"She seeketh wool, and flax, and worketh willingly with her hands.She is like the merchants' ships; she bringeth her food from afar.
She
The colonies of Massachusetts and Virginia were located in separate regions of the New World and had many social and economic variations. The very laws and ideas these people have put into work are what have shaped America into the county it is today. When looking at these two colonies we know one thing is for sure, trade, land, religion, and natural resources were vital parts of their being. In this free-response essay I will contrast the colonies by how their societies were ran and how their economies affected their way of life.…
Much of the colonies in North America followed their mother country’s footsteps in gender roles. It was a general trend that colonial society was patriarchal. Men were considered to be the leader of the household, and women were expected to be subordinate to men. The reason for this being that women were traditionally thought to be “weaker” in the general sense of physical work, but also in the sense of emotional well-being. However, there were cases where women were able to demonstrate their worth by pursuing positions such as merchants, printers, and even doctors. In addition, women often had to assume the leadership role if the husband was away or injured.…
From the 1815-1860, two events changed the role of woman in society forever. From a social, political and cultural standpoints The antebellum market revolution and the second great awakening both played key roles in changing the woman’s role in the family, workplace and society.…
Some factors that contributed to the prosperity of British colonies were the dethroning of King James II, mercantilism, population growth, and expansion. The crowning of William and Mary opened up a new era for the colonists. William dismantled the Dominion of New England and brought back self-governing colonies rather than crown appointed governors. Mercantilism helped further develop England’s economy. Mercantilism maximized sales while minimizing foreign purchase. The colonies wouldn’t purchase things from other nations but they would encourage other nations to buy from them. Mercantilism became the commercial economy of England. The income produced from mercantilism enhanced commerce. All the colonies had a population growth, not from immigration but from natural increase. In the early 1700s, England expanded many of their colonies like Delaware. England also spread their empire south to Georgia. Georgia became a refugee for debtors to work off their debts.…
Conditions changed for Englishwomen over the colonial period in America. In early colonial period men, woman and children traveled to America to settle. This was unusual because usually young men are going first to the frontier then woman and families follow afterward. The families coming to America together created a tight knit community where they had public elementary schools for the children to learn to read. More Englishmen than Englishwomen who came to Massachusetts could read. Some woman in Jamestown worked at the tobacco farms and in other colonies may have done other sorts of labor. At the time women’s labor belonged to their husband. In the early 1600s many Puritans, like John Winthrop, who came to America from England followed the…
Geography impacted the development of the thirteen original colonies. The New England colonies had cold winters, rocky soil, mountains, forests, rivers, and natural harbors. The rocky soil made fertilization hard. The forests, rivers, and natural harbors provided the New England colonies with other ways to survive. These geographic disadvantages and advantages shaped the economy of the New England colonies. The New England colonies had a diverse economy. Their economy included small-scale farming, fishing, fur trade, shipbuilding, lumbering, trade and commerce, crafts, and industry. New England was run by manufacturing. Trade, lumber, and fishing were the primary source of income. Although farming was the most common occupation, New England colonies became the center of colonial shipping, with major ports at Boston and Salem.…
On farms in New England, women were usually working in the home and rarely worked in the fields. Trade was usually a task the men completed. Although these were the norms in many colonial regions, there were some areas that women held the same roles as men. However, holding a job that a man usually held did not give women equality.…
Women were taught to be subordinates to their husbands and be silent when other were around. Throughout the colonies, a women duties were to be helpmeets to their husbands. They would perform farm work. Farmwives tended gardens and spun thread and yarn. “They knitted sweaters and stockings, made candles and soap, churned milk into butter and pressed curds into cheese, fermented malt for beer, preserved meats, and mastered dozens of other household tasks. “Notable women”— those who excelled at domestic arts — won praise and high status,” (Henretta 97).…
During the 17th century, women’s work was extremely difficult, exhausting, and under appreciated. Most colonial women were homemakers who cooked meals, made clothing, and doctored their family as well as cleaned, made household goods to use and sell, took care of their animals, and sometimes maintained and tended the farm. Middle class and wealthy women also shared some of these chores in their households, but they often had servants to help them. Women were also the primary care givers for the children, and they often had many children. Mothers were often the primary spiritual instructors in the home, especially in the latter part of the Seventeenth Century.…
In the 1700’s, women performed all the domestic tasks as they were not seen equal to men. During the Revolutionary War women stepped up and proved that they were not beneath men. Showcasing that they could be as strong as the men and that they weren't just made to cook and be tasteful companions for their husbands. Without women's support in the Revolutionary War, the war wouldn't have been as successful. They managed businesses, became secret soldiers, and opposed British Policies, proving that they could perform tasks just as well as men.…
From its’ foundation, the New England region harbored a great amount of people, the average lifespan of these people was in their sixties. This stability and abundance of women created an environment suited for family life. Women could live long enough to become married, have children, raise children, and see their children go through the process. In fact, it has been said that the New England colonists invented family, because they were like a shining beacon of hope in a dismal, violent wilderness. This was a huge impact of society as well. As the family life came about, so did the concept of sharing. A community within the town began to grow, regulating the wages people received and the prices on objects would be deemed based on the status of the families in the region. Thus, women affected the New England region because there abundance allowed for the creation of family and a community-like…
The skill sets that the women had were essential to everyone living during the American Revolution. As helpmates, women had to focus on skills that surrounded the house, garden, and hen house, where they would spend their time “processing the raw materials their husbands produced into usable items such as food, clothing, candles, and soap” (6). The role of women is very important throughout the American Revolution because men needed them to do tasks they couldn’t do while they were at war. Eventually, these women got “caught between the older ideal of ‘notable housewife’ and the newer ideal of ‘pretty gentlewoman’” (8). Although not very happy about it, the women needed to serve the men in order to have places to live and not risk…
Each colony had a specific trade or product that they could offer to an adjacent settlement or even back to their homeland. The location of the colony determined what that product or service would be and this gave opportunity to the colonists that resided there. The most prominent of the colonies, New England, "[was] one of the largest and most flourishing towns in North America" (Doc 4). In the New England region they had a great coast line which opened opportunities to fisherman and whalers. It also had a great amount of forest, which opened a window for ship builders and carpenters who were skilled in…
Salmon, Marylynn. The Limits of Independence: American Women 1760-1800. 1st ed. 3. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. 1-144. Print.…
While English colonial women tended to experience more oppression because of societal expectations of women’s subordination and Native American women experienced a much greater equality of genders, both groups of women were integral to the evolution of their respective societies. Both Native American women and colonial women’s sexualities confused and provided points of misunderstanding in the colonial era of America that contributed to a change in the societies.…