Changes In Colonial America

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Colonial America is often referred to as the “melting pot”. Societies were made up of culture, religion, and ethnic groups of different settlers, coming together to create new hybrid cultures and communities. The population from 1700 to 1775 grew by over two million in the thirteen colonies, which increased slavery, strong religious faith, and education. In the late seventeenth century and early eighteenth century, colonial America began to experience social and economic changes. As a result of these changes, the colonial population had an explosive increase with almost a million immigrants arriving by the turn of the eighteenth century.
Slavery was first brought to Jamestown where the colony was cultivating large plantations of tobacco. There was a need for a strong powerful work force because producing tobacco was very labor intensive. The population increase in colonial America meant that there would be an increase in buyers for cash crops as well as an increase for slaves. There were two sources of labor in colonial America, indentured servants and
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As it reached America, it became critical in shaping almost every aspect of Colonial America, more specifically when it came down to political, religious, and governmental differentiating factors. Many philosophers such as John Locke and Thomas Hobbes began to question monarchy as well as promote liberalism, religious tolerance, science and reason. From this, many books, scientific discoveries, laws, etc, were brought forth. The movement ended up taking a different approach to the world and allowed people to see that they had rights as well as the power to shape their own lives. The Enlightenment changed the colonists’ perspectives of the way life should be lived and it created new developments and opportunities, which was a big factor in the arrival of new immigrants in the eighteenth