Jeff Novich Donnison Period 4 September 22, 1996 Essay on three factors that shaped British North America from 1607 - 1763 The society of British North America was shaped by a number of factors between 1607 and 1763. Three of these factors were the shortage of labor, British imperial policies, and colonial assemblies. Because America had an agriculturally based economy with farming as a chief business and as a way of life for many, and as a result of the colonial frontier being either cheap or free land, thousands of frontiersmen went out in search of land to cultivate and settle on. Labor soon became drastically scarce, and resulted in both positive and negative changes in the economy. The economy was also greatly shaped by the economic policies of the mother country, imposed upon colonial America. By restricting trade, but at the same time allowing monopolies over certain products, and trade and commerce with England in an enclosed market economy, the British empire profited under mercantilism. Colonial assemblies clearly shaped what we now perceive as "American Democracy," as Charles M. Andrews’s sums up: "In the development of American political ideas and social practices, the influence of the popular assembly…is the most potent single factor underlying our American system of government," (The First American Revolution: By Clinton Rossiter; page 119). The advancement of British North America’s economy and democratic values until prior to the Revolution, were due to the effects of a labor shortage, the mother country’s imperial policies, and colonial assemblies from 1607 to 1763. An increase in cost and scarcity of labor became evident in almost all colonies as a result of the shortage of labor, causing wages to increase and conditions to be better than that of England. There were both exceptional and detrimental effects of the shortage of labor on the American economy. Since the laborers were small in population, they were a very important class, and because of their significance in the economy of British North America, they were able to make many notable accomplishments. As the working class worked towards a "democracy of labor," there soon followed good wages and good working conditions, protection against capricious employers, a philosophy acknowledging the prestige of the work force, and opportunities for advancement and legal regulations that helped bolster against disaster. Furthermore, it supported American liberty. On the other hand, however, two very deep-rooted problems also occurred as a result of the shortage of labor. The most straightforward problem was simply the restraining effect it had on the condition of manufacturing. If there are very few people available to work, then clearly there can’t be any mass production of goods and merchandise. Therefore, to correct this problem, the colonial system of labor turned to slaves to work. Although the system made thousands free men, it also was one of the greatest factors which gave rise to the terrible plight of slavery in the colonies. Because the shortage of labor put a major damper on the economic aspect of British North American society in the 17th and 18th centuries, economic success rooted through British imperial policy. The English imperial system was designed, not only to help England, but to sustain the whole empire as well as each individual unit, encouraging each part to ‘do what it could do best.’ England had originally created America in the early 1600s as a mercantilist state, an established area created solely as a source of money and resources to help their economy as well as their empire. It was this ‘give and take’ idea that lead England to make colonial America a large component in the enclosed market economy between them, and immediate economic success on both parts was a result. To regulate this economic growth, some restrictions were imposed upon the colonies. One of these restrictions was the Navigation Acts from 1651 on through the 1700s. The effects of these acts on the economy were, although appearing detrimental, very beneficial for the economy of the colonies. They did not allow the colonies to export to anyone but England, and, with the addition of the Staple Act of 1663, all imports had to go through England before going to the colonies. However, they did create a near-absolute monopoly for the colonies over England in terms of resources, (for example, the tobacco colonies had a monopoly for their product), and England depended greatly on them for it. They also helped greatly to protect the American carry trade, and stimulated shipbuilding in British North America. The Navigation Act of 1660 allowed export of such products as flour and fish to the West Indies and southern Europe, "in order to pile up specie and credits to pay for still more English wares," (page 59). Although there were some major restrictions on colonial trade and export, if it weren’t for the English allowance of the colonies into the trade circle, their economy might well have collapsed. On the other hand, however, it was all of the restrictions and limitations that Britain proscribed upon the colonies that cleared the way for a more resentful and surreptitious society as well as an economy that did not thrive as far as it could have. With the introductions of the Wool Act of 1699, and the Hat Act of 1732, both of which prohibited the exportation of their respective products, and the Iron Act of 1750, which forbade the establishment of iron developers, the general reaction was disgust for the constraints. Furthermore, when the Molasses Act of 1733 was created, which would have terminated the production of rum if the colonists had obeyed it, a ‘sneaky’ attribute to the British North American society was contrived. Colonists were becoming very contumacious as a result of their ignoring these laws. By 1763, the economy of the colonies had risen to such a great level, despite problematic laws and acts that confronted them, and the people of British North America came to "possess most of the requisites of an independent people," (page 63). The colonists would not tolerate the British imperial policies any longer, and the collective desire of the society of the colonies was to overcome them in some way or another. This desire of most of the colonists by 1763 to rid themselves from the English reign about them arose likewise as a result of the colonial assemblies. Since the assemblies were formed in the colonies, as a primitive democratic "ruling by the many," they struggled with the governors for power. By opening up the proceedings of the assemblies for inspection and criticism, printing and distributing their journals, and thorough coverage by the colonial press concerning their exchanges with the governor, the direction of power consistently moved towards the assemblies. As they gained more power, they were able to produce a line of techniques for representation: "Residence requirements, constituency payments, annual elections, instructions, voting by ballot, and bans on place-holding by assemblymen is evidence that the assemblies were far more advanced toward the idea of a popular legislature than was the House of Commons," (page 104). With the assembly’s ability to decide the governor’s payment, "they brought more than one recalcitrant to heel in such matters as personnel and jurisdiction of colonial courts," (page 117). By the mid-1700s, the colonial assemblies were dominant in nearly every colony of British North America, which lead to very democratic ideology of the colonists. It was because of these powers that the colonial assemblies "were the most important instruments of popular government in colonial America," (page 104), and that they "were influential schools of American political thought," (page 118). The colonial assemblies of British North America, by fighting for legislature and liberty against the governors, were able to cause the colonial mind to begin thinking about liberty and freedom, and a government of democracy which eventually developed into the "American Democracy." As British North America developed between the years of 1607 and 1763, its path was dictated by many factors. Three of these factors, the shortage of labor, British imperial policies, and the colonial assemblies, greatly refined and advanced many aspects of colonial society. By causing the work force to be an important component in the cities, and making colonial America a very significant agent in the enclosed merchant economy with Britain, respectively, the economy of the colonies was shaped both positively and negatively. While the colonial assemblies were making progress towards modern day democracy, they influencing the minds of the colonists, all three conditions helped immensely to shape the developing colonies.