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The American Pageant (16th Edition)

Hey everyone, I'm a student here in the US and I'm attempting to share the chapters on The American Pageant to help anyone who has APUSH next year and or those who had just forgotten theirs at home and need to get the information from the book and or if anyone just wants to get a good look on the American histories. I'm currently going through chapter 5-12 in class so I'm going to to try and get there before the end of October 2022, but I make no promises but I'll try to upload the chapters up here as quickly as I can when I can find the time to during my lively schedule. The purpose of doing this is solely to help those study and review since I know going through that hard ass textbook can be annoying and doing it like this might just help studying better. But I don't know? So imma test that theory out, ya get it? Plus this is also for my own studying so I'm seriously not trying to screw anyone over, so if you could do me a favor, don't report me if you get and are like, well instead of doing that, those students should just go buy an online version of it you selfish prick. And to you I say, well not all of us have money like that. So please, just let me have this till I finish APUSH this year. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The American Pageant is: Written by David M. Kennedy & Lizabeth Cohen. This is the updated Ap® addition version. Sixteenth Edition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Also I can't afford being sued or anything so if you're the collage or whatever who's throwing fingers at me for doing this, just contact me throughout any means and I'll just book it. Please... I can't afford a lawsuit, I just got my life documents legalized.

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27 Chs

Virginia: Child Of Tabaco

John Rolfe, the husband of Pocahontas, became father of the tobacco industry and an economic savior of the Virginia colony.

By 1612 he had per fected methods of raising and curing the pungent weed, eliminating much of the bitter tang.

Soon the European demand for tobacco was nearly insatiable. A tobacco rush swept over Virginia, as crops were planted in the streets of Jamestown and even between the numerous graves.

So exclusively did the colonists concentrate on planting the yellow leaf that at first they had to import some of their foodstuffs.

Colonists who had once hungered for food now hungered for land, ever more land on which to plant ever more tobacco.

Relentlessly, they pressed the frontier of settlement up the river valleys to the west, abrasively edging against the Indians.

Virginia's prosperity was finally built on tobacco smoke. This "bewitching weed" played a vital role in putting the colony on firm economic foundations.

But tobacco-King Nicotine-was something of a tyrant. It was ruinous to the soil when greedily planted in successive years, and it enchained the fortunes of Virginia to the fluctuating price of a single crop.

Fatefully, tobacco also promoted the broad-acred plantation system and with it a brisk demand for fresh labor.

In 1619, the year before the Plymouth Pilgrims landed in New England, what was described as a Dutch warship appeared off Jamestown and sold some twenty Africans.

The scanty record does not reveal whether they were purchased as lifelong slaves or as servants committed to limited years of servitude.

How ever it transpired, this simple commercial transaction planted the seeds of the North American slave system. Yet blacks were too costly for most of the hard-pinched white colonists to acquire, and for decades few were brought to Virginia.

In 1650 Virginia counted but three hundred blacks, although by the end of the century blacks, most of them enslaved, made up approximately 14% of the colony's population.

Representative self-government was also born in primitive Virginia, in the same cradle with slavery and in the same year-1619. The Virginia Company autho rized the settlers to summon an assembly, known as the House of Burgesses.

A momentous precedent was thus feebly established, for this assemblage was the first of many miniature parliaments to flourish in the soil of America.

As time passed, James I grew increasingly hostile to Virginia. He detested tobacco, and he distrusted the representative House of Burgesses, which he branded a "seminary of sedition." In 1624 he revoked the charter of the bankrupt and beleaguered Virginia Company, thus making Virginia a royal colony directly under his control.

Pg. 32-33

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