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Early American Literature 
Pre 1800
Introduction: The Main Theme 
Themes 
 Religion 
 Early colonists left England to separate from the Church of England 
 Authors were intrigued by theology 
 The Great Awakening influenced many writers 
 Politics 
 English politics 
 The Revolution 
 The Constitution 
 Science 
 Studies of natural sciences were popular 
 Many new inventions
Early American History 
1600-1700
1600-1700 America 
 English settled on Jamestown, 
Virginia 1607 
 Colonist were dying from 
diseases, starvation, attacks. 
 Captain John Smith meets 
Pocahontas. 
 1612, The Dutch use Manhattan as a 
fur trading center. 
 Eventually becomes New 
Amsterdam 
 Tobacco planted for the first time 
by English colonists in Virginia. 
 1620 - November 9, the Mayflower 
ship lands at Cape Cod, 
Massachusetts, with 101 colonists.
Cont’d 
 1630 - John Winthrop leads a Puritan 
migration of 900 colonists to 
Massachusetts Bay. 
 1636 – Roger Williams found Rhode 
Island 
 1638 – Anne Hutchison banished from 
Massachusetts
Cont’d 
 1638, The first colonial printing 
press is set up in Cambridge, 
Massachusetts. 
 1640 - 1659 - English Civil War 
erupts between the Royalists of 
King Charles I and the 
Parliamentary army. 
 1646 - In Massachusetts, the 
general court approves a law that 
makes religious heresy punishable 
by death.
Cont’d 
 1652 - Rhode Island enacts the first 
law in the colonies declaring slavery 
illegal. 
 1660 - The English Crown approves a 
Navigation Act. 
 1663 - Navigation Act of 1663 requires 
that most imports to the colonies must 
be transported via England on English 
ships.
Cont’d 
 1664 - Maryland passes a law 
making lifelong servitude for black 
slaves mandatory. 
 1673 - Dutch military forces 
retake New York from the British. 
 1681 - Pennsylvania is founded as 
William Penn, a Quaker, receives 
a Royal charter with a large land 
grant from King Charles II.
Cont’d 
 1686 - King James II begins 
consolidating the colonies of 
New England into a single 
Dominion depriving colonists of 
their local political rights and 
independence. 
 1693 - The College of William 
and Mary is founded in 
Williamsburg, Virginia.
Early American History 
Timeline: 1700 – 1800
Colonies Expand 
 1700 - The Anglo population in the 
English colonies in America reaches 
275,000, with Boston (pop. 7000) as 
the largest city, followed by New York 
(pop. 5000). 
 1706 - January 17, Benjamin Franklin 
is born in Boston. In November, South 
Carolina establishes the Anglican 
Church as its official church. 
 1712 - In May, the Carolina colony is officially divided into North 
Carolina and South Carolina. 
 1714 - Tea is introduced for the first time into the American 
Colonies.
England Fears for Control 
 1727 - King George II ascends 
the English throne. 
 1729 - Benjamin Franklin 
begins publishing The 
Pennsylvania Gazette, which 
eventually becomes the most 
popular colonial newspaper. 
 1731 - The first American 
public library is founded in 
Philadelphia by Benjamin 
Franklin. 
 1739 - England declares war on Spain. As a result, in America, 
hostilities break out between Florida Spaniards and Georgia 
and South Carolina colonists.
War on the French 
 1750 - The Iron Act is passed 
by the English Parliament, 
limiting the growth of the iron 
industry in the American 
colonies to protect the English 
Iron industry. 
 1754 - The French and Indian 
War erupts as a result of 
disputes over land in the Ohio 
River Valley. 
 1758 - In July, a devastating defeat occurs for English forces at Lake George, 
New York, as nearly two thousand men are lost during a frontal attack 
against well entrenched French forces at Fort Ticonderoga. French losses are 
377 men.
War Tax 
 1760 - The population of colonists in America reaches 1,500,000. In 
March, much of Boston is destroyed by a raging fire. 
 1763 - The French and Indian War ends with the Treaty of Paris. 
Under the treaty, France gives England all French territory east of 
the Mississippi. The Spanish give up east and west Florida to the 
English in return for Cuba. 
 1764 - The Sugar Act is passed by the English Parliament to offset 
the war debt brought on by the French and Indian War (This taxed 
the import of textiles to the colonies.)
