+ All Categories
Home > Documents > The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland...

The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland...

Date post: 01-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: irene-stanley
View: 227 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
19
The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4
Transcript
Page 1: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Southern Colonies

Chapter 3, Section 4

Page 2: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Southern Colonies

• The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies.

• A proprietary colony is a colony which is owned by an individual as private property.

Page 3: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.
Page 4: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

How the Proprietors Made Money

• Many people wanted to own their own land, but few could afford it.

• The headright system helped wealthier people.

Page 5: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

How the Proprietors Made Money

• A "quit-rent" is where you own the land as long as you pay rent on it.

• The quit-rent system enabled poorer people to own land.

Page 6: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

How the Proprietors Made Money

• While the amount paid in quit-rent was small, it added up for the proprietor.

Page 7: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Maryland Colony

• George Calvert founded Maryland as a place for Catholics to go.

• Remember - Catholics were not very popular in England.

Page 8: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Maryland Colony

• In 1632, a group of 200 Catholics and 2 priests came and founded Maryland near Virginia. They had a pretty easy time since Jamestown could help out, and they came prepared.

Page 9: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Maryland Colony

• The problem was, more Puritans would end up coming to Maryland than Catholics.

• This caused religious tension in the colony.

Page 10: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Maryland Colony

• So, Cecilius Calvert (aka Lord Baltimore), being the proprietor, made the Act of Toleration, which said everyone in Maryland was free to worship as they chose.

Page 11: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.
Page 12: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

An advertisement from the Glasgow Journal, 1 September 1763, for a blacksmith to go to the British colony of Maryland on the east coast of America.

Page 13: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

Back in England…

• Remember Charles II repaid his supporters by making them Proprietors in the area South of Virginia.

Page 14: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

King Charles II, 1685 byGodfrey Kneller (1646 - 1723)

Page 15: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

The Carolinas

• South Carolina found success in growing indigo, a type of plant which made an excellent purple dye.

• North Carolina was much poorer, and they made most of their money growing tobacco.

Page 16: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

Georgia

• This happened much later than the other Colonies, in the 1730's.

• King George II gave James Oglethorpe a charter to start the colony.

• Georgia would serve two purposes.

Page 17: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

Georgia

• First, Georgia was an experiment in social reform, they sent debtors and petty criminals there to start a new life.

• Colonists were not allowed to drink or gamble, etc.

Page 18: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

Georgia

• But, they did not mend their ways. The colony succeeded by growing rice and indigo, but the social experiment failed.

• Slavery and the plantation system took over the economy.

Page 19: The Southern Colonies Chapter 3, Section 4. The Southern Colonies The colonies of Georgia, Maryland and Carolina were Proprietary colonies. A proprietary.

Georgia

• Georgia also served as a buffer between Spanish Florida and the rest of the English colonies to prevent Spanish expansion.


Recommended