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Lucas Petricorena

Jamestown, Virginia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • Jamestown
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      was founded May 14, 1607
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    "Jamestown, located on Jamestown Island in the Virginia Colony, was founded on May 14, 1607.[1] It is commonly regarded as the first permanent English settlement in what is now the United States of America, following several earlier failed attempts, including the Lost Colony of Roanoke. It was founded by the London Company (later to become the Virginia Company), headquartered in London. Located in James City County when it was formed in 1634 as one of the original eight shires of Virginia, Jamestown was the capital of the Colony for 83 years, from 1616 until 1699.[2] At that time, the capital was relocated to Middle Plantation, about 8 miles (13 km) distant. (That small community, which had also become home to the new College of William and Mary in 1693, was renamed Williamsburg in 1699). The London Company's second settlement, Bermuda, claims the oldest town in the English New World, as St. George's, Bermuda was officially established (as New London) in 1612, where James Fort, in Virginia, is said not to have been converted into Jamestown until 1619. Jamestown ceased to exist as a settlement after the transfer of Virginia's capital to Williamsburg in 1699, existing, today, only as archaeological remains, whereas St. George's has continued in use throughout.[3] Jamestown is one of three locations comprising the Historic Triangle of Colonial Virginia: Jamestown, Yorktown, and Williamsburg. Jamestown offers two areas to visit. Historic Jamestowne,[4] on Jamestown Island, is a cooperative effort by Jamestown National Historic Site, a part of Colonial National Historical Park, which is a unit of the National Park Service, and the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. The other attraction is known as Jamestown Settlement, and located 1.25 miles (2.01 km) from the historic location of the colony. It is a Living History interpretive site operated by the Jamestown Yorktown Foundation in conjunction with the Commonwealth of Virginia and was established f
Janaisha Torres

13 Originals - 1 views

  • Everybody remembers Jamestown, Capt. John Smith, Pocahontas and all the rest. But do you remember Roanoke? In 1585, after a small scouting expedition had returne
Lucas Petricorena

Fort Duquesne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • Following Washington's return to Virginia in January 1754, Dinwiddie sent Virginians to build Fort Prince George at the forks. Work began on the fort on February 17. By April 18, a much larger French force arrived at the forks, forcing the small British garrison there to surrender. The French knocked down the tiny British fort and built Fort Duquesne, named in honor of Marquis Duquesne, the governor-general of New France.
  • Fort Duquesne
    • Lucas Petricorena
       
      its from the french and Indian war and it was built 1754
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    this fort is what protects and keeps wacth of inports and outports of the Monoghela and the Allegherny rivers
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    The fort was built by the French who expected Washington.
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    It was destroyed and replaced by Fort Pitt in 1758; over two centuries later, the site formerly occupied by Fort Duquesne is now Point State Park.
daniel cruz

Slavery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 9 views

    • giovanni belletti
       
      The slaves carry and plant tobaco
    • giovanni belletti
       
      The Dutch, French, an the Spanish made a lot of money selling slaves to each other
    • Cesar Monterroso
       
      They also collected cotton from the fields feeding there masters and carrying for any kids that there. The lived in small one room huts. The slept on hay beds along with maybe 7 more people squished together. The Master usually have 100's of slaves per farm.
    • Rafael Rivera
       
      The Slaves were also sold for tabaco . Becuase tabaco was like money back then .
    • anibal hernandez
       
      Slaves in the time of George Washington's time were treated with no respect. the slaves would get sold for tobacco and money.also even when the black people were free they would still have to respect all the white people because they weren't treated the same as other free citizens.like there was a woman named Francis and she was a free African American that wasn't treated the same as the whites she would go to court for thingts she would do and wipe her. then she went to court again and they made her become a slave for 10 years. then her owner told her if he dies she was free but that didn't happen to her. the slave owner died and she went back to court because they didn't believe her so the family of the died slave owner got the slave to work for them for the rest of there life.
    • christopher salinas
       
      the slaves also harvested rice. they grew a lot of rice
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      the slaves showed the british on how to make rice
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      some people were agianst slaves but still owned for example john adams and george washington.
  • Slavery (also called thralldom) is a form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others.
    • alexy velasco
       
      America was one of the last to end slavery. It took 200 years to do this.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      If a woman gives birth to a child and she is free then the child will automatically be free also but if she is not the child must remain a slave
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      american was one of the last country to end slavery it toook over 200 years for this to happen
  • debt-slavery
    • alexy velasco
       