Rise to Revolt 
 1770 - The population of the American colonies reaches 2,210,000 
persons. 
 1773 – The Tea act is passed allowing the East India Trading Co. a 
three penny per pound tax on tea. During the Boston Tea Party 
colonial activists disguise themselves as Mohawk Indians then board 
the ships and dump all 342 containers of tea into the harbor. 
 1774 - September 5 to October 26, the First Continental Congress 
meets in Philadelphia with 56 delegates, representing every colony, 
except Georgia.
Revolution 
 1775 – April 18th, Paul Revere rides to Lexington, to warn Sam 
Adams and John Hancock about the British invasion of a weapons 
depot in Concord. At Dawn on the 19th 70 Massachusetts Militia Men 
stand guard and an un-ordered shot starts the revolutionary war. 
 1776 – July 4th. The founding Fathers sign the declaration of 
independence. 
 1776 – 1784 July 14 – The Revolutionary War wages. France and 
Spain ally the United States in their struggle for independence. The 
War lasted for 8 years; the forces under the command of General 
Washington, Count de Grasse, and Rochambeau are responsible for 
allied rebellious victory.
Reconstruction 
 1786 - Americans suffer from post-war 
economic depression including 
a shortage of currency, high taxes, 
Bankruptcies, and farm 
foreclosures. 
 1787 – A draft of the constitution is 
drawn up. Federalists agree with a 
centralized government, similar to 
that of Britain minus the Monarchy. 
Anti-Federalists oppose centralized 
government in exchange for more 
power to state Govt. 
 1788 – The Federalist prevail as the 
Bill of rights is Ratified by a vote of 
89 – 75.
Civil Reform 
 1789 – April 30th, George Washington, at age 57, is sworn in as the 
first President of the United States. 
 1789 - The U.S. Army is established by Congress. Totaling 1000 
men, it consists of one regiment of eight infantry companies and 
one battalion of four artillery companies. 
 1790 – April 17th, Benjamin Franklin dies in Philadelphia at age 84. 
His funeral draws over 20,000 mourners. 
 1793 - Cotton Gin invented November 16. Fugitive Slave Act passed, 
this made it a federal crime to help a runaway slave.
Out with the Old in with the New 
 1796 - December 7. John 
Adams is elected second 
president of the U.S. 
Jefferson is elected vice 
president. 
 1800 - The U. S. capital is 
moved from Philadelphia to 
Washington, D.C. 
 1799 - December 14. 
George Washington dies at 
Mount Vernon, at Age 67.
Early American Authors 
1600-1700
Captain John Smith (1580-1631) 
 Captain John Smith (c. January 1580–June 21, 
1631) Admiral of New England was an English 
soldier, sailor, and author 
 Remembered for his part in making the first 
permanent English settlement in north America at 
Jamestown, Virginia, and his brief association with 
the native American girl Pocahontas when they 
were hanging out with the Powhatan Confederacy 
and her father, Chief Powhaton 
 He was a leader of the Virginia Colony between 
September 1608 and August 1609, and led an 
exploration along the rivers of Virginia and the 
Chesapeake Bay 
 With his books, he helped get people to follow trails 
like he did 
 He gave the name New England to that region, and 
encouraged people with the comment, "Here every 
man may be master and owner of his own labor 
and land...If he have nothing but his hands, he 
may...by industry quickly grow rich.“ 
 His message attracted millions of people in the next 
four centuries. 
 His writings: 
 A True Relation of Such Occurrences and 
Accidents of Note as Happened in Virginia 
(1608) 
 A Map of Virginia (1612) 
 The Proceedings of the English Colony in 
Virginia (1612) 
 A Description of New England(1616) 
 New England's Trials (1620, 1622) 
 The General historiy of Virginia, New England, 
and the Summer Isles (1624) 
 An Accidence, or the Pathway to Experience 
Necessary for all Young Seamen (1626) 
 A Sea Grammar (1627) - the first sailors' 
word book in English 
 The True Travels, Adventures and 
Observations of Captain John Smith (1630) 
 Advertisements for the Unexperienced 
Planters of New England, or Anywhere (1631)
Edward Winslow (1595-1655) 
 Edward Winslow was a Pilgrim leader on the 
Mayflower and was governor of Plymouth colony in 
1633, 1636, and 1644 
 He was born in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England, 
on October 18, 1595 
 His first wife was Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow 
 She accompanied him on the Mayflower, and died 
soon after their arrival in Plymouth 
 Winslow remarried in May 1621 to Mrs. Susannah 
White - this was the first marriage in the New 
England colonies 
 Winslow later founded what would become Marshfield 
in the Plymouth Colony where he lived on an estate 
he called Careswell. 
