This differentiation could be contributed to many factors, the most distinct being the intentions of the original settlers and the components of the lives they lived in the New World. New England’s communal and moralistic approach to settlement, as well as its composition of mainly family units, created colonies where alleviate workloads allowed for the pursuit of other ventures such as religious tasks, while the harsh conditions of the Chesapeake Region and the individualistic settlement of the area demanded the energy of the colonists be used for