The Three Colonial Regions
By: Bred • Essay • 484 Words • November 8, 2009 • 1,559 Views
Essay title: The Three Colonial Regions
In British North America, three colonial regions appeared in the different geographical areas; New England, the Middle colonies, and the Southern colonies. Although these colonies were founded by the English, different agricultural and industrial oppurtunities and immigrancy led to a distinctive economy, religion, and social order between the sectional differences of the American colonies before 1750. Each region had its own type of houses, crops, churches, and values but the things keeping them together was their political ties to mother England and the English origins of the majority of the people.
The area that contained the colonies Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire, New England, had created its own sort of social distinctiveness. The English Puritans, who left England in search of religious
freedom and economic success, settled this region in 1620 when they landed in Plymouth. By the next century, these Puritans created the majority of the region and therefore made New England the most culturally and religious
ly similar of the three regions. Puritans were very simple people who sought to purify the church at first, but later some wanted to totally reform it. When they established Massachusetts in New England, religion was the basis of their settlement. All churched men could vote, but the government was still not a democracy. Governor Winthrop calls democracy the "meanest and worst" of all forms of government because he distrusted the common people. Also, Puritans believed everyone should be educated so they can read scripture for religious purposes. Even though New England was very homogeneous, it contained Rhode Island, the most democratic of all the thirteen colonies. Outcasts who were rejected in other colonies could come to Rhode Island for religious toleration and democracy. Economically, New England was fairly prosperous. It had successful