 In 1655 he was the chief of the three English 
commissioners whom Cromwell sent on his expedition 
against the West Indies to advise with its leaders 
Admiral Venables and Admiral William Penn, but died 
near Jamaica on May 8, 1655, and was buried at sea 
 His fragments of writings are very important to 
historians of the Plymouth colony 
His Writings: 
 Good News from New England, or a True Relation of 
Things very Remarkable at the Plantation of 
Plymouth in New England (1624) 
 Hypocrisy Unmasked; by a True Relation of the 
Governor and Company of Massachusetts against 
Samuel Gorton, a Notorious Disturber of the Peace 
(1646), to which was added a chapter entitled "A 
Brief Narration of the True Grounds or Cause of the 
First Plantation of New England“ 
 New England Salamander (1647) 
 The Glorious Progress of the Gospel amongst the 
Indians in New England (1649).
Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672) 
 Anne Bradstreet (c. 1612 – September 16, 
1672) was a writer and the first notable 
American poet and the first woman to be 
published in Colonial America 
 Born in Northampton, England 
 Married Simon Bradstreet when she was 
sixteen 
 Had smallpox when she was younger, and 
when she got it again later her joints became 
paralyzed 
 She had eight children 
 In 1666 her house burned down, losing 
everything 
 Her daughter died soon after, followed by 
her son 
 She found religious devotion, knowing that 
her children were in heaven 
 She wrote about politics, history, medicine, 
and theology 
 Died on September 16th, 1672 in Andover, 
Massachusetts at the age of 60 
 Her Writings: 
 First work was published in London asThe 
Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up into 
America, by a Gentlewoman in such Parts 
 Contemplations - collection of poems about 
religion 
 "Several Poems Compiled with Great Variety 
of Wit and Learning", which included one of 
her most famous poems, “To my dear and 
loving husband”
Early American Authors 
1700-1800
Jonathan Edwards (1703-1757) 
 Early Life (1703-1730) 
 Born October 5th, 1703 in New Haven, Connecticut 
 Attended Yale College from 1716 to 1726 
 Studied theology, philosophy, and natural sciences 
 Supported Calvinism 
 Became a minister in 1727 at Northampton 
 Life During the Great Awakening (1730-1750) 
 Took part in the religious revival movements in Northampton 
 Wrote several sermons on the aspects of conversion 
 A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1738) 
 Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (1741) 
 In the Distinguishing Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God (1741) 
 Some Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival (1742) 
 A Treatise Concerning Religious Affections (1746) 
 Later Years (1750-1758) 
 His church at Northampton dismissed him in 1750 
 Worked as a missionary to the Mahican and Mohawk families 
at Stockbridge, Massachussets 
 Later works addressed the “Arminian controversy” 
 A Careful and Strict Inquiry into the Modern Prevailing Notions of 
that Freedom of Will… (1754) 
 The Great Christian Doctrine of Original Sin Defended (1758) 
 Accepted presidency at the College of New Jersey (Princeton 
University) in 1757 
 Died on March 22nd, 1758 due to smallpox inoculation
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) 
 Early Life (1706-1723) 
 Born on January 7th, 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts 
 His father put him school with the clergy but could not 
afford the years of education he had to receive 
 Became and apprentice printer, working with his brother 
James, who owned the New England Courant 
 His brother didn’t let him write in the paper 
 In 1723, he ran away due to his brother’s abusive 
personality 
 Life as a Printer in Philadelphia (1723-1750) 
 Found work as an apprentice printer 
 Was sent to England by the governor to buy equipment 
 Once he returned, he started his own printing business 
 Bought the Pennsylvania Gazette in 1729 
 In 1733 he started publishing Poor Richard’s Almanac 
 Helped out with various civil contributions 
 Retired from work in 1749, focusing on science 
 Stove, Swim fins, Glass armonica, Bifocals, 
Electricity 
 Life in England (1750-1775) 
 From 1757 to 1775 he served as a representative for 
Pennsylvania, Georgia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts 
 Persuaded Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act in 1765 
 Got involved in the Hutchinson Affair 
 Was condemned in public by the English Foreign Ministry 
 Later Years (1775-1790) 
 Elected to the Second Continental Congress 
 Helped write the Declaration of 
