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Author Middleton, Richard, 1941-
Title Colonial America : a history to 1763 / Richard Middleton and Anne Lombard.
Publication Info Oxford : Wiley-Blackwell, 2011.
Edition 4th ed.



Descript xvii, 603 p. : ill., maps
Edition 4th ed.
Contents List of Figures. List of Maps. List of Documents. Preface to the Fourth Edition. Acknowledgments. Part I: Old and New Worlds Meet:. 1. The Peoples of Eastern North America: Societies inTransition. 1 America Before Columbus and the Problem of History. 2 The Americas in Ancient Times. 3 The Eastern Woodlands, 1000 1300. 4 Eastern Woodlands Societies in Transition,1300 1500. 5 Earliest Contacts with Europeans. 2. The Age of European Exploration. 1 Western Europe, 1300 1450. 2 The Portuguese in Africa. 3 Spain Encounters the New World. 4 Sixteenth-Century European Competitors. 5 England: The Elizabethan Prelude. Part II: The Seventeenth-Century Settlements:. 3. The English Conquer Virginia, 1607 1660. 1 Virginia Before the English. 2 The Virginia Company: Early Settlement. 3 The Charter of Liberties. 4 The Massacre of 1622 and Fall of the Company. 5 Growth and Consolidation, 1625 1660. 4. The Conquest Continues: New England,1620 1660. 1 New England Before the English. 2 The Pilgrims. 3 Massachusetts: A City on the Hill. 4 Establishing and Defending Order. 5 Challenges from England. 6 Stable Societies. 5. Diverse Colonies: New France, New Netherland, Maryland,and the West Indies. 1 New France. 2 New Netherland and Delaware: The Dutch and SwedishBeginnings. 3 Maryland: A Catholic Proprietary. 4 English Colonies in the West Indies. 6. The Restoration Era. 1 The Return of Charles II. 2 Mercantilism: The Navigation Laws. 3 New York Becomes an English Colony. 4 The Carolinas: Early Settlement. 7. The Later Years of Charles II. 1 Virginia: Bacon s Rebellion and Its Aftermath. 2 Massachusetts: The Struggle to Remain Self-Governing. 3 New Jersey and Pennsylvania: The Beginnings. 8. James II and the Glorious Revolution. 1 The Dominion of New England. 2 Massachusetts Reclaims Control. 3 New York: Leisler s Rebellion. 4 Maryland. 5 Aftermath. 9. The Eras of William and Mary, and Queen Anne. 1 William and Mary s Colonial Policy. 2 The Salem Witchcraft Trials. 3 War on the Northern Frontier, 1689 1713. 4 War and Political Change in the Carolinas. 5 Proprietary Problems in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Part III: The Eighteenth-Century Provinces in a ChangingContinent:. 10. The Economy and Labor System in British NorthAmerica. 1 The British Atlantic Economy. 2 The Southern Plantation System. 3 Northern Farming and Commerce. 4 The Mercantilist System. 5 Money and Taxation. 6 The Standard of Living: Poverty and Prosperity. 11. Settler Families and Society. 1 New World Families. 2 Children. 3 Patriarchal Authority. 4 Social Structure: Rank and Class. 12. White Women and Gender. 1 Gender and the Settler Experience in the SeventeenthCentury. 2 Regional Variations. 3 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: The Eighteenth-CenturyRefined Lady. 4 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: Middling and WorkingWhite Women. 13. British North American Religion, Education, and Culture,1689 1760. 1 Religion. 2 Education. 3 The Anglicization of Taste. 4 Libraries, Literature, and the Press. 5 Science and the Arts. 6 Popular Culture. 14. Slavery and the African American Experience,1689 1760. 1 Slavery: An Evolving Institution. 2 Slaves Experiences. 3 The African American Family. 4 African American Culture. 5 Free African Americans. 6 Resistance to Slavery. 15. Expanding Spanish and French Empires in NorthAmerica. 1 Florida. 2 New Mexico. 3 The Growth of New France. 4 The French Upper Country, or Pays d en Haut. 5 Louisiana. 6 Texas. 7 Significance for the British Colonies. 16. Native American Societies and Cultures,1689 1760. 1 Native American Societies in the Eighteenth Century. 2 The Nations of the Northern Frontier. 3 The Nations of the Southern Frontier. 4 Adaptation or Decline?. 17. Immigration and Expansion in British North America,1714 1750. 1 The Germans and Scots-Irish. 2 The Founding of Georgia. 3 The Urban Frontier. 18. British North American Institutions ofGovernment. 1 The Royal Framework. 2 Local Government: Town Meeting and County Court. 3 The Provincial Assembly: Crown versus People. 4 Parties and Factions in the Age of Walpole. 5 Toward a Republican Ideology. 19. Britain, France, and Spain: The Imperial Contest,1739 1763. 1 The War of Jenkins Ear. 2 The Struggle for the Ohio. 3 The Conquest of Canada. 4 The War s Consequences. Selected Bibliography. Index.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9781444396270 (e-book)
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Author Middleton, Richard, 1941-
Subject United States -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
Alt author Lombard, Anne S.
