of the /ather famil in 3ew !ngland, we $an see how the :uritan tradition grew wea%er and wea%er" *ichard +ather )159C'1CC9+, the founder of his famil in Ameri$a, was greatl admired as a t pi$al

strong :uritan minister" %ncrease +ather )1C39'1B23+, his son, was a leader of the 3ew !ngland theo$ra$ until it began to fall apart at the end of the seventeenth $entur " #e was also a minister at 3orth Chur$h in *oston, the most powerful $hur$h in 3ew !ngland" &he 1C96s was the time of the great wit$h$raft pani$" In the town of Salem, /assa$husetts, oung girls and lonel old women were arrested and put on trial as wit$hes" A number of these people were put to death for -selling their souls. to the <evil" In$rease /ather7s best'%nown boo%, Remar#a$le "ro%idences )1CH4+, tells us mu$h about the ps $hologi$al environment of the time" &he boo% is filled with the :uritans7 strange beliefs" &o /ather and other :uritans, wit$h$raft and other forms of evil were an absolutel real part of ever da life" In$rease7s son, 'otton +ather )1CC3'1B2H+, be$ame the most famous of the famil " #e had -an insane genius for advertising himself." #e wrote more than 456 wor%s" 4henever something happened to him in his life, Cotton /ather wrote a religious boo%" 4hen his first wife died, he published a long sermon $alled Death Made Easy and Happy" 4hen his little daughter died, he wrote The &est 'ay of (i%ing, 'hich is to Die Daily" /ost of these wor%s were ;uite short and are of little interest to us toda " *ut some, su$h as his famous Magnalia )hristi *mericana )1B62+, were ver long and were published in man volumes" &he most fas$inating part of this wor% is the des$ription of the Salem wit$h trials" #e ma%es it $lear that he personall believed that this was an -assault from #ell. and that all of 3ew !ngland was filled with evil spirits from hell" At the same time, he admitted that the wit$h trials had been a mista%e and that it was good that the were finall stopped" In the writings of the earliest :uritans, we often find poems on religious themes" Su$h poets were Anne Bradstreet )1C12'1CB2+ and Edward Taylor )1C45'1B29+" &he poetess refuses -to sing of 4ars, of Captains, and of Dings." Instead, she gives us a loo% into the heart of a seventeenth'$entur Ameri$an woman" &he poetr of &a lor was $on$erned with the inner spiritual life of :uritan believers" #e $reated ri$h, unusual images to help his reader -see, hear, taste and feel religious do$trine." In one poem, he des$ribes trul religious people" &he are as rare -As *la$% Swans that in mil%white Iivers are". &hroughout Ameri$an histor , even in the twentieth $entur , there have been man sudden e0plosions of religious emotion" One of the most famous, $alled the - #reat Awa,ening., began about 1B36" :rea$hers li%e #eorge Whitfield toured the $ountr , telling people to -repent and be saved b the 3ew ?ight." &he sermons of (onathan Edwards )1B63'1B5H+ were so powerful ( and so frightening ( that his $hur$h was often filled with s$reams and $r ingA -&he Fod that holds ou over the fire of hell, mu$h as one holds a spider or some loathsome inse$t over the fire, abhors ou,. he said" &he sermon from whi$h this line is ta%en, Sinners in the Hands of an *ngry God )1B33+, is still famous for its literar ;ualit " ?ater in life, !dwards developed into a great theologian, or religious philosopher" In his +reedom of 'ill )1B54+5 he tried to build a philosoph based on the :uritan faith" Although literature developed far more slowl in the South than in 3ew !ngland, a few earl writers are worth mentioningA *obert Beverley )1CB3'1B22+ and William Byrd )1CB4'1B44+" #lossary$uritans, believers in a simple Christian religion without $eremon " 'ulture, the parti$ular wa of living and thin%ing of a so$iet , in$luding its art" Theocracy ' a government ruled b or sub8e$t to religious authorit " witchcraft, the imagined abilit to wor% magi$ of $ertain women )wit$hes+" sermon, religious address" Theme, sub8e$t on a pie$e of writing" %mage, a pi$ture brought into the mind b words, imagery, the use of su$h words" *e!ent. be sorr for one7s wrongdoing" Abhor, hate"

)elected Bibliogra!hy*r n, O7Callaghan, *n llustrated History of the -S* )?ongmanA :earson !du$ation ?imited, 1996+ :eter *" #igh, *n !utline of *merican (iterature .?ongman Froup ?imited, 19HC+

