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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper which examines the physical and religious differences between the Northern and the Southern colonies of America. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAnsc3.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
beliefs, the truth is that many people came to the new land for a variety of reasons, and they were possessed of many religious beliefs. For the most part the
groups that arrived in the new land essentially settled in different areas and as such different colonies became associated with particular religious beliefs, different agricultural capabilities, and different ideals and
dreams concerning the new land. The following paper examines the northern and southern colonies as they differed in religious and agricultural perspectives. Northern and Southern Colonies It should
be understood that by most standards there are considered to be the Northern colonies (the New England colonies), the Middle colonies, and then the Southern colonies (The Chesapeake colonies). Considering
that the student requested a discussion of the northern and southern sections this paper will not discuss the Middle colonies of New York and New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The
people who came to the New England colonies were primarily the Puritans. They were a people who truly desired to be free of religious persecution and as such this was
their opportunity to begin life newly, in a new land. The New England colonies did not have wondrous flat areas wherein agriculture could be heavily engaged in. In light of
this fact they often grew on small plots, traded with the Natives in the beginning, and essentially remained in close knit families living off the land without engaging in huge
crop production. One author offers the following in these regards: "[T]he New England colonies where unable to grow...cash crops and so settled mostly in small farms as opposed to huge
plantations. Natural resources where abundant however and the colonists used this to their advantage. This huge supply of natural resources, particularly timber helped to establish several New England cities as
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