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Growth of Colonies
Why did the Virginia colony claim land on both sides of the Chesapeake Bay? What consequences did their claim have for the territories further inland such as Maryland and Pennsylvania?
Profit was an overwhelming motivation for Virginia's overseers and colonists. Explain how the search for profit affected the development of the colony. Why was tobacco such an important crop to the emerging market society and mercantile state in England? Who supplied tobacco to the English before Virginia? Why would they prefer to buy it from their own colonies? How did participation in the global market affect Virginia's landscape and society?
Compare and contrast the motives for colonization of the Pilgrims in the Plymouth colony in the Puritans (and their many non-religious fellow colonizers)? How did these motives differ from those who settled Virginia and Maryland? What types of groups settled New England? Contrast those with the experience of the Chesapeake. How did the group structure and motives of the New England settlers affect their pattern of settlement?
Examine the spread of settlement in the Chesapeake and New England. How did Chesapeake settlement differ from that of New England? Why did Europeans press westward during this period, instead of concentrating in the more easily defended coastal towns? How did the Native Americans respond to the expansion of English settlement in each area?
Compare and contrast Native American agricultural practices with those of the early English settlers. What innovations allowed the Europeans to sustain much greater population densities on the land? How did European farming practices change the landscape of the Chesapeake and New England?