Southern Colonies Characteristics

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The fall of the once dominant Spanish Empires was the signal for England’s take on colonizing the New World while using it for economic growth and overall domination. They took it step by step effectively setting the stage for the first colonies by developing successful systems that acted as forerunners of the modern corporation. They grew outward eliminating Native Americans in the way, creating land space for their colonies. Generally, England’s southern colonies thrived in prevalence, but some colonies such as North Carolina and Georgia added a taste of exoticness and variation that contrasted their neighboring settlements.

The southern plantation colonies all shared certain qualities. England’s southern colonies consisted of, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. To begin with, most colonies were economically based on mass agriculture. They had immense acres for growing profitable products notably, tobacco and rice, that were exported. The slave system fueled the plantations providing potent labor that led to the production of large quantities of the crops. Socially, the majority of the colonies had a strong aristocratic atmosphere. Also, due to excessive tobacco growing it caused ruinous effects to the soil, driving settlers westward for
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North Carolina definitely had a mind of its own and differed from the other colonies. The settlers of North Carolina were driven down from Virginia because of their contradicting way of thinking. On the contrary to their neighboring settlers, they were religious dissenters and poor outcasts, that had little to no legal rights to the soil therefore having only small farms for crops slowing the growth of a plantation economy. The lack of plantations dampened the need for slaves. However, their strong spirit of resistance to authority really set them apart, being dubbed the most independent minded and least