Why is America called /America0 Why did Euro!ean geogra!hers give the name America to the lands that 'olumbus discovered1 Why did they not name them instead after 'olumbus1 &he reason is that to the end of his life Columbus believed that his dis$overies were part of Asia" &he man who did most to $orre$t this mista%en idea was Amerigo @espu$$i" @espu$$i was an Italian sailor from the $it of 9loren$e" <uring the late 1496s he wrote some letters in whi$h he des$ribed two vo ages of e0ploration that he had made along the $oasts of South Ameri$a" #e was sure, he wrote, that these $oasts were part of a new $ontinent" Some ears later @espu$$i7s letters were read b a Ferman s$holar who was revising an old geograph of the world" &he letters $onvin$ed the s$holar that @espu$$i was $orre$t, and that the lands be ond the Atlanti$ were a new $ontinent" &o honor @espu$$i the s$holar named them Ameri$a, using the feminine form of @espu$$i7s first name as the other $ontinents had female names" The ca!tain and the !rincess Captain Eohn Smith was the most able of the original Eamestown settlers" An energeti$ 2B' ear'old soldier and e0plorer, he had alread had a life full of a$tion when he landed there in 1C6B" It was he who organi2ed the first Eamestown $olonists and for$ed them to wor%" If he had not done that, the infant settlement would probabl have $ollapsed" 4hen food supplies tan out Smith set off into the forests to bu $orn from the Amerindians" On one of these e0peditions he was ta%en prisoner" A$$ording to a stor that he told later )whi$h not ever one believed+, the Amerindians were going to beat his brains our when :o$ahontas, the twelve' ear'old daughter of the $hief, :owhatan, saved his life b shielding his bod with her own" :o$ahontas went on to pla an important part in @irginia7s survival, bringing food to the starving settlers" -She, ne0t under Fod,. wrote Smith, -was the instrument to preserve this $olon from death, famine and utter $onfusion". In 1C69 Smith was badl in8ured in a gunpowder e0plosion and was sent ba$% to !ngland" 9ive ears later, in 1C14" :o$ahontas married the toba$$o planter Eohn Iolfe" In 1C1C she travelled to !ngland with him and was presented at $ourt to Ding Eames 1" It was there that the portrait ou se$ here was painted" :o$ahontas died of smallpo0 in 1C1B while waiting to board a ship to $arr her ba$% to @irginia with her newborn son" 4hen the son grew up he returned to @irginia" /an @irginians toda $laim to be des$ended from him and so from :o$ahontas" Brides for sale @er few women settled in earl @irginia, so in 1C19 the @irginia Compan shipped over a group of ninet oung women as wives for its settlers" &o obtain a bride the would'be husbands had to pa the Compan -126 pounds weight of best toba$$o leaf". &he pri$e must have seemed reasonable, for within a ver short time all the oung women were married" The lost colony &he Eamestown settlers were not the first !nglish people to visit @irginia" &went ears earlier the adventurer Sir 4alter Ialeigh had sent ships to find land in the 3ew 4orld where !nglish people might settle" #e named the land the visited @irginia, in honor of !li2abeth, !ngland7s unmarried Jueen" In Eul 15H5, 16H !nglish settlers landed on Ioano%e Island, off the $oast of what is now the state of 3orth Carolina" &he built houses and a fort, planted $rops and sear$hed ( without su$$ess ( for gold" *ut the ran out of food and made enemies of the lo$al Amerindian inhabitants" In less than a ear the gave up and sailed ba$% to !ngland" In 15HB Ialeigh tried again" #is ships landed 11H settlers on Ioano%e, in$luding fourteen famil groups" &he $olonists were led b an artist and mapma%er named Eohn 4hite, who had been a member of the 15H5 e0pedition" Among them were 4hite7s daughter and her husband" On August 1Hth the $ouple be$ame the parents of @irginia <are, the first !nglish $hild to be born in Ameri$a" On August, 4hite returned to !ngland for supplies" &hree ears passed before he was able to return" 4hen his ships rea$hed Ioano%e in August 1596, he found the settlement deserted" &here was no sign of what had happened to its people e0$ept a word $arved on a tree ( -Croaton,. the home of a friendl Indian $hief, fift miles to the south" Some believe that the Ioano%e settlers were $arried off b Spanish soldiers from 9lorida" Others thin% that the ma have de$ided to go to live with friendl Indians on the mainland" &he were never seen, or heard of, again" The +ayflower 'om!act 4hen the :ilgrims arrived off the $oast of Ameri$a the fa$ed man dangers and diffi$ulties" &he did not want to put themselves in further danger b ;uarreling with one another" *efore landing at :l mouth, therefore, the wrote out an agreement" In this do$ument the agreed to wor% together for the good of all" &he

agreement was signed b all fort 'one men on board the Mayflower" It be$ame %nown as the /a flower Compa$t" In the Compa$t the :l mouth settlers agreed to set up a government ( a -$ivil bod politi$. ( to ma%e -8ust and e;ual laws. for their new settlement" All of them, :ilgrims and Strangers ali%e, promised that the would obe these laws" In the diffi$ult ears whi$h followed, the /a flower Compa$t served the $olonists well" It is remembered toda as one of the first important do$uments in the histor of demo$rati$ government in Ameri$a" Than,sgiving !ver ear on the fourth &hursda in 3ovember Ameri$ans $elebrate a holida $alled &han%sgiving" &he first people to $elebrate this da were the :ilgrims" In 3ovember, 1C21, the sat down to eat together and to give than%s to Fod for enabling them to survive the hardships of their first ear in Ameri$a" &he :ilgrims were 8oined at their feast b lo$al Amerindians" &he 4ampanoag and :e;uamid people of the nearb forests had shared $orn with the :ilgrims and shown them the best pla$es to $at$h fish" ?ater the Amerindians had given seed $orn to the !nglish settlers and shown them how to plant $rops that would grow well in the Ameri$an soil" 4ithout them there would have been no &han%sgiving"

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