New England vs. The Chesapeake Colony Essay

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    As stories of the New World drifted back to the old, a new start appealed to the residents of a troubled, turbulent England. Poverty had made it difficult for many to provide for their families, forcing them to seek their livelihood elsewhere. Displaced peasants traveled to the already overpopulated major cities such as London, hoping to scrape by. Around the same time, King Henry VIII severed ties with the Catholic Church, establishing the Church of England, a Catholic sect with himself at the head

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    century, two colonies emerged from England in the New World. The two colonies were called the Chesapeake and New England colonies. Even though the two areas were formed and governed by the English, the colonies had similarities as well as differences. Differences in geography, religion, politics, economic, and nationalities, were responsible for molding the colonies. These differences came from one major factor: the very reason the English settlers came to the New World. 
The Chesapeake colonies were primarily

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    to the Chesapeake. Just twenty three years later, with a compact as a foundation, almost a thousand English settlers would travel to the Massachusetts Bay area. Although there are many