Independence 
 Became Ambassador for the French in 1776 
 Returned to America in 1783 
 Became President of the Executive Council 
of Pennsylvania 
 Served as a delegate to the Constitutional 
Convention 
 Died on April 17th, 1970
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) 
 Notable Writings: 
 Work Ethic 
 Poor Richard’s Almanac (1732-1758) 
 The Way to Wealth (1758) 
 Criticism on the English 
 Rules By Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One (1773) 
 An Edict By the King of Prussia (1773) 
 Native Americans 
 Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America (1784) 
 Slavery 
 An Address to the Public (1789) 
 A Plan for Improving the Conditions of Free Blacks (1789) 
 Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim on the Slave Trade (1790) 
 Other 
 Autobiography (1790)
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) 
 Early Life (1737-1775) 
 Born on January 27th, 1737 in Thetford, England 
 Attended school until age 12 
 Became an apprentice corset maker 
 Sailed out of England to become a privateer 
 Returned to England, establishing his own corset 
shop in 1759 
 Became an excise (tax) officer in 1762 
 The Case of the Officers of Excise (1772) 
 Life in America (1775-1783) 
 Emigrated to Philadelphia 
 Started a career in journalism 
 Became editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine 
 Supported the American Revolution 
 Common Sense (1776) 
 The Crisis (1776-1783) 
 Return to Europe (1783-1802) 
 Supported the French Revolution 
 The Rights of Man (1792) 
 Moved to France to join the National Convention 
 Imprisoned due to his opposition to the execution of 
Louis XVI 
 The Age of Reason (1794-1796) 
 Freed in 1794 thanks to James Monroe 
 Final Years (1802-1809) 
 Returned to America in 1802 when 
Thomas Jefferson invited him 
 Became disliked due to his actions 
before he moved back 
 Died on June 8th, 1809
Early American Artists 
(1600-1800)
John Trumbull (1756-1843) 
 Born June 6, 1756 Lebanon Connecticut 
 Father was the governor of Connecticut 
 Famous for historical paintings 
 Educated at Harvard 
 Due to a childhood accident he lost use of one eye 
which could have influenced his style 
 Was a soldier in the American Revolutionary war. 
 At the Battle of Boston he sketched the British 
Fortifications to aid the revolution 
 In 1780 he went to London to study under Benjamin 
West who turned him on to the idea of painting small 
pictures of the war of independence and miniature 
portraits 
 When British agent Major John Andre was captured and 
hanged as a spy in America he was imprisoned for 
seven months in London because he was a soldier of 
similar rank in the continental army. 
 He sold a series of 28 paintings and 60 miniature 
portraits to Yale University which is the single largest 
collection of his works. 
 Died November 10, 1843 New York, New York
John Trumbull’s Paintings
Gilbert Stuart (1775-1828) 
 Born December 3, 1775 Saunderstown Rhode Island 
 Did Lots and Lots of Portraits 
 His most famous work is the portrait of George Washington on the 1 dollar 
bill 
 Made portraits of the United States first 6 presidents 
 His dad Gilbert Stuart was a Scottish immigrant who worked in the snuff-making 
industry 
 His mom Elizabeth Anthony Stewart was part of a prominent land owning 
family in Middletown, Rhode Island 
 At 7 he moved to Newport, Rhode Island with his dad. He showed much 
aptitude in painting and was tutored by Cosmo Alexander 
 He moved to Scotland with his teacher in 1771 but his mentor died the 
next year so he returned home 
 At the onset of the American Revolution he left for England because the 
revolution jeopardized his career 
 While there he studied under Benjamin west for 6 years and soon gained 
wide acclaim 
 Despite his paintings selling so well he accumulated lots of debt and was in 
danger of being sent to a debtors prison so he fled to Dublin, Ireland 
where he continued to paint and fall further in debt 
 Eventually he would move back to America and set up a studio in 
Germantown, Pennsylvania 
 It was here that he would paint many affluent Americans and become well 
known as an American artist 
 He moved to Boston in 1805 where he continued to grow in debt and 
acclaim 
 He had a stroke in 1828 that left him partially paralyzed but continued to 
paint for another 2 years till he died 
 Since he left his family in such debt he was buried in an unmarked grave 
that was purchased cheaply 
 Once his family recovered from debt they were going to move his body to a 
family cemetery but couldn’t remember the location so they didn’t 
 Died July 9, 1828 Boston, Mass.
