DiscoverAPUSH for AllThe Seeds of Colonialism: How Mercantilism, Tobacco, and 1619 Planted the Roots of English America (1607-1676)
The Seeds of Colonialism: How Mercantilism, Tobacco, and 1619 Planted the Roots of English America (1607-1676)

The Seeds of Colonialism: How Mercantilism, Tobacco, and 1619 Planted the Roots of English America (1607-1676)

Update: 2025-09-01
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From Jamestown’s shaky start to Bacon’s Rebellion, this episode traces how profit and power shaped early English America. We unpack mercantilism’s rules of empire, the tobacco boom that tethered Chesapeake fields to Atlantic markets, and 1619—the year a Jamestown assembly met and the first recorded Africans arrived—reshaping labor and law. Through indentured servitude, land hunger, and conflict with Native nations, colonial elites learned to manage class tensions and harden racial boundaries. By 1676, Virginia’s ruling class turned crisis into strategy, accelerating hereditary slavery. It’s the seedbed of the plantation South—and the American story—told with sources, context, and classroom-ready insights.


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The Seeds of Colonialism: How Mercantilism, Tobacco, and 1619 Planted the Roots of English America (1607-1676)

The Seeds of Colonialism: How Mercantilism, Tobacco, and 1619 Planted the Roots of English America (1607-1676)

Zach Garrison, Riley Keltner, and Mike Hill