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13 Colonies. New England Colonies. Rhode Island Connecticut Massachusetts New Hampshire. New England. Climate and Physical Features Rocky Soils Short farming season Subsistence farming Bad farming conditions Great harbors for port Cities like Boston. New England.
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New England Colonies • Rhode Island • Connecticut • Massachusetts • New Hampshire
New England • Climate and Physical Features • Rocky Soils • Short farming season • Subsistence farming • Bad farming conditions • Great harbors for port • Cities like Boston
New England • Economic Comparative Advantage • Commercial businesses ($$$) • Fishing • Shipping • manufacturing
New England • Why colonies were started • Religious freedom • Pilgrims, Puritans fled England for Massachusetts
The New England Colonies Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Connecticut
Rhode Island • Founded: 1636 by Roger Williams and others, at Providence • Major Industry: Agriculture (livestock, dairy, fishing), Manufacturing (lumbering) • Major Cities: Providence • Colony Named for: Dutch for "red island" • Became a State: May 29, 1790
Connecticut • Founded: 1636 by Thomas Hooker and others, at Hartford • Major Industry: Agriculture (wheat, corn, fishing) • Major Cities: Hartford, New Haven • Colony Named for: from an Algonquin word, quinnehtukqut, "beside the long tidal river" • Became a State: February 6, 1788
Massachusetts • Founded: 1630 by John Winthrop and others, at Massachusetts Bay • Major Industry: Agriculture (fishing, corn, livestock), Manufacturing (lumbering, shipbuilding) • Major Cities: Boston, Quincy, Plymouth, Salem, Lexington, Concord • Colony Named for: Massachusetts tribe (word means "large hill place") • Became a State: February 6, 1788
New Hampshire • Founded: 1638 by John Wheelwright and others • Major Industry: Agriculture (potatoes, fishing), Manufacturing (textiles, shipbuilding) • Major Cities: Concord • Colony Named for: county of Hampshire in England • Became a State: June 21, 1788
Middle Colonies • Delaware • Pennsylvania • New York • New Jersey
Middle Colonies • Climate and Physical Features • Good Soil • Longer growing seasons than New England • Ok Harbors
Middle Colonies • Economic Comparative Advantage • Known as the “Breadbasket” • Grew crops like wheat and corn • Provided food for other colonies • Some shipping and manufacturing
Middle Colonies • Why colonies were started • Religious Freedom • Make money through trade (New York and New Jersey)
The Middle Colonies New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware
Delaware • Founded: 1638 by Peter Minuit and others • Major Industry: Agriculture (fishing), Manufacturing (lumbering) • Major Cities: Wilmington • Colony Named for: named for the Delaware tribe and for an early governor of colonial Virginia, Lord de la Warr • Became a State: December 7, 1787
Pennsylvania • Founded: 1682 by William Penn and others, at Philadelphia • Major Industry: Agriculture (wheat, corn, cattle, dairy), Manufacturing (textiles, papermaking, shipbuilding) • Major Cities: Philadelphia, Lancaster, York • Colony Named for: William Penn and sylvania, Latin for "forest" • Became a State: December 12, 1787
New York • Founded: 1626 by Peter Minuit and others, on Manhattan Island • Major Industry: Manufacturing (shipbuilding, iron works), Agriculture (cattle, grain, rice, indigo, wheat) • Major Cities: New York City, Albany • Colony Named for: Duke of York • Became a State: July 26, 1788
New Jersey • Founded: 1664 by English colonists • Major Industry: Manufacturing (ironworking, lumbering) • Major Cities: Trenton, Princeton • Colony Named for: Isle of Jersey in England • Became a State: December 18, 1787
Southern Colonies • Maryland • Virginia • North Carolina • South Carolina • Georgia
Southern Colonies • Climate and Physical Features • Great Soil • Warm Weather • Very long growing seasons • Bad harbors
Southern Colonies • Economic Comparative Advantage • Focused on farming cash crops • Large plantation farms for tobacco, cotton, and indigo • Almost no shipping
Southern Colonies • Why colonies were started • Almost all were started to make money by growing cash crops • Maryland was started for religious freedom • Georgia • A place for criminals/ debtors
Southern Colonies Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia
Maryland • Founded: 1633 by Lord Baltimore and others, at Baltimore • Major Industry: Manufacturing (shipbuilding, iron works), Agriculture (corn, wheat, rice, indigo) • Major Cities: Baltimore, Annapolis • Colony Named for: Queen Henrietta Maria of England • Became a State: April 28, 1788
Virginia • Founded: 1607 by John Smith and others, at Jamestown • Major Industry: Plantation agriculture (tobacco, wheat, corn) • Major Cities: Jamestown, Williamsburg, Richmond • Colony Named for: England's "Virgin Queen," Elizabeth I • Became a State: June 25, 1788
North Carolina • Founded: 1653 by Virginia colonists • Major Industry: Plantation agriculture (indigo, rice, tobacco) • Major Cities: Raleigh • Colony Named for: from Carolus, the Latin word for "Charles," Charles I of England • Became a State: November 21, 1789
South Carolina • Founded: 1663 by English colonists • Major Industry: Plantation agriculture (indigo, rice, tobacco, cotton, cattle) • Major Cities: Charleston • Colony Named for: from Carolus, the Latin word for "Charles," Charles I of England • Became a State: May 23, 1788
Georgia • Founded: 1732 by James Oglethorpe and others • Major Industry: Agriculture (indigo, rice, sugar) • Major Cities: Savannah • Colony Named for: England's King George II • Became a State: January 2, 1788