Gilbert Stuart’s Paintings
John Wollaston 
 Born in England 
 Son of a portraitist John Wollaston 
 He may have received instruction from a 
painter in drapery in London before moving 
to New York where he was a portrait painter 
 Since those who could actually afford 
portraits were the rich and affluent that’s 
who he painted 
 Died in England
Presentation Sources 
 http://www.historyhotline.com/AmericanHistoryTimelines.htm 
 http://www.apva.org/history/ 
 http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/a_us_history/1600_1799_timeline.htm 
 http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/a_us_history/1700_1800_timeline.htm 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_washington 
 http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/revolution/rev-early.htm 
 http://edwards.yale.edu/research/about-edwards/biography 
 http://www.ushistory.org/paine/index.htm 
 http://www.marylandartsource.org/artists/detail_000000073.html

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Early american literature pre 1800 (1)

  • 2. Introduction: The Main Theme Themes  Religion  Early colonists left England to separate from the Church of England  Authors were intrigued by theology  The Great Awakening influenced many writers  Politics  English politics  The Revolution  The Constitution  Science  Studies of natural sciences were popular  Many new inventions
  • 4. 1600-1700 America  English settled on Jamestown, Virginia 1607  Colonist were dying from diseases, starvation, attacks.  Captain John Smith meets Pocahontas.  1612, The Dutch use Manhattan as a fur trading center.  Eventually becomes New Amsterdam  Tobacco planted for the first time by English colonists in Virginia.  1620 - November 9, the Mayflower ship lands at Cape Cod, Massachusetts, with 101 colonists.
  • 5. Cont’d  1630 - John Winthrop leads a Puritan migration of 900 colonists to Massachusetts Bay.  1636 – Roger Williams found Rhode Island  1638 – Anne Hutchison banished from Massachusetts
  • 6. Cont’d  1638, The first colonial printing press is set up in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  1640 - 1659 - English Civil War erupts between the Royalists of King Charles I and the Parliamentary army.  1646 - In Massachusetts, the general court approves a law that makes religious heresy punishable by death.
  • 7. Cont’d  1652 - Rhode Island enacts the first law in the colonies declaring slavery illegal.  1660 - The English Crown approves a Navigation Act.  1663 - Navigation Act of 1663 requires that most imports to the colonies must be transported via England on English ships.
  • 8. Cont’d  1664 - Maryland passes a law making lifelong servitude for black slaves mandatory.  1673 - Dutch military forces retake New York from the British.  1681 - Pennsylvania is founded as William Penn, a Quaker, receives a Royal charter with a large land grant from King Charles II.
  • 9. Cont’d  1686 - King James II begins consolidating the colonies of New England into a single Dominion depriving colonists of their local political rights and independence.  1693 - The College of William and Mary is founded in Williamsburg, Virginia.
  • 10. Early American History Timeline: 1700 – 1800
  • 11. Colonies Expand  1700 - The Anglo population in the English colonies in America reaches 275,000, with Boston (pop. 7000) as the largest city, followed by New York (pop. 5000).  1706 - January 17, Benjamin Franklin is born in Boston. In November, South Carolina establishes the Anglican Church as its official church.  1712 - In May, the Carolina colony is officially divided into North Carolina and South Carolina.  1714 - Tea is introduced for the first time into the American Colonies.
  • 12. England Fears for Control  1727 - King George II ascends the English throne.  1729 - Benjamin Franklin begins publishing The Pennsylvania Gazette, which eventually becomes the most popular colonial newspaper.  1731 - The first American public library is founded in Philadelphia by Benjamin Franklin.  1739 - England declares war on Spain. As a result, in America, hostilities break out between Florida Spaniards and Georgia and South Carolina colonists.
  • 13. War on the French  1750 - The Iron Act is passed by the English Parliament, limiting the growth of the iron industry in the American colonies to protect the English Iron industry.  1754 - The French and Indian War erupts as a result of disputes over land in the Ohio River Valley.  1758 - In July, a devastating defeat occurs for English forces at Lake George, New York, as nearly two thousand men are lost during a frontal attack against well entrenched French forces at Fort Ticonderoga. French losses are 377 men.