Descript xvii, 603 p. : ill., maps
Edition 4th ed.
Contents List of Figures. List of Maps. List of Documents. Preface to the Fourth Edition. Acknowledgments. Part I: Old and New Worlds Meet:. 1. The Peoples of Eastern North America: Societies inTransition. 1 America Before Columbus and the Problem of History. 2 The Americas in Ancient Times. 3 The Eastern Woodlands, 1000 1300. 4 Eastern Woodlands Societies in Transition,1300 1500. 5 Earliest Contacts with Europeans. 2. The Age of European Exploration. 1 Western Europe, 1300 1450. 2 The Portuguese in Africa. 3 Spain Encounters the New World. 4 Sixteenth-Century European Competitors. 5 England: The Elizabethan Prelude. Part II: The Seventeenth-Century Settlements:. 3. The English Conquer Virginia, 1607 1660. 1 Virginia Before the English. 2 The Virginia Company: Early Settlement. 3 The Charter of Liberties. 4 The Massacre of 1622 and Fall of the Company. 5 Growth and Consolidation, 1625 1660. 4. The Conquest Continues: New England,1620 1660. 1 New England Before the English. 2 The Pilgrims. 3 Massachusetts: A City on the Hill. 4 Establishing and Defending Order. 5 Challenges from England. 6 Stable Societies. 5. Diverse Colonies: New France, New Netherland, Maryland,and the West Indies. 1 New France. 2 New Netherland and Delaware: The Dutch and SwedishBeginnings. 3 Maryland: A Catholic Proprietary. 4 English Colonies in the West Indies. 6. The Restoration Era. 1 The Return of Charles II. 2 Mercantilism: The Navigation Laws. 3 New York Becomes an English Colony. 4 The Carolinas: Early Settlement. 7. The Later Years of Charles II. 1 Virginia: Bacon s Rebellion and Its Aftermath. 2 Massachusetts: The Struggle to Remain Self-Governing. 3 New Jersey and Pennsylvania: The Beginnings. 8. James II and the Glorious Revolution. 1 The Dominion of New England. 2 Massachusetts Reclaims Control. 3 New York: Leisler s Rebellion. 4 Maryland. 5 Aftermath. 9. The Eras of William and Mary, and Queen Anne. 1 William and Mary s Colonial Policy. 2 The Salem Witchcraft Trials. 3 War on the Northern Frontier, 1689 1713. 4 War and Political Change in the Carolinas. 5 Proprietary Problems in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Part III: The Eighteenth-Century Provinces in a ChangingContinent:. 10. The Economy and Labor System in British NorthAmerica. 1 The British Atlantic Economy. 2 The Southern Plantation System. 3 Northern Farming and Commerce. 4 The Mercantilist System. 5 Money and Taxation. 6 The Standard of Living: Poverty and Prosperity. 11. Settler Families and Society. 1 New World Families. 2 Children. 3 Patriarchal Authority. 4 Social Structure: Rank and Class. 12. White Women and Gender. 1 Gender and the Settler Experience in the SeventeenthCentury. 2 Regional Variations. 3 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: The Eighteenth-CenturyRefined Lady. 4 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: Middling and WorkingWhite Women. 13. British North American Religion, Education, and Culture,1689 1760. 1 Religion. 2 Education. 3 The Anglicization of Taste. 4 Libraries, Literature, and the Press. 5 Science and the Arts. 6 Popular Culture. 14. Slavery and the African American Experience,1689 1760. 1 Slavery: An Evolving Institution. 2 Slaves Experiences. 3 The African American Family. 4 African American Culture. 5 Free African Americans. 6 Resistance to Slavery. 15. Expanding Spanish and French Empires in NorthAmerica. 1 Florida. 2 New Mexico. 3 The Growth of New France. 4 The French Upper Country, or Pays d en Haut. 5 Louisiana. 6 Texas. 7 Significance for the British Colonies. 16. Native American Societies and Cultures,1689 1760. 1 Native American Societies in the Eighteenth Century. 2 The Nations of the Northern Frontier. 3 The Nations of the Southern Frontier. 4 Adaptation or Decline?. 17. Immigration and Expansion in British North America,1714 1750. 1 The Germans and Scots-Irish. 2 The Founding of Georgia. 3 The Urban Frontier. 18. British North American Institutions ofGovernment. 1 The Royal Framework. 2 Local Government: Town Meeting and County Court. 3 The Provincial Assembly: Crown versus People. 4 Parties and Factions in the Age of Walpole. 5 Toward a Republican Ideology. 19. Britain, France, and Spain: The Imperial Contest,1739 1763. 1 The War of Jenkins Ear. 2 The Struggle for the Ohio. 3 The Conquest of Canada. 4 The War s Consequences. Selected Bibliography. Index.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9781444396270 (e-book)
Author Middleton, Richard, 1941-
Subject United States -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
Alt author Lombard, Anne S.

