...The Southern colonies had its first permanent settlement in the year of 1607 when immigrants settled in present day North Carolina(Virginia.) (Brinkley)In 1619 Virginia became known for the first colony to have an elected legislature, known as the House of Burgess. Most of the people that lived in these colonies where Anglicans and those who weren’t had to leave. (Brinkley) The colonies that made up the southern included; Maryland, Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas (later split into North & South in 1729.) The southern colonies where founded by the British in 16th and 17th centuries. (U.S.History.org, The Southern Colonies) The weather was humid and warm with hot summers, and long growing seasons. (Brinkley) It was also often rainy and cold. These southern colonies turned to cash crops (indigo dye, rice, Tabaco) with Tabaco becoming the most important. (U.S.History.org, The Southern Colonies) Slaves and servants were very much important to the southern colonies, as that’s who most crops where done by. Settlers traveled from England in order to seek economic prosperity that England lacked. (Staff)...
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...Most of our discoveries didn’t just pop out of the blue. No, they came from a certain time period in the past that has evolved over time into something much larger and improved. The southern colonies were established in the seventieth and eighteenth centuries by England in North America. Consisting of Virginia, Maryland, North and South Carolina, and Georgia. The purpose of founding these colonies was to compete with other European powers in the search of wealth, land, and clothing. Over time they developed an economy based on cash crops such as tobacco, indigo, rice and cotton. The southern colonies were an ideal place for agriculture. The climate was warm and damp, which made it easy to grow plants. Virginia’s and Maryland’s main crop was tobacco, Georgia grew cotton, rice, and indigo, and South Carolina’s main crop was rice, indigo, sugarcane and cotton as well. The people who harvested these plantations were African American slaves and people of the poverty. We still use most of these products that were grown centuries ago. In fact, they play a large part of our life providing everyday uses. The southern colonies is the beginning of plantations to produce products that are still around centuries later. The land was rich of...
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...After years of planning and two months crossing the Atlantic, James Oglethorpe and 114 colonists climbed 40 feet up the bluff from the Savannah River on this day in 1733 and founded the colony of Georgia. Oglethorpe wanted wanted to get rid of depth. Agriculture- In the Southern Colonies several things were grown. The most popular crop was tobacco. The Jamestown colonists had grown tobacco originally, and tobacco farms sprung up all over Virginia and North Carolina. The two southernmost states (South Carolina and Georgia) grew mostly indigo, rice, and sugar. Georgia made most of its money off of these three cash crops. Foods- As far as meat goes: whatever they could catch, shoot or hit with an axe. Turkeys, deer, rabbits, fish and turtles, plus beef and pork from the animals they imported. The cows were also kept for the consumption of milk and butter. As far as plants go: lots of grains, including wheat and and rice and barley, which was also used to make small...
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... Pick one of the 3 sets of colonies that you would prefer to migrate to in the 1700s (New England, The Middle Colonies, or the Southern Colonies). You must give reasons for your choice as well as against the other two sections. I would like everyone to turn in an outline of their essay on turnitin.com. This is a 30 point major grade. Essay outline: Region: New England Thesis: In the 1700s it would be more religiously and politically beneficial for individuals to settle in New England colonies over Mid-Atlantic and southern colonies. Reason 1 to settle here: The New England colonies provide an escape for puritans from New England. How is this true of this region: New England colonies were founded by puritans or puritan accepting people....
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...We believe you should live in the Southern Colonies. It has tidelines along the coast, perfect for growing crops. Many lakes to get fresh water to drink and to bathe in. Huge mountains in the west. The Southern Colonies had barrier islands also. With just these things it is possible for a new start for people. You can even take a vacation there since the climates are wonderful and the sceneries are beautiful. The population in the Southern Colonies are a lot. Georgia had 2,000 people at the time. South Carolina had 45,000 people living there at the time. North Carolina had 51,800 people living there at the time. Virginia had the highest population of the Southern Colonies and it was 691,737 people. Maryland had 116,100 people living there....
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...As the American colonies, mostly the Southern colonies, became more rich and appealing than the motherland of England, several men, and women and even children sought to live there. However, most of them could not afford the passage to the colonies, so they agreed to work for a time to pay off the debt and get started in their new life. In order to do this, they meet with an English representative to sign an indenture, or contract, that included housing and food in exchange for labor. The time these people worked was from 4 to 7 years, but children would have worked longer. In other cases, indentured servants were not free people, but prisoners and sinners sent to the colonies as punishment. Nevertheless, they had the following liberties while working. Even though indentured servants had to work tirelessly, they were not slaves. They had a few rights granted to them in the contract. While working, the household or plantation that...
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...mid 1700s, the New England and Southern colonies were very different because of multiple factors. The New England and Southern colonies had never been very similar, even when they were first founded. Many people immigrated to the New England colonies for religious freedom, while people who immigrated to the Southern colonies were seeking prosperity. While they were generally similar politically, both economically and in terms of society, the colonies were extremely different. The economic values of the two different areas of colonies were quite unalike. In New England, trade, fishing, livestock, farming, and exporting goods were valued. A very commonly exported good was lumber, because it was frequently used for shipbuilding. Trade was a main source of acquiring wealth in the New England colonies. However, in the Southern colonies, the economy was based on slavery, as there were lots of plantations that needed slaves in order to function. The Southern colonists also grew...
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...Colonies in North America differed notably in how they lived from their counterparts in the Southern colonies. These differences included economic, cultural, settlement reasons, geographical, and regional distinctions. Colonial America depended heavily on the natural resources from the environmentas they aided in meeting the basic requirements for the individuals as well as the colonies at large. In essence, these natural resources dictated each region’s unique speciality and in turn steered the economic state and development of each colony. Most importantly, the human and environmental interaction determined the people moving into each colony. The northern colonies were mostly mountainous with colder climates and a thin layer of soil that...