  • 14. War Tax  1760 - The population of colonists in America reaches 1,500,000. In March, much of Boston is destroyed by a raging fire.  1763 - The French and Indian War ends with the Treaty of Paris. Under the treaty, France gives England all French territory east of the Mississippi. The Spanish give up east and west Florida to the English in return for Cuba.  1764 - The Sugar Act is passed by the English Parliament to offset the war debt brought on by the French and Indian War (This taxed the import of textiles to the colonies.)
  • 15. Rise to Revolt  1770 - The population of the American colonies reaches 2,210,000 persons.  1773 – The Tea act is passed allowing the East India Trading Co. a three penny per pound tax on tea. During the Boston Tea Party colonial activists disguise themselves as Mohawk Indians then board the ships and dump all 342 containers of tea into the harbor.  1774 - September 5 to October 26, the First Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia with 56 delegates, representing every colony, except Georgia.
  • 16. Revolution  1775 – April 18th, Paul Revere rides to Lexington, to warn Sam Adams and John Hancock about the British invasion of a weapons depot in Concord. At Dawn on the 19th 70 Massachusetts Militia Men stand guard and an un-ordered shot starts the revolutionary war.  1776 – July 4th. The founding Fathers sign the declaration of independence.  1776 – 1784 July 14 – The Revolutionary War wages. France and Spain ally the United States in their struggle for independence. The War lasted for 8 years; the forces under the command of General Washington, Count de Grasse, and Rochambeau are responsible for allied rebellious victory.
  • 17. Reconstruction  1786 - Americans suffer from post-war economic depression including a shortage of currency, high taxes, Bankruptcies, and farm foreclosures.  1787 – A draft of the constitution is drawn up. Federalists agree with a centralized government, similar to that of Britain minus the Monarchy. Anti-Federalists oppose centralized government in exchange for more power to state Govt.  1788 – The Federalist prevail as the Bill of rights is Ratified by a vote of 89 – 75.
  • 18. Civil Reform  1789 – April 30th, George Washington, at age 57, is sworn in as the first President of the United States.  1789 - The U.S. Army is established by Congress. Totaling 1000 men, it consists of one regiment of eight infantry companies and one battalion of four artillery companies.  1790 – April 17th, Benjamin Franklin dies in Philadelphia at age 84. His funeral draws over 20,000 mourners.  1793 - Cotton Gin invented November 16. Fugitive Slave Act passed, this made it a federal crime to help a runaway slave.
  • 19. Out with the Old in with the New  1796 - December 7. John Adams is elected second president of the U.S. Jefferson is elected vice president.  1800 - The U. S. capital is moved from Philadelphia to Washington, D.C.  1799 - December 14. George Washington dies at Mount Vernon, at Age 67.
  • 21. Captain John Smith (1580-1631)  Captain John Smith (c. January 1580–June 21, 1631) Admiral of New England was an English soldier, sailor, and author  Remembered for his part in making the first permanent English settlement in north America at Jamestown, Virginia, and his brief association with the native American girl Pocahontas when they were hanging out with the Powhatan Confederacy and her father, Chief Powhaton  He was a leader of the Virginia Colony between September 1608 and August 1609, and led an exploration along the rivers of Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay  With his books, he helped get people to follow trails like he did  He gave the name New England to that region, and encouraged people with the comment, "Here every man may be master and owner of his own labor and land...If he have nothing but his hands, he may...by industry quickly grow rich.“  His message attracted millions of people in the next four centuries.  His writings:  A True Relation of Such Occurrences and Accidents of Note as Happened in Virginia (1608)  A Map of Virginia (1612)  The Proceedings of the English Colony in Virginia (1612)  A Description of New England(1616)  New England's Trials (1620, 1622)  The General historiy of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles (1624)  An Accidence, or the Pathway to Experience Necessary for all Young Seamen (1626)  A Sea Grammar (1627) - the first sailors' word book in English  The True Travels, Adventures and Observations of Captain John Smith (1630)  Advertisements for the Unexperienced Planters of New England, or Anywhere (1631)
  • 22. Edward Winslow (1595-1655)  Edward Winslow was a Pilgrim leader on the Mayflower and was governor of Plymouth colony in 1633, 1636, and 1644  He was born in Droitwich, Worcestershire, England, on October 18, 1595  His first wife was Elizabeth (Barker) Winslow  She accompanied him on the Mayflower, and died soon after their arrival in Plymouth  Winslow remarried in May 1621 to Mrs. Susannah White - this was the first marriage in the New England colonies  Winslow later founded what would become Marshfield in the Plymouth Colony where he lived on an estate he called Careswell.  In 1655 he was the chief of the three English commissioners whom Cromwell sent on his expedition against the West Indies to advise with its leaders Admiral Venables and Admiral William Penn, but died near Jamaica on May 8, 1655, and was buried at sea  His fragments of writings are very important to historians of the Plymouth colony His Writings:  Good News from New England, or a True Relation of Things very Remarkable at the Plantation of Plymouth in New England (1624)  Hypocrisy Unmasked; by a True Relation of the Governor and Company of Massachusetts against Samuel Gorton, a Notorious Disturber of the Peace (1646), to which was added a chapter entitled "A Brief Narration of the True Grounds or Cause of the First Plantation of New England“  New England Salamander (1647)  The Glorious Progress of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New England (1649).