Subject United States -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775.
Descript xvii, 603 p. : ill., maps
Contents List of Figures. List of Maps. List of Documents. Preface to the Fourth Edition. Acknowledgments. Part I: Old and New Worlds Meet:. 1. The Peoples of Eastern North America: Societies inTransition. 1 America Before Columbus and the Problem of History. 2 The Americas in Ancient Times. 3 The Eastern Woodlands, 1000 1300. 4 Eastern Woodlands Societies in Transition,1300 1500. 5 Earliest Contacts with Europeans. 2. The Age of European Exploration. 1 Western Europe, 1300 1450. 2 The Portuguese in Africa. 3 Spain Encounters the New World. 4 Sixteenth-Century European Competitors. 5 England: The Elizabethan Prelude. Part II: The Seventeenth-Century Settlements:. 3. The English Conquer Virginia, 1607 1660. 1 Virginia Before the English. 2 The Virginia Company: Early Settlement. 3 The Charter of Liberties. 4 The Massacre of 1622 and Fall of the Company. 5 Growth and Consolidation, 1625 1660. 4. The Conquest Continues: New England,1620 1660. 1 New England Before the English. 2 The Pilgrims. 3 Massachusetts: A City on the Hill. 4 Establishing and Defending Order. 5 Challenges from England. 6 Stable Societies. 5. Diverse Colonies: New France, New Netherland, Maryland,and the West Indies. 1 New France. 2 New Netherland and Delaware: The Dutch and SwedishBeginnings. 3 Maryland: A Catholic Proprietary. 4 English Colonies in the West Indies. 6. The Restoration Era. 1 The Return of Charles II. 2 Mercantilism: The Navigation Laws. 3 New York Becomes an English Colony. 4 The Carolinas: Early Settlement. 7. The Later Years of Charles II. 1 Virginia: Bacon s Rebellion and Its Aftermath. 2 Massachusetts: The Struggle to Remain Self-Governing. 3 New Jersey and Pennsylvania: The Beginnings. 8. James II and the Glorious Revolution. 1 The Dominion of New England. 2 Massachusetts Reclaims Control. 3 New York: Leisler s Rebellion. 4 Maryland. 5 Aftermath. 9. The Eras of William and Mary, and Queen Anne. 1 William and Mary s Colonial Policy. 2 The Salem Witchcraft Trials. 3 War on the Northern Frontier, 1689 1713. 4 War and Political Change in the Carolinas. 5 Proprietary Problems in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Part III: The Eighteenth-Century Provinces in a ChangingContinent:. 10. The Economy and Labor System in British NorthAmerica. 1 The British Atlantic Economy. 2 The Southern Plantation System. 3 Northern Farming and Commerce. 4 The Mercantilist System. 5 Money and Taxation. 6 The Standard of Living: Poverty and Prosperity. 11. Settler Families and Society. 1 New World Families. 2 Children. 3 Patriarchal Authority. 4 Social Structure: Rank and Class. 12. White Women and Gender. 1 Gender and the Settler Experience in the SeventeenthCentury. 2 Regional Variations. 3 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: The Eighteenth-CenturyRefined Lady. 4 Gender in a Commercializing Culture: Middling and WorkingWhite Women. 13. British North American Religion, Education, and Culture,1689 1760. 1 Religion. 2 Education. 3 The Anglicization of Taste. 4 Libraries, Literature, and the Press. 5 Science and the Arts. 6 Popular Culture. 14. Slavery and the African American Experience,1689 1760. 1 Slavery: An Evolving Institution. 2 Slaves Experiences. 3 The African American Family. 4 African American Culture. 5 Free African Americans. 6 Resistance to Slavery. 15. Expanding Spanish and French Empires in NorthAmerica. 1 Florida. 2 New Mexico. 3 The Growth of New France. 4 The French Upper Country, or Pays d en Haut. 5 Louisiana. 6 Texas. 7 Significance for the British Colonies. 16. Native American Societies and Cultures,1689 1760. 1 Native American Societies in the Eighteenth Century. 2 The Nations of the Northern Frontier. 3 The Nations of the Southern Frontier. 4 Adaptation or Decline?. 17. Immigration and Expansion in British North America,1714 1750. 1 The Germans and Scots-Irish. 2 The Founding of Georgia. 3 The Urban Frontier. 18. British North American Institutions ofGovernment. 1 The Royal Framework. 2 Local Government: Town Meeting and County Court. 3 The Provincial Assembly: Crown versus People. 4 Parties and Factions in the Age of Walpole. 5 Toward a Republican Ideology. 19. Britain, France, and Spain: The Imperial Contest,1739 1763. 1 The War of Jenkins Ear. 2 The Struggle for the Ohio. 3 The Conquest of Canada. 4 The War s Consequences. Selected Bibliography. Index.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
Alt author Lombard, Anne S.
ISBN 9781444396270 (e-book)

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