      People that worked for this kind of slavery were known as indentured servants. Indentured servants were mostly white. They were also treated better than any of the other slaves. They could have their freedom after the time they promised to the specific person is over.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      The indentured servants would work for 7 years and after that they were free .
    • Geselle Valera
       
      if they werent indentured slaves they had to work till they died indentured slaves were mostly white.
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  • the birth of slave children to slaves
    • alexy velasco
       
      This rule was a little different. It is known that if the mother of the children was a slve then the children were slaves too. But if the mother is free then the children are free too.
    • Janelly Rodriguez
       
      it did not matter if the father was free because if the mother was a slave soa were the children
    • Geselle Valera
       
      the white men had sex whith african slaves and if they had children the children had to be slaves till the mom was free
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      Blacks taken from africa are oiled and said across then traded. After that process they are forced to work for the slave owners and traded again for tabacco.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      during the voyage of transporting the slaves to the new world almost 50% died coming over here
    • Jarred Green
       
      many slaves dided while coming to america, they were force captured from africa
  • legal for an owner to kill a slave
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      The slave owners are aloud to kill their slave sif they felt that they arent diong what is asked of them. Its mainly towards africa slaves.
    • Geselle Valera
       
      the black slaves had no rights and had to do exactly what they were told to do and if they didnt the owners would kill them or beat them
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      All slave owners are aloud to kill their slaves due to them running away and disobeying the orders. This abuse is mainly towards the blacks.
    • Jaylen Gibson
       
      Many slave owners have africa sex slaves. Their job is to produce and work for the master and if the mother is free the child is free too.
    • Alexia Rivera
       
      Even the natives had slaves espiecially the cherokee indians
    • Ashley Torres
       
      Many of the blacks were abused because of their behavior.
    • Samuel Melendez
       
      South Carolina had the most slaves than any other collony
    • Janaisha Torres
       
      The Washington and Jefferson Family had slaves. But didnt treat them the way other people treated slaves
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      slaves owners were allowed to kill their slaves for, disobaying or running away this usally happend to the blacks. this was really unfair
    • Samuel Melendez
       
      The Americans would trow the dead african bodys to the Atlantic sea.The americans later then got disturbed because of the bodys going to the shore.
  • form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others
  • of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others.
  • Approximately 10–20% of the rural population of Carolingian Europe consisted of slaves
    • anibal hernandez
       
      slaves were big part of the population of many other places then europe. in america there were atleast 250000 slaves in america in the 1750's.
  • Slavery (also called thralldom ) is a form of forced labour in which people are considered to be the property of others . Slaves can be held against their will from the time of their capture, purchase or birth, and deprived of the right to leave, to refuse to work, or to demand wages.
    • Jarred Green
       
      they were held against there will and had very few rights
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      if a slave had a baby their baby was a slave also
    • alize mcghee
       
      thier was one slavery person that was under the militia that  the gost made . 
    • alize mcghee
       
       if an woman that was a slave had an slave that baby she had would automaticley me an slave as well 
    • alize mcghee
       
      all of the slaves wanted freedom 
    • alize mcghee
       
      they did not get treated same as the whites did 
  • By this definition there are approximately 27 million slaves in the world today, more than at any point in history and more than twice as many as all African slaves who survived being taken to the Americas in the Atlantic slave trade.[2][3][4]
  • the birth of slave children to slaves
  • Slavery was prominent presumably elsewhere in Africa long before the beginnings of the transatlantic slave trade.[69
  • Slavery in the United States
  • Slavery has existed, in one form or another, through the whole of recorded human history — as have, in various periods, movements to free large or distinct groups of slaves.
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    (this link is going to tell you everything about slaves .
  • ...3 more comments...
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    SOme Indians were slaves but they were topowerfull
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    Tabbaco is what made the slave owners so rich they would sell a young slave for 200 pounds of tabbaco
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    slaves yeah they were bad lolL
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    Slaves were not people (metaphorically speaking). They were property. They were treated like animals. Their masters would often whip them as a lesson of discipline.
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    slaves had no rights at all basically they were property to the white people they could not even vouch for there selves in the court of law
3ddi3 3d :1 Yea!!! S0n

Belvoir, Virginia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Belvoir is a small, unincorporated community in Fauquier County, Virginia.
    • 3ddi3 3d :1 Yea!!! S0n
       
      this is where george washington, lord thomas fairfax and william fairfax went fox hunting wih blood hounds and golden retviers
    • nilsson Siguenza
       
      THis is were george washington, lord thomas fairfax and william fairfax went fox hunting with there trianed dogs. They let lord thomas fairfax win so he would be happy.
3ddi3 3d :1 Yea!!! S0n