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...Southern Colonies | Who founded the colony? | Why was the colony founded? | Virginia | King James I John Smith | The colony was founded for economic opportunities. The people were looking for gold and when they didn't find any, they started to grow tobacco. | Maryland | Lord Baltimore | Lord Baltimore wanted to create a place for Catholics to practice their religion freely and without religious persecution. | The Carolinas | The Lord Proprietors | The colony was founded for eco | Georgia | James Oglethorpe | The colony was founded for people in debt to earn money to pay back their debt in England. Georgia also forms a "buffer zone" to protect the other 13 colonies/ | | | | Charter: A document issued by a sovereign or state giving a person or group of people permission to start a colony. Under the organization of the colony, defined right and privileges would be named. What is the Mason-Dixon line? Why would this line be significant later on in U.S. history? The Mason-Dixon line was the line that divided the Middle and Southern Colonies. The line was significant because it shows the different ways off life on the different areas. European colonists believed that they were entitled to the land because… | Native Americans believed they were entitled to the land because… | The Europeans thought that they were entitled to the land because they felt that the Indians weren't human and that the Indians didn't have souls. They decided that the Indians were...
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...Southern colonies contrasted to the New England colonies in the way they were established. The Southern Colonies were mostly established for the purposes of making profits and thus drew more young single men looking to make money. There was a high mortality rate and population growth was from immigration as opposed to procreation. Virginia was established by a Joint-Stock company and was primarily a business venture with a full charter from the King. The Carolinas were given to the Lords Proprietor by King Charles II of England as reward for help in restoring him to the crown. The climate of the south allowed for the establishment of large farms and plantations. Businessmen who chose to use slave labor to maximize profits owned these large...
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...Justin Baker R. Brogan US History 1865 Midterm Essay #1: Question #1: Northern, Middle, and Southern Colonies Compare and Contrast America has always been a land of diversity but also a land of unity. This statement also applied to the first English settlements that were established here in North America. In the beginning years of America, the colonies could be divided into three regional areas: New England colonies, middle colonies and the southern colonies. Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Rhode Island comprised the northern colonies; New York, Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania made up the middle colonies; and Virginia, Maryland, Carolina, North Carolina, and Georgia composed the southern colonies. These three colonial areas had both similarities and differences that will be analyzed in respects to their economic base, political structures, and attitudes toward slavery established in these three regional areas throughout this essay. Although many different types of Europeans founded the colonies throughout the eastern seaboard they were some similarities as to how they were established and how they made their economic bases. Throughout the Norton text I’ve noticed that all of the colonies were established through some sort of business enterprise, whether it was through the Massachusetts Bay Company, or the Virginia Company, or even a lone entrepreneur, looking to make a fortune for them. These businesses were all expected to turn a profit, some of them...
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...The southern colonies had a lasting effect which is still noticed today. This essay will explain How Virginia and Maryland were established. How the Carolinas were established. How colonists and Native Americans interacted with each other. Why plantations formed. What like was like for enslaved laborers on plantations. And, How the southern colonies helped to develop a representative government. How were Virginia and Maryland established? “The first English colony in North America was Virginia, sponsored by the Virginia Company of London. The Virginia Company was a group of stockholders who hoped to profit from a Virginia colony. They sponsored Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in North America, in 1607.”(D.E 2.4,1) The stockholders...
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...New England Colony vs Southern Colony There are 13 British colonies and each colony is different in several ways. The colonies are broken up into three regions: New England, Mid Atlantic and Southern. I have chosen to compare and contrast New England and the Southern region primarily because I found New England quite interesting and I am partial to the south since that is where we live. I recognized the two colonies had more differences than likeness. Politics were their main similarities. However, socially and economically they had some differences. One similarity was their royal governors. Their kings had the ability to choose the royal governors whom made all the decisions for the region. The royal governors tried to be as equitable as possible with the rules. Although the citizens knew they had to obey the rules they were not very fond of them. Each colony had the ability to vote for who would be placed into a position of authority and be the lawmakers. There were some early examples of democracy in the 17th century colonies. Virginia had the House of Burgesses that was a legislature picked by the people, which is an example of democracy....
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...the West Indies, and the Southern Colonies are different regions of the Americas, the institutions of slavery within these areas were fairly similar. All three regions shared similar racial ideologies, used slave labor to construct their economies, and experienced resistance. Aside from these similarities the regions of Brazil, the West Indies, and the Southern Colonies exhibited differences, specifically in the way they justified the use of slaves, how they organized slave labor, and in what ways slaves resisted. To begin, nations present in the West Indies, Brazil, and the Southern Colonies each had specific racial ideologies. In each region the use of African slaves stemmed directly from a need for labor. Likewise, each region varies in its justification of its use of slaves. The Portuguese justified their use of slaves in Brazil as a direct result of the necessity of labor. On the other hand, the French in Haiti felt racially superior to Africans using that as their justification. The French were so absorbed with one’s racial background they tracked heritage...
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...New England versus the southern colonies, why were they so different. How where they the same. What makes them so different? For starters,The New England colonies were separatist that started there own communities, living the religious dream life. The Virginia colonist were money making plantations maned by indentured man servants, Woman were scarce. This made these people very different from each other. There cultures and government system were different as well, which was a example to Eastern civilization on what could run better. Relations with the natives was seemingly okay at first but conflict did arise for both parties. The two colonies had a very distinct similarity, they both had bad relations with the natives. The colonist were invaders...
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