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Related Topics: History >> United States >> Colonial Period (1600-1775)
Colonial America; From Jamestown to Yorktown,9780333790557
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Colonial America; From Jamestown to Yorktown


Author(s): Mary K. Geiter and W.A Speck
ISBN10:  0333790553
ISBN13:  9780333790557
Format:  Trade Book
Pub. Date:  2/8/2003
Publisher(s): Palgrave Macmillan

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SummaryTable of ContentsAuthor Biography
Colonial America deals with the development of the American colonies from the first permanent settlement at Jamestown to the independence of the 13 which became the US. Instead of anticipating the birth of a nation, Mary K. Geiter and W. A. Speck treat the history of the colonies as part of the wider history of the British Empire, including colonies in the Americas which did not rebel against British rule, such as the islands in the West Indies. In this way, Geiter and Speck demonstrate how Britain and America shared a common history for nearly 200 years.
List of Maps
ix
Preface x
Introduction 1(8)
Part I The Imperial Context
The British Empire in America to 1750
9(12)
Roanoke Island
10(1)
Early Stuart settlements
11(2)
Colonisation under Cromwell and the later Stuarts
13(1)
Imperial policy
14(7)
British Society in the Era of Western Migration
21(17)
Stuart England
21(5)
Migration from England to the colonies under the Stuarts
26(2)
Religion
28(4)
Population
32(2)
Early modern Britain
34(1)
Social mobility
35(3)
Anglo--Indian Relations
38(13)
The Chesapeake
40(1)
The Pequot War
41(1)
The Covenant Chain and Chain of Friendship
42(2)
The middle ground
44(2)
Pontiac's War
46(5)
Part II The American Context
The Chesapeake
51(17)
Jamestown
51(3)
Relations with the Indians
54(1)
Survival
54(3)
Crown takeover
57(3)
Bacon's rebellion
60(4)
Maryland
64(4)
New England
68(17)
Plymouth
68(1)
Massachusetts
69(9)
Rhode Island
78(1)
Connecticut
79(1)
New Hampshire
80(1)
King Philip's War
80(2)
Witchcraft
82(3)
The Middle Colonies
85(16)
New York
85(6)
New Jersey
91(1)
Pennsylvania
92(8)
The significance of the middle colonies
100(1)
The Lower South
101(10)
The Carolinas
101(1)
Constitutions
102(3)
Rice and slaves
105(1)
Crown colonies
106(1)
Georgia
106(2)
Slavery in the lower south
108(3)
The West Indies
111(10)
Sugar and slaves
112(4)
The planter aristocracy
116(5)
Part III The Imperial Connection
The Glorious Revolution in England and America
121(16)
England: The 1680s
121(4)
America
125(10)
An imperial revolution?
135(2)
King William's War and Queen Anne's War
137(9)
Anglo--French relations
137(1)
The financial revolution
138(1)
King William's War
139(2)
Queen Anne's War
141(5)
`Salutary Neglect'? British Colonial Policy under the First Two Georges
146(9)
The Duke of Newcastle
147(1)
Colonial governors and the rise of the Assemblies
148(1)
1713--1744
149(1)
Anglo--Spanish relations
150(2)
King George's War
152(1)
1748--1754
153(2)
The French and Indian War
155(12)
Anglo-French relations in North America
155(1)
The Albany Congress, 1754
156(1)
Hostilities begin
156(2)
Initial setbacks
158(1)
War in Europe
159(1)
Recovery in North America
160(1)
1759: `this wonderful year'
161(1)
The French defeat in North America
162(1)
The Peace of Paris, 1763
163(4)
Part IV The Imperial Crisis
British America at the Accession of George III
167(16)
The Great Awakening
167(3)
Urban society
170(1)
Rural America
171(1)
Women
172(3)
Anglicisation
175(1)
The West Indies
176(1)
Black Americans
177(1)
Frontier frictions
178(1)
The North Carolina regulators
179(4)
Adjustment to Empire, 1763--1770
183(12)
Inevitable independence?
183(1)
The Grenville programme
184(2)
The Stamp Act
186(2)
The repeal of the Stamp Act
188(1)
The Townshend duties
189(4)
The repeal of the Townshend duties
193(1)
The Boston massacre
194(1)
The Imperial Crisis: `Tis time to part
195(13)
The `period of quiet'
195(2)
The Boston Tea Party
197(1)
The Coercive Acts
198(3)
The first Continental Congress
201(1)
Lexington and Concord
202(1)
The second Continental Congress
203(3)
The War of American Independence
206(1)
Independence
207(1)
Conclusion 208(11)
Guide to Further Reading 219(5)
Index 224
Mary K. Geiter is Assistant Professor, Immaculata College. W.A Speck is Emeritus Professor of History, Leeds University, and Visiting Professor, University of Northumbria.

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