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Objective: To examine the similarities and differences between the three colonial regions.

Objective: To examine the similarities and differences between the three colonial regions. New Hampshire. New York. Massachusetts. Rhode Island. Connecticut. New Jersey. Pennsylvania. Delaware. Maryland. Virginia. North Carolina. South Carolina. Georgia. 13 Colonies. KEY.

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Objective: To examine the similarities and differences between the three colonial regions.

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  1. Objective: To examine the similarities and differences between the three colonial regions. New Hampshire New York Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut New Jersey Pennsylvania Delaware Maryland Virginia North Carolina South Carolina Georgia

  2. 13 Colonies KEY New England Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut Middle Colonies New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware Southern Colonies Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia

  3. New England Colonies Farming was difficult in New England because of: • long winters • thick forests • rocky soil * Fishing and trade became major industries in New England.

  4. …lumbering. A growing fishing industry in New England caused an increase in… …sailmaking. …metal working. (blacksmith) …shipbuilding. …barrel making. • In order to learn these skills, people became apprentices. Apprentice - a person who learns a trade or craft from a mastercraftsworker.

  5. Middle Colonies • New York was first settled by the Dutch, then the English. • Pennsylvania was originally a Quaker settlement. • In time, Pennsylvania was settled by German-speaking Protestants known as the Pennsylvania Dutch. • Farmers exported grain such as wheat, barley, and rye. • Therefore, the Middle Colonies became known as the BreadbasketColonies.

  6. Southern Colonies • The South has rich soil and a warm climate. • Tobacco, rice, and indigo were grown on plantations. • Planters, or plantation owners, relied on slavelabor to accumulate massive wealth. Plantation - large estate farmed by many workers

  7. Commercial Farming vs. Subsistence Farming commercial farming - farming for a profit, where food is produced by advanced technological means for sale in the market. commercial farm, Humboldt, Tennessee (2008) • Plantations in the Southern Colonies used slave labor before the Civil War, and sharecroppers after the war, to produce large quantities of crops for commercial distribution. Early 20th-century: "Negroes picking cotton on a plantation in the South"

  8. Commercial Farming vs. Subsistence Farming subsistence farming - farming where output is produced for consumption of the farmer and its family members and not for cash sale • Most farmers in the South were subsistence farmers and did not own slaves. "Part of the family of Hugh Noe, a renter on a farm near Andersonville, Tennessee." (October 24,1933 photo credit: Lewis Hine Colonial Regions Summary (3:31)

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