Chapter 6 – Middle and Southern Colonies Lesson 3 – The Southern Colonies Pg. 202-205.

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Chapter 6 – Middle and Southern Colonies

Lesson 3 – The Southern Colonies

Pg. 202-205

What will we learn today?

•Today we will learn how the southern colonies were founded.

Words to Watch For

•plantation•legislature•refuge•debtor

Lesson 3 – The Southern Colonies

•Where?•Southern Colonies•What?•Beginnings of the Southern

Colonies•When?•1600-1750

The Southern Colonies

We’re #1!• Remember

Jamestown?• 1607 – Virginia

became the first permanent English colony in North America.

Plantations• When the

colonists could not find gold, they started plantations.

• A plantation is a large farm whose workers live there.

Forced Labor• Most workers

were indentured servants or enslaved Africans.

• Cash crops of tobacco and rice made many plantation owners very wealthy.

First Come . . .• The first colonists

began plantations in the tidewater areas near the shore.

• Those who came later had to settle for the backcountry where they often had conflict with the Powhatan.

Also the 1st Legislature• Virginia became

the first colony to have an elected legislature.

• A legislature is a group of people with the power to make and change laws.

Burgesses• The Virginia

Legislature was called the House of Burgesses.

• Why is the formation of the House of Burgesses important?

Not Everyone is Represented

• The House of Burgesses was made up of–White men–Landowners–Most were members of the Church of England

More Colonies•1632-1732 – Four more English colonies were settled in the Southern region–Maryland–North Carolina–South Carolina–Georgia

Maryland• Began in 1632• King Charles I gave

the land to Cecilius Calvert or Lord Baltimore

• Calvert, a Catholic, made Maryland a refuge for Catholics.

• The Toleration Act- 1st law in North America to promise that all Christians could worship freely.

The Carolinas• King Charles II started

the Carolina colony to keep out the French and Spanish.

• As it grew, it eventually was separated into North Carolina and South Carolina.

• South Carolina grew very quickly due to its good farmland and harbors.

Georgia• Given to James

Oglethorpe by King George.

• It was created to be a place for debtors and poor people.

• Oglethorpe had friendly relations with the American Indians nearby.

Slavery Begins• Oglethorpe had strict

rules for the colonists, including not allowing slavery.

• These rules were later changed and Georgia began to have plantations with slave workers.

• Georgia became a wealthy plantation colony.

1. Which was the first permanent English colony?

A. North Carolina

B. Georgia

C. Virginia

D. South Carolina

2. Virginia became the first colony to

A. create an elected legislature.

B. pass The Toleration Act.

C. become a refuge for Catholics.

D. put debtors in prison.

3. Representatives in the Virginia legislature were called

A. Anglicans.

B. debtors.

C. plantation owners.

D. burgesses.

4. After Virginia, how many more Southern Colonies did England form?

A. four

B. three

C. two

D. one

5. What did Calvert want Maryland to be?

A. a refuge for poor people and debtors

B. a refuge for servants and enslaved Africans

C. a refuge for Catholics

D. a refuge for Anglicans

Images• http://www.answers.com/topic/colony-and-dominion-of-virgi

nia• http://www.mccordfamilyassn.com/mccords.htm• http://www.bangor.ac.uk/~afs082/characterization.htm• http://www.dkimages.com/discover/Home/Geography/Africa

/Unassigned/Unassigned-51.html• http://www.mouseplanet.com/articles.php?art=eo050126bb• http://www.viewimages.com/Search.aspx?mid=51086230&

epmid=1&partner=Google• http://www.fcps.edu/CanterburyWoodsES/Finished%20Page

s/techprojects/vasymbols/burgess.html• http://www.ohlone.pausd.org/Williamsburg/page15.htm• http://images.google.com/url?q=http://www.bridgewater.ed

u/~lhill/williamsburg.htm&usg=AFQjCNGrQxrxtYhrjXtwKgs2CfVAPa1l-A

• http://www.heritage.nf.ca/avalon/history/cecil_calvert.html• http://www.answers.com/topic/colonial-period-of-south-

carolina• http://www.viewimages.com/Search.aspx?

mid=52022110&epmid=1&partner=Google• http://www.britannica.com/ebc/art-52114/James-Oglethorpe