  • 23. Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)  Anne Bradstreet (c. 1612 – September 16, 1672) was a writer and the first notable American poet and the first woman to be published in Colonial America  Born in Northampton, England  Married Simon Bradstreet when she was sixteen  Had smallpox when she was younger, and when she got it again later her joints became paralyzed  She had eight children  In 1666 her house burned down, losing everything  Her daughter died soon after, followed by her son  She found religious devotion, knowing that her children were in heaven  She wrote about politics, history, medicine, and theology  Died on September 16th, 1672 in Andover, Massachusetts at the age of 60  Her Writings:  First work was published in London asThe Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up into America, by a Gentlewoman in such Parts  Contemplations - collection of poems about religion  "Several Poems Compiled with Great Variety of Wit and Learning", which included one of her most famous poems, “To my dear and loving husband”
  • 25. Jonathan Edwards (1703-1757)  Early Life (1703-1730)  Born October 5th, 1703 in New Haven, Connecticut  Attended Yale College from 1716 to 1726  Studied theology, philosophy, and natural sciences  Supported Calvinism  Became a minister in 1727 at Northampton  Life During the Great Awakening (1730-1750)  Took part in the religious revival movements in Northampton  Wrote several sermons on the aspects of conversion  A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God (1738)  Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (1741)  In the Distinguishing Marks of a Work of the Spirit of God (1741)  Some Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival (1742)  A Treatise Concerning Religious Affections (1746)  Later Years (1750-1758)  His church at Northampton dismissed him in 1750  Worked as a missionary to the Mahican and Mohawk families at Stockbridge, Massachussets  Later works addressed the “Arminian controversy”  A Careful and Strict Inquiry into the Modern Prevailing Notions of that Freedom of Will… (1754)  The Great Christian Doctrine of Original Sin Defended (1758)  Accepted presidency at the College of New Jersey (Princeton University) in 1757  Died on March 22nd, 1758 due to smallpox inoculation
  • 26. Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)  Early Life (1706-1723)  Born on January 7th, 1706 in Boston, Massachusetts  His father put him school with the clergy but could not afford the years of education he had to receive  Became and apprentice printer, working with his brother James, who owned the New England Courant  His brother didn’t let him write in the paper  In 1723, he ran away due to his brother’s abusive personality  Life as a Printer in Philadelphia (1723-1750)  Found work as an apprentice printer  Was sent to England by the governor to buy equipment  Once he returned, he started his own printing business  Bought the Pennsylvania Gazette in 1729  In 1733 he started publishing Poor Richard’s Almanac  Helped out with various civil contributions  Retired from work in 1749, focusing on science  Stove, Swim fins, Glass armonica, Bifocals, Electricity  Life in England (1750-1775)  From 1757 to 1775 he served as a representative for Pennsylvania, Georgia, New Jersey, and Massachusetts  Persuaded Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act in 1765  Got involved in the Hutchinson Affair  Was condemned in public by the English Foreign Ministry  Later Years (1775-1790)  Elected to the Second Continental Congress  Helped write the Declaration of Independence  Became Ambassador for the French in 1776  Returned to America in 1783  Became President of the Executive Council of Pennsylvania  Served as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention  Died on April 17th, 1970
  • 27. Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)  Notable Writings:  Work Ethic  Poor Richard’s Almanac (1732-1758)  The Way to Wealth (1758)  Criticism on the English  Rules By Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One (1773)  An Edict By the King of Prussia (1773)  Native Americans  Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America (1784)  Slavery  An Address to the Public (1789)  A Plan for Improving the Conditions of Free Blacks (1789)  Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim on the Slave Trade (1790)  Other  Autobiography (1790)
