The article Virginia Is an Abundant New Paradise and Virginia Is Not a New Paradise both are written by colonist that came from the Old World, but they also both came from completely different lives. The very small amount of people fortunate to be wealthy will live amazing lives. For the majority of the colonists, Richard Ffrethorne’s letter home will be a more accurate representation of what their lives will turn out to be like. Those lives being filled with terrible sickness, disease and days of hard labor in bad environments for little to no food. Many people who came to find a better life in the Colonies quickly caught sickness and diseases. Those unlucky colonist’s new lives were cut short by suffering. Virginia Is Not a New Paradise which was written by Richard Ffrethorne, an English serf that …show more content…
The rich colonist just go and buy their food which allows them to stay full. Alexander Whitaker, a minister who had an easy life in both the new and old world, states in the article Virginia Is an Abundant New Paradise, “ Many have died with us heretofore through their own filthiness and want of bodily comforts for sick men…” (Dudley 13). Alexander Whitaker is explaining that only the rich and prosperous will survive unravaged by disease and sickness while if the colonist was a normal man he would living in a world of disease and filth. After reading these two articles, Virginia Is an Abundant New Paradise and Virginia Is Not a New Paradise, Virginia is worse for the majority of colonist because of the tremendous amount of disease and sickness spreading throughout the colony. The limited amount of food available to the normal colonist for the hard labor completed is also enough to drive anyone away. Virginia is only a paradise to the rich, which does not say anything because the rich can make any place a
During early civilization in America, not every colonist lived the same way. Many migrated over the Atlantic Ocean in search of wealth and religious freedom. Adjusting to a new life thousands of miles away was hard, and many worked countless hours to make ends meet. Here are inventories of two American colonials at the time of their death from around the late 1600s, Edward Inman and Stephen Luffe. Edward Inman died in 1688 in Talbott County in Maryland, while Stephen Luffe died in 1698 in Sumersett County in the same state.
I’m writing to you to inform you that your colony of Georgia is going great, now. The Good ship Anne was perfect and wonderful for the journey. It took exactly 57 days to get to place called Charleston, South Carolina on January 13th, 1733. Even when we didn’t have the supply to keep going such a food and clean water, we worked out our problems and got through them, out of the 114 passengers only 2 infants didn’t make it. When we got to Charleston we went to man named John Musgrove to ask permission to use Mary Musgrove as a translator.
Being the first two well-known places in which the English would set out to colonize in 1607 and 1620, Jamestown, Virginia and Plymouth, Massachusetts hold very separate set of beliefs, standards, and outlooks on life then and the future to come. While paving the way for things such as slavery, taxes, ownership of land, inclusion of women, tobacco and government assemblies, John Smith and the people of Jamestown became a classical foundation for new life and economic growth for the new world that is, the United States. On the other hand, William Bradford and his people began to realize the intentions of the Church of England were unholy and had strayed away from God’s teachings from the Bible. With this in mind, the Pilgrims set on a voyage to the new world to seek religious freedom. As we know it, the Pilgrims sought for peace and a new way of living that was fair, just and free from religious corruptions.
James Horn’s, “A Land As God Made It”, tells about the hardships and tragedies the settlers faced as they attempted to make a settlement in Jamestown. Before attempting to settle at Jamestown, England tried to permanently settle in Roanoke, off the coast of North Carolina. The colony was “unsuitable because its shallow waters could not accommodate ocean-going vessels” (Horn 2005, 31). Horn says that the failure of the Roanoke colony occurred for many different reasons; one of the main reasons being that it was not a time for success for the colony. Although the colony failed, it gave impact on the future for settlers to start a new settlement (Horn 2005, 33).
We think though disease and violence definitely caused disturbances in the thriving of Roanoke, they could not have been the sole factor of the colony’s abondonation. After so many people died of
I am enlightened by your desire to come join me here in Jamestown, but life has been a never ending roller coaster as the years slowly pass by. Some days I wonder if leaving the slums to avoid my peasant status was worth risking making an attempt at creating a new life in Jamestown. I have trouble falling asleep as I am persistently worrying about whether or not I will wake up the next morning, or if I will die in my sleep during a surprise Indian attack. Even tobacco alone cannot soothe my nerves and paranoia, nor can the money that has been produced from the tobacco market keep my mind in a state of peace. Even though the colony has recently prospered from the blooming tobacco business, I would strongly recommend for you all to refrain from coming here unless you enjoy an indentured servant life, constant Native American threats, and terrible living conditions.
Benjamin Franklin said it perfectly when asked how the colonist would react economically. “The goods they take from Britain are either necessaries, mere conveniences, or superfluities.” (Benjamin Franklin, Testimony Against the Stamp Act) This statement made speaks volumes as it shows that the colonist aren’t required to buy any luxurious products. They are nothing but “mere articles of fashion”. He later went on to say that the colonist would just make such clothes when needed.
The British colonies in the Chesapeake region and those of the New England region were both similar yet different in certain ways. One because both the colonist that settled there were looking for new opportunities. However, it was mostly second son aristocrats, which means the first born usually inherits the better half of the father’s riches. Their lives in England had either been mistreated or they were unable to flourish economically. Regardless of whether they were searching the land for expansive homesteads, religious freedom, or exchanging and merchant opportunities, the colonist in both regions were searching for another land in the New World.
As the colonists live in Jamestown, they question their survival. In 1607, they landed on Chesapeak Bay and built a colony called Jamestown. They had their hearts set on land and gold. But they didn’t get what they hoped for. The years they have lived in North America have not been easy.
William Moraley’s failure in the American colonies was not due to laziness but being at the wrong place at the wrong time. His hard work and motivation to better his life just didn’t work in his favor. Even before his journey to America, Moraley had a string of bad luck. After his father’s death, he quarreled with his mother for his rightful fortune. But unable to acquire these funds he was reduced to poverty.
The early Virginia and New England colonies differed politically, socially, and economically due to the situations that the settlers faced. Throughout many of the letters written about some of the experiences of the earlier settlers, one can easily see a major difference in the way of life of the two colonies. Although many of these colonies differed in the way of life, each colony faced some similar things that they each had to overcome. These challenges made a massive difference in the way that each of the colonies started out and directly influenced the future for both colonies. When these challenges are faced, many of the settlers will create the foundations of their political, social, and economic systems.
&&“Love and Hate in Jamestown” is a book that tells the story of the U.S.’s first colony in the eyes of the American legend John Smith and through the accounts of the other settlers. The book starts with a small history lesson and eventually ties it in with John Smith, a soldier who eventually becomes a leader among the men in Jamestown. As we read, there is more detail to whom Smith is; where he came from, a small farm in London; what he went through, he became a soldier fighting in foreign lands with the Turks and getting caught; his family, the battles with his father that kept Smith home as an archer. Moreover, Smiths’ story rolls over to how he was able to go to Virginia; the colony in Virginia started out as a business investment until it was royal property in the 1620’s. Now, while going to
This was the compare and contrast about Jamestown and
“In this situation, I see a great deal of the property of the people of Virginia in jeopardy, and their peace and tranquility gone. I repeat it again, that it would rejoice my very soul that every one of my fellowbeings was emancipated. We ought to lament
Throughout history cultures have clashed many times. Whether it be because of land, industrialization, or race people have always found reasons to disagree with one another. John Smith’s writing “The General History of Virginia” shows a dominant culture coming in contact with a less developed culture, dehumanizing them and uplifted John Smith in order to take control of the people. Smith, an influential member of society and founder of Jamestown, wrote his text in 1624, seventeen years after the events had occurred. He is also known to have embellished his story to make himself appear more substantial.