Examples of Colonial Elections in the following topics:
-
- The colonies began as disparate political units, eventually merging themselves into thirteen cohesive colonies.
- Elections were carnivals where all men were equal for one day and traditional restraints relaxed.
- Saybrook Colony was founded in 1635 and merged with Connecticut Colony in 1644.
- Carolina colony was divided into two colonies, North Carolina and South Carolina, in 1712.
- Both colonies became royal colonies in 1729.
-
- In practice, this meant that British "liberties" and cultural practices were extended to the colonies through overseas trade, weaving the colonies together while forcefully displacing American Indians from their land and building the economy on the exploitation of slave labor.
- Therefore, Anglo-American colonies were extensive communal cultures, centered on the civic and political sphere.
- Elections became the main forum in which men could publicly profess political allegiances, demonstrating local civic pride to a community that placed high importance on it.
- Such widespread participation in local community governments was characteristic solely of the Anglo-American colonies.
- This 19th century lithograph depicts colonial sugarcane plantations in the Caribbean.
-
-
-
-
- The American language of liberty is a concept deeply rooted in the Anglo-American colonial experience as well as the American Revolution.
- Therefore, Anglo-American colonies were extensive communal cultures, centered on the civic and political sphere.
- Elections became the main forum in which men could publicly profess political allegiances, demonstrating local civic pride to a community that placed high importance on it.
- Such widespread participation in local community governments was characteristic solely of the Anglo-American colonies.
- Instead, American colonial politics revolved around the notion of public civic life and responsibility, an ideology that included:
-
- The doctrine was issued at a time when nearly all Latin American colonies of Spain and Portugal had achieved independence from the Spanish Empire (except Bolivia, which became independent in 1825, and Cuba and Puerto Rico).
-
- Each colony had a paid colonial agent in London to represent its interests.
- Provincial colonies, also known as royal colonies, were under the direct control of the king, who usually appointed a royal governor.
- Proprietary colonies were governed much as provincial colonies except that Lords Proprietors, rather than the king, appointed the governor.
- Massachusetts began as a charter colony in 1684 but became a provincial colony in 1691.
- In a charter colony, Britain granted a charter to the colonial government establishing the rules under which the colony was to be governed.
-
-
- Through the 17th century, Great Britain established 13 colonies in North America and greatly expanded its colonial reach.
- In the early 1700s, the population in the colonies had reached 250,000.
- The early colonies also contributed to the rise in population in English America as many thousands of Europeans made their way to the colonies.
- The colonies differed substantially in their economics; while northern colonies relied heavily on the emergence of industry and the production of goods to sell or trade, southern colonies arose out of agriculture and the production of staple crops.
- Southern colonies especially relied on slavery, but all colonies benefited from the institution.