The Big Idea Activity

Why do people settle new areas?

Perform a Play About Colonial Life

Ellis ISland

Ellis Island

Prepare and perform a play about people who settled in a new area. Show what daily life was like in one of the colonies. California Standard 5.3  Students describe the cooperation and conflict that existed among the American Indians and between the Indian nations and the new settlers.                                                                      California Standard 5.4  Students understand the political, religious, social, and economic institutions that evolved in the colonial era.

Research RoadmapPrint the Research Roadmap. Use it to take notes and hand it in to your teacher when you make your presentation.

 

Topic Finder

Need help finding a topic? Explore these ideas for research...Colonial Times.

Case Study

Here's an example of a topic you could choose for Big Idea Activity: Did you know that the Pennsylvania Dutch are not really Dutch but German? Many German immigrants settled in Pennsylvania in the 1600s. A group called the Mennonites moved to the colony for religious freedom. Their descendents are known as the Pennsylvania Dutch. The word Deutsch means "German" in the German language. They have been able to preserve their heritage in the United States. What other reasons do you thinks the Mennonites had for moving to the colonies?

Fun Facts Today's Old Order Mennonites and Amish do not believe in using many modern conveniences. They live as their ancestors did without cars, television, or electricity in their homes!

 
 

What country or countries did your family or your ancestors emigrate from? What were the reasons for settling in a new country? How has their decision to settle in a new land affected your life? Write about what your life might be like today if your family had decided not to settle in a new country.

Did your ancestors arrive at Ellis Island?

Explore the list of some famous Ellis Island arrivals.

 
 

The Southern Colonies

Virginia and Maryland

Virginia and Maryland needed a large number of people to work in the plantation fields. Indentured servants who survived their service were given "freedom dues."

The Carolinas and Georgia

Not all the people of the Carolinas and Georgia came of their own free will. Africans were taken by force from their homeland to be enslaved in America.

Living in the Southern Colonies

Most Southern colonists lived on small farms. The wealthy owners of plantations hired or enslaved workers to take care of their fields.

The New England Colonies

Plymouth Colony

A Native American named Squanto showed the Pilgrims how to plant crops, fish, and hunt game. After months of near starvation, the Pilgrims were able to eat better.

The Puritans Settle Massachusetts Bay

The Puritans founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony along the Charles River. They named their first settlement Boston.

Connecticut and Rhode Island

At first, Native Americans helped the colonists. But conflicts soon flared, such as the bloody Pequot War.

Living in New England

In the 1600s and 1700s, witchcraft was a serious crime. In 1692, Puritans hanged 19 people for witchcraft in Salem.

The Middle Colonies

New York and New Jersey

In 1626, the Dutch bought Manhattan Island from a group of Native Americans. The Dutch bought the land from the wrong Native American tribe. Scroll down the timeline to learn about the history of Manhattan.

Pennsylvania and Delaware

William Penn called his Pennsylvania colony a Holy Experiment because people there could worship freely. Pennsylvania attracted colonists fleeing Europe for religious or political reasons.

Living in the Middle Colonies

Farmers in the Middle colonies were so prosperous that they sold their extra crops of grain to the New England and Southern colonies. People began to call the Middle colonies the "Breadbasket of the colonies."

Life in the 13 Colonies

Conflicts with Native Americans

Fighting broke out when colonists settled on land the Native Americans thought of as their own. The Powhatan Wars in Virginia lasted for almost 40 years.

Slavery in the Colonies

By the mid-1770s, the slave trade had brought 250,000 Africans over to America. Many Africans did not survive the brutal trip across the ocean.

The Triangular Trade

On the first leg of the voyage, ships carried manufactured goods such as weapons and cloth to trade for African captives. The deadly Middle Passage brought the enslaved Africans to the West Indies to be traded for molasses, which was shipped to the Northern Colonies for the third leg of the triangle.