As the Spanish and Portuguese empire expanded in Central and South America, The British established a tenuous presence in North America in 1607 with settlements that stretched along the east coast from Florida to Newfoundland. By 1733, the British Empire had carved out an empire as formidable as their Spanish counterparts. Originally, the entire coast was named “Virginia” after Queen Elizabeth I the “Virgin Queen”, who in the 1580s enlisted the explorer Sir Walter Raleigh to discover new lands for the British Empire. Though Raleigh’s initial attempts to establish a colony in Roanoke Island in 1584 failed, his experience would later pave the way for the successful colonies that followed. The defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 signaled the dawn of British naval dominance and permitted Great Britain to continue its exploration of the New World virtually unchallenged.
St. John’s and Newfoundland were early colonies as was the Roanoke Colony, founded in 1585 and the Jamestown Settlement, founded in 1607. The Plymouth Colony, originally intended for Virginia, was actually established in Massachusetts in 1620. A flow of colonies followed these original ones along the northeast coast of North America, including the Massachusetts Bay Colony, founded in 1630. In the decades that followed, the British formed the original thirteen colonies that supplied the crown with spices and other commodities at great economic cost to the colonies. The British imposed heavy taxation policies that eventually led to an increasingly hostile political climate between the colonies and the Royal government. The original thirteen British colonies were Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia.
The early colonies consisted of English farmers and gentlemen who lived according to the laws enforced by a system of Proprietary Governors. The way the British first introduced and funded settlements in North America was through joint stock companies that appointed leadership through mercantile charters. Other European powers, such as the Dutch, French and Spanish had tried to establish colonies in North America but did not succeed in sustaining them.
The British would eventually take control over most of the originally settled lands through either hostile campaigns or commercial ventures, as they did in 1664 when they took the Dutch colony of New Netherland including the New Amsterdam settlement. Parts of Delaware and Pennsylvania had also been colonized by the Dutch prior to British dominance. In 1713 England acquired the French colony of Acadia as well as the rest of New France and, in 1763, the Spanish colony of Florida. In 1776, the thirteen original colonies rebelled against the British crown over representation, local laws and tax issues which by that point had become intolerable to the colonial population, this rebellion or revolution eventually led to the creation of the United States of America.
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The British Empire continued to increase its territorial holdings as it colonized the western part of North America. Vancouver Island was founded in 1849 and New Caledonia was founded in 1846 to become British Columbia. In 1867 the colonies of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and the
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Province of Canada combined under the name Canada. Following their defeat by the British during the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763) The French relinquished Quebec and Nova Scotia to England with the Treaty of Paris in 1763. The signing of the Treaty of Paris marked the beginning of British dominance outside of Europe. In the century that followed, other North American territories such as the North-Western Territory would be ceded to British controlled Canada by 1870. The British influence on the colonies would later serve as a cornerstone for the legal and economic systems that the colonies formed in their independence from the crown.
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Tags: 1584, 1588, 1607, 1620, 1630, 1664, 1713, 1733, 1756-1763, 1763, 1776, 1870, Acadia, American Revolutionary Infantryman Scale Model Kit Andrea Miniatures Spain 1:32 (54mm), british colonialism, British Empire, British Naval dominance, Charleville Rifle with Bayonet - American Revolutionary War, colonial economy, colonial government, colonial history store, colonial settlements in North America, Dont Tread on Me - Revolutionary War Flag, Dutch colonies in North America, English colonial farmers, French colonies in North America, French relinquish Quebec, Jamestown, Massachussetts Bay Colony, New Foundland, New France, Plymouth Colony, Queen Elizabeth I, Rebellion of the British colonies, Roanoke Colony, Roanoke Island, Seven Years War, Sir Walter Raleigh, Spanish Armada, Spanish colonies in the Americas, St. John's, taxation without representation, The Revolutionary War Map Collection 6 CD Set - 366 Maps in Total, the thirteen colonies, Treaty of Paris, Virginia
When Queen Victoria ascended to the throne of England in 1837 she cut a particular image. She was a diminutive woman, about 4′ 11″ in height, but had all the power of an empire behind her and she carried herself as such in the fashions she chose. She came to the public spotlight at a time when the fashion for women’s clothing was becoming more restrictive and confining in some ways yet these she promoted as being exemplars of a woman’s strive for virtue and uprightness. Her reign would be characterized by a high sense of decorum and moral code and developed a confirmed identity that we have since classified as the Victorian era.
What had preceded the Victorian era was the Regency period during which women’s fashion were inspired by a neoclassical aesthetic. Dresses were often made of white muslin, cut with a high waist and a flowing skirt that celebrated a romantic spirit and that, thanks to the effect of the French Revolution, nodded to a society temporarily freed from certain previous strictures.
With Victoria, as England entered the Industrial Age, censure of wayward social attitudes and actions paralleled an increase in opportunities (through urban life) to stretch the boundaries of social etiquette. Queen Victoria was paramount in popularizing a fashion of constraint and reform. Bodices were close-fitting, ending in a V-shape, and shaped by fine whalebone frames that contained the female figure formidably. Tailoring was precise in the cut of the seams so that a woman’s arms were somewhat constrained by the cut of the wide collared and low-shouldered chemises and by the narrowness of the sleeves. By the mid 1840’s the woman’s fashion in skirts had become more exaggerated and compiled of excessive cloth and bustling. The bell-shaped skirt was favored and, as the addition of fabric increased the weight on the garment, the shaping of the skirt was aided by metal or whalebone frames.
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This general tendency in women’s fashion to accentuate certain forms while confining the woman’s movements would last through Queen Victoria’s reign of 64 years. She became a reference for women’s fashions and an icon of the moral rectitude generally attributed to the Victorian period.
image: Portrait of Lady Meux. James Abbot McNeill Whistler, c. 1881
image: Victorian Women’s Fashions, Harper’s Bazaar.
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Tags: Bodices, British Empire, Classic Chemise, Dresses in the Victorian Era, England 1837, Fashion History, Fashion in the Industrial Age, Fashion in Victorian England, French Revolution Fashion influences, Industrial Age, neoclassical aesthetic, Old West Store, Old West Victorian Shirt Collar Set of 3, Queen Victoria, Regency period, Renaissance Noble Bodice (Reversible Aubergine), tailoring in Victorian England, v-shape bodice, Victorian Chemise, Victorian Dress Shirt, Victorian England, Victorian Era, Victorian Fashion, whalebone framed bodice, white muslin dresses