In 1585 Englishman traveled to Roanoke Island which they named Virginia. Virginia was colonized in 1607, which makes it the first English colony in the New World that thrived. The Virginia Colony has some popular nicknames. These nicknames were Old Dominion, Mother of Presidents, Mother of States, The Cavalier State, and Mother of Statesman. The Virginia Colony was home to a lot of religious teachings such as Anglicans, Baptist, and others.
The Virginia Colony’s trade and exports included cotton, livestock, grains, tobacco, vegetables, and fruits. Its natural resources were forests, fish, agriculture lands, coastal plains, valleys, and mountains. The Virginia Colony was one of Great Britain's colonies, and was made a royal colony in 1624. It declared its independence from Great
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Rhode Island was colonized in 1636, which makes it the 6th colony in the New World. The Rhode Island Colony was founded by Roger Williams who paid the Indians for the land because he and many other people thought that it was the right thing to do. He was a former colonist and religious exile from the Massachusetts Colony, it got its name from a man named Adriaen Block a Dutch explorer who named it “Roodt Eylandt.” The Rhode Island Colony was home to the first Jewish synagogue and Baptist church in the New World.
There were major industries in Rhode Island Colony included, fishing, whaling, manufacturing on their ships, export of rum manufacturing, and just a little bit of farming. Just like Virginia Colony the Rhode Island Colony has a lot of nicknames such as, Ocean State, Little Rhody, the Plantation State, the Smallest State, the Land of Roger Williams, and the Southern gateway to New England. In 1761 The Rhode Island Colony was home to 3 sugar refineries and 22 distilleries. Unlike the Virginia Colony, in the Rhode Island Colony crops are harder to grow and diseases were harder to spread because of the frigid
Colonial expansion of european nations into the western hemisphere or “New World”, was truly a time of social innovation. As New England saw an extensive amount of change in the 17th and 18th centuries, many developing factors were shaping the future of what we now know as Rhode Island. Specifically, the socio-political as well as economic factors which shaped the towns of Providence and Newport were powerful enough to influence the surrounding towns and eventually the entire state as we see it today. Providence and Newport had both grown in their own respective series of circumstance as well as influence each other greatly from the late 17th century until the end of the American Revolution. Providence and Newport had both began to form in
The peculiar part about these colonies, is that each colonies plantations were different. For example, South Carolina grew rice, while Virginia grew
He instead formed a godly community, the Massachusetts Bay Colony, that was an example of reformers back home. Roger Williams was a political and religious leader who established Rhode Island in 1636. He encouraged the separation of the Church and the state in Colonial America. The way in which he viewed religious freedom matched his disapproval of the way in which Native Americans were being expropriated from their properties. His believes caused anger from his Church which in turn banished him from the
Many people in the southern colonies owned plantations, which slaves did most of the labor. (“Maryland Colony”) Britain relied on the colonies as source of raw materials, such as lumber and tobacco. It was important for the province to export these resources. (“The American
Roger Williams might be well notorious for being the new founder of the state Rhode Island. When he first settled a colony in Narragansett, a settlement in Rhode Island, one of his many principles was that there should be a separation between church and state colonies. Many individuals made the decision to move to Rhode Island–– due to their religious freedom. Jews, Baptists, and even Quakers decided to join this movement. A good proportion of settlers confiscated lands, which belonged to Native Americans; however, Roger Williams made an impactful decision that no one should be allowed to confiscate them.
The Virginia colony differed from their native land New England, in many different aspects. The Virginia colony had slightly different views on government, religion and society. The colonist were members of the Anglican faith (a tradition within Christianity comprising the Church of England and churches which are historically tied to it or hold similar beliefs, worship practices and church structures). Which is the official Church of England.
The colony most fitting to my given situation between Virginian, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania, would be Pennsylvania in the late 1680s. Pennsylvania was becoming well established due to it’s powerful economic growth, cultural diversity and religion, and change in slavery.
Colonial Williamsburg was the capital of Virginia until 1779 while the American dream was taking shape. People across the globe came to the United States for a life like that of in Williamsburg. It was, at the time, the largest, and the most important of the American colonies. It had the largest population (approximately 5,000). The colony was a very wealthy and influential colony.
Massachusetts was founded by John Winthrop and other Puritans John Winthrop eventually became the Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Rhode Island: From the beginning, Rhode Island has been distinguished by its support for freedom of conscience and action. Clergyman Roger Williams founded the present state capitol, Providence, after being exiled by the Massachusetts Bay Colony Puritans in 1636. The Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations was one the original 13 colonies established on the east coast of North America.
The New England colonies were first founded in the last 16th to 17th century as a sanctuary for differing religious groups. New England was made up of the Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and New Hampshire. New Hampshire, however, was formed for economic reasons instead of religious ones. The Chesapeake region, which is made up of the colonies of Maryland and Virginia, was founded by the British colonies for the purpose of farming. However, by the 1700’s, despite both being settled by Englishmen, New England and the Chesapeake region had developed differently.
The colonies of Massachusetts and Virginia were a start of the new world for England. These were founded by similar people but, with their strikingly differences, grew into separate political, economic and social structures. Both settlements arose from over-crowdedness in England: people wanted a better life. Virginia was settled by men who were single and looking for opportunities and wealth. They were part of the Anglican religion.
Massachusetts was one of the most successful colonies, founded by John Winthrop, as the Puritan religion allowed a strict regime of tight government rules and ideals. These colonies also differ
Religion played a large role in both colonies. English settlers arriving to Virginia were from the
, In order to make as much as possible from these cash crops, english men would come over to be indentured servants. Virginia and Maryland both had huge plantations and urban development, unlike colonies one New England. The main difference in Maryland and Virginia colonies is that Maryland planted other crops than tobacco and had other ways of making money including shipbuilding. Tobacco was not as successful in Maryland due to geographical issues . Both colonies had indentured servants.
New England’s founders were strict Puritans who did not have much tolerance for any religion except their own. Over time, as more and more immigrants came with increasingly diverse beliefs, the once stable foundation began to crack. Conflicts broke out and certain religious groups were banished which led to the development of other nearby colonies, for example Rhode Island and Connecticut. In the Chesapeake region, it was easier and there was not as much controversy over religion. The area started out as a refuge for Catholics, but over time many Protestants immigrated there and soon became the majority.