  • 28. Thomas Paine (1737-1809)  Early Life (1737-1775)  Born on January 27th, 1737 in Thetford, England  Attended school until age 12  Became an apprentice corset maker  Sailed out of England to become a privateer  Returned to England, establishing his own corset shop in 1759  Became an excise (tax) officer in 1762  The Case of the Officers of Excise (1772)  Life in America (1775-1783)  Emigrated to Philadelphia  Started a career in journalism  Became editor of the Pennsylvania Magazine  Supported the American Revolution  Common Sense (1776)  The Crisis (1776-1783)  Return to Europe (1783-1802)  Supported the French Revolution  The Rights of Man (1792)  Moved to France to join the National Convention  Imprisoned due to his opposition to the execution of Louis XVI  The Age of Reason (1794-1796)  Freed in 1794 thanks to James Monroe  Final Years (1802-1809)  Returned to America in 1802 when Thomas Jefferson invited him  Became disliked due to his actions before he moved back  Died on June 8th, 1809
  • 29. Early American Artists (1600-1800)
  • 30. John Trumbull (1756-1843)  Born June 6, 1756 Lebanon Connecticut  Father was the governor of Connecticut  Famous for historical paintings  Educated at Harvard  Due to a childhood accident he lost use of one eye which could have influenced his style  Was a soldier in the American Revolutionary war.  At the Battle of Boston he sketched the British Fortifications to aid the revolution  In 1780 he went to London to study under Benjamin West who turned him on to the idea of painting small pictures of the war of independence and miniature portraits  When British agent Major John Andre was captured and hanged as a spy in America he was imprisoned for seven months in London because he was a soldier of similar rank in the continental army.  He sold a series of 28 paintings and 60 miniature portraits to Yale University which is the single largest collection of his works.  Died November 10, 1843 New York, New York
  • 32. Gilbert Stuart (1775-1828)  Born December 3, 1775 Saunderstown Rhode Island  Did Lots and Lots of Portraits  His most famous work is the portrait of George Washington on the 1 dollar bill  Made portraits of the United States first 6 presidents  His dad Gilbert Stuart was a Scottish immigrant who worked in the snuff-making industry  His mom Elizabeth Anthony Stewart was part of a prominent land owning family in Middletown, Rhode Island  At 7 he moved to Newport, Rhode Island with his dad. He showed much aptitude in painting and was tutored by Cosmo Alexander  He moved to Scotland with his teacher in 1771 but his mentor died the next year so he returned home  At the onset of the American Revolution he left for England because the revolution jeopardized his career  While there he studied under Benjamin west for 6 years and soon gained wide acclaim  Despite his paintings selling so well he accumulated lots of debt and was in danger of being sent to a debtors prison so he fled to Dublin, Ireland where he continued to paint and fall further in debt  Eventually he would move back to America and set up a studio in Germantown, Pennsylvania  It was here that he would paint many affluent Americans and become well known as an American artist  He moved to Boston in 1805 where he continued to grow in debt and acclaim  He had a stroke in 1828 that left him partially paralyzed but continued to paint for another 2 years till he died  Since he left his family in such debt he was buried in an unmarked grave that was purchased cheaply  Once his family recovered from debt they were going to move his body to a family cemetery but couldn’t remember the location so they didn’t  Died July 9, 1828 Boston, Mass.
  • 34. John Wollaston  Born in England  Son of a portraitist John Wollaston  He may have received instruction from a painter in drapery in London before moving to New York where he was a portrait painter  Since those who could actually afford portraits were the rich and affluent that’s who he painted  Died in England
  • 35. Presentation Sources  http://www.historyhotline.com/AmericanHistoryTimelines.htm  http://www.apva.org/history/  http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/a_us_history/1600_1799_timeline.htm  http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/a_us_history/1700_1800_timeline.htm  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_washington  http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/revolution/rev-early.htm  http://edwards.yale.edu/research/about-edwards/biography  http://www.ushistory.org/paine/index.htm  http://www.marylandartsource.org/artists/detail_000000073.html