Monongahela River - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The Monongahela Valley was the site of a famous, if small, battle that was one of the first in the French and Indian War (Braddock Expedition). It resulted in a sharp defeat for British and Colonial forces against those of the French and their Native American allies.
3ddi3 3d :1 Yea!!! S0n

Cambridge, Massachusetts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • Cambridge is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, in the Greater Boston area.
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    The site for what would become Cambridge was chosen in December 1630, because it was located safely up river from Boston Harbor, which made it easily defensible from attacks by enemy ships.
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    Also, the water from the local spring was so good that the local Natives believed it had medicinal properties.
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    Cambridge grew slowly as an agricultural village eight miles (13 km) by road from Boston, the capital of the colony. By the American Revolution, most residents lived near the Common and Harvard College, with farms and estates comprising most of the town. Most of the inhabitants were descendants of the original Puritan colonists, but there was also a small elite of Anglican "worthies" who were not involved in village life, who made their livings from estates, investments, and trade, and lived in mansions along "the Road to Watertown" (today's Brattle Street, still known as Tory Row)
alexy velasco

Valley Forge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 3 views

  • With winter almost completely setting in, and the prospects for campaigning greatly diminishing, General George Washington sought quarters for his men. Washington and his troops had just fought what was to be the last major engagement of 1777 at the Battle of White Marsh (or Edge Hill). He devised to pull his troops from their present encampment in the White Marsh area (now Fort Washington State Park) and move to a more secure location for the coming winter. Though several locations were proposed, he selected Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, 18 miles (29 km) northwest of Philadelphia.
  • On December 19, 1777, when Washington's poorly fed, ill-equipped army, weary from long marches, struggled into Valley Forge, winds blew as the 12,000 Continentals prepared for winter's fury. Grounds for brigade encampments were selected, and defense lines were planned and begun. Though construction of more than a thousand huts provided shelter, it did little to offset the critical shortages that continually plagued the army.
  • Soon word of the British departure from Philadelphia brought a frenzied activity to the ranks of the Continental Army. On June 19, 1778, six months after its arrival, the army marched away from Valley Forge in pursuit of the British, who were moving toward New York. The ordeal had ended. The war would last for another five years, but for Washington, his men, and the nation to which they sought to give birth, a decisive victory had been won — a victory not of weapons but of will
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Valley Forge in Pennsylvania was the site of the camp of the American Continental Army over the winter of 1777–1778 in the American Revolutionary War.
    • Cristian Colon
       
      this is where Washington and his men stood for the winter
    • Janaisha Torres
       
      Washington and his men stood there for the winter. They built their own houses.
    • Joel Garcia
       
      ithink 2nd worst winter in american history
    • alexy velasco
       
      This was where G.W. stayed with his men during the first worst winter. Most of his men either got Hypothermia or Frostbite. When they would get frostbite they had to go the hospital to get whatever had frostbite cut off. Most of the men wouldn't survive.
  • National Memorial Arch inscription: Naked and starving as they are We cannot enough admire The incomparable Patience and Fidelity of the Soldiery             –George Washington
    • Cristian Colon
       
      Washingtons quote
  • It proved to be an excellent choice. Named for an iron forge on Valley Creek, the area was close enough to the British to keep their raiding and foraging parties out of the interior of Pennsylvania, yet far enough away to halt the threat of British surprise attacks.
    • Kevin Rodriguez
       
      This is now a park. This place was a suprise attack place.
  • The men described their lodgings as "cozy and comfortable quarters"
    • alexy velasco
       
      In the movie it said that the lodges were very cold (they only had a small fire) and uncomfortable. They were said to be so cold a lot of men would get frostbite.
  • Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben
    • alexy velasco
       
      This was the guy who trained the militia that were with G.W. It was his job to disipline them so that they would be ready to fight the British.
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    this is the place where washington and his army spent the coldest winter of that time
Jason Diaz

Colonel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • abbreviated as Col or COL, is a military rank of a
  • Today, a colonel is usually a military title rated as the highest, or the second-highest, field rank below the general, or "flag", grades. In some small military forces, it can be the highest rank held.
Janelly Rodriguez

The Battle of Bennington: An American Victory - 0 views

  • British put in motion an ambitious campaign designed to isolate New England from the rest of the colonies and thereby crush the American rebellion
  • In August, however, he found himself in desperate need of provisions, wagons, cattle, and horses. Burgoyne then made the fateful decision to send an expeditionary force to the small town of Bennington, Vermont to capture these much needed supplies.
  • e British army and its Canadian, Indian, and Loyalist supporters faced Patriots defending their newly proclaimed independence.
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  • For two months, General John Burgoyne led his army down the Lake Champlain-Hudson River corridor toward Albany with apparent ease,
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