|
1700-1749 |
Political and
Social History |
Literature |
|
1700-1704 |
1700 Massachusetts representative
assembly orders all Roman Catholic priests to vacate the colony within three
months, an action also taken by the New York legislature.
Population of the American colonies: about 275,000
people. Boston has 7,000 people and New York 5,000.
1702-1713 Queen Anne's War (War of the
Spanish Succession)
1704 28-29 February. Deerfield,
Massachusetts is destroyed and 100 residents are abducted, a consequence of
Queen Anne's War.![Old Fray [sic] House, Deerfield, Mass (1698); Courtesy of American Memory Home Page](http://www.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/pics/frey.jpg) |
1700. 24 June. Judge
Samuel
Sewall publishes
The Selling of
Joseph, an anti-slavery tract.
1702
Cotton
Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana
1704 (October) Sarah Kemble Knight begins
her Private Journal of a Journey from Boston to New York (published
1825).
. |
|
1705-1709 |
1705. Laws restricting the travel of
slaves and banning miscegenation are enacted in New York, Massachusetts,
and Virginia (Virginia Black Code of 1705).
1707 Settlers in Charlestown, South
Carolina successfully defend their town against an attack by French and
Spanish colonists from Havana and St. Augustine. |
1705 Robert Beverley,
History of Virginia
1706
Cotton
Mather, The Good Old Way, a book that laments the declining
Puritan influence in America.
1707 John Williams, The Redeemed Captive,
a best-selling
captivity narrative recounting his abduction during the Deerfield raid.
1708 The Sot-Weed Factor, satirical
poem by Ebenezer Cook |
|
1710-1714 |
1710 3,000 German refugees from the
Palatinate settle near Livingston Manor on the Hudson River in New York to
produce naval stores. When the colony fails, the settlers go first to the
Mohawk Valley (in New York) and finally to eastern Pennsylvania.
1712-13 Tuscarora Indian War in North and
South Carolina
1713 England's South Sea Company is allowed
to transport 4,800 slaves per year into the Spanish colonies of North
America.
1714
Cotton
Mather preaches a sermon in which he states his belief in the Copernican
theory of the universe, which places the sun at the center and planets in
orbit around it; the traditional or Ptolemaic view at that time held that
all revolved around the earth. |
1710 Cotton Mather, Bonifacius (Essays
to Do Good), a book that influenced Benjamin Franklin |
|
1715-1719 |
1715 Yamasee tribes attack and kill
several hundred Carolina settlers.
1716 South Carolina settlers and their
Cherokee allies attack and defeat the Yamassee.
1717 Scots-Irish immigration begins, with
most settling to western Pennsylvania.
1718 French found New Orleans.
City of San Antonio founded by the Spanish. |
1719-41 The Boston Gazette |
|
1720-1724 |
1720 Estimated population of colonies:
474,000.
The French build forts on the Mississippi, the St.
Lawrence, and the Niagara rivers.
1723
Benjamin Franklin leaves Boston for Philadelphia, a trip that he
chronicles in his Autobiography.
1724 Jewish settlers are exiled from the
Louisiana colony. |
1722 Benjamin Franklin, the "Dogood
Papers" |
|
1725-1729 |
1727
Benjamin Franklin founds the Junto Club. (Image
courtesy of the
Images of American Political History site.)
1728 Prospective brides arrive in Louisiana
for the French settlers there; they are known as "casket girls" because they
have received dresses in small trunks or caskets as an incentive for
immigration.
1728 Col. William Byrd keeps a diary of his
travels in determining the boundary between Virginia and North Carolina; it
is published in 1841 as History of the Dividing Line. |
1727 Dr. Cadwallader Colden, History
of the Five Indian Nations
1728 God's Mercy Surmounting Man's
Cruelty, Exemplified in the Captivity and Redemption of Elizabeth Hanson
(captivity
narrative of a Quaker woman)
1729
Franklin purchases and publishes the Pennsylvania Gazette, which
later becomes The Saturday Evening Post. |
|
1730-1734 |
1731.Franklin's Junto club establishes
the Library Company of Philadelphia, the first circulating library in the
US.
1732 Birth of George Washington.
1734 John Peter Zenger, editor of the
New York Weekly Journal, is imprisoned in New York for upholding freedom
of the press. He is accused of libeling New York Governor William Cosby.
In 1735, Zenger is acquitted when his attorney,
Andrew Hamilton,
says that the charges cannot be libelous because the accusations against
Cosby were true.
Jonathan Edwards begins preaching fiery
sermons to crowds in Northampton, Massachusetts. This begins the religious
revival movement known as the Great Awakening.
|
1732
Benjamin Franklin begins publishing Poor Richard's Almanac. |
|
1735-1739 |
1738 British preacher George Whitefield
arrives in Savannah; his sermons help to promote the "Great Awakening"
throughout the 1740s. One of the thousands impressed by his eloquence is
Benjamin Franklin, who writes in his
Autobiography, "I happened soon after to attend one of his Sermons,
in the Course of which I perceived he intended to finish with a Collection,
& I silently resolved he should get nothing from me. I had in my Pocket a
Handful of Copper Money, three or four silver Dollars, and five Pistoles in
Gold. As he proceeded I began to soften, and concluded to give the Coppers.
Another Stroke of his Oratory made me asham’d of that, and determin’d me to
give the Silver; & he finish’d so admirably, that I empty’d my Pocket wholly
into the Collector’s Dish, Gold and all." Other preachers in this movement
included Theodore Frelinghuysen of the Dutch Reformed Church, Gilbert
Tennent (Presbyterian), and
Jonathan Edwards.
1739-42 War of Jenkin's Ear (against Spain
in the Southern colonies) |
|
|
1740-1744 |
1741 Vitus Bering surveys the Alaskan
coast for Russian Tsar Peter the Great |
1741
Jonathan Edwards, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, one of
the most famous sermons of the Great Awakening |
|
1745-1749 |
1745 French attack and burn Saratoga
during King George's War (1745-8; ended by Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle)
1749 First American repertory acting
company established in Philadelphia; it opens with Thomas Keane in Richard
III.
1749 Trustees of Georgia colony revoke
their prohibition on slavery in the colony, marking a legal recognition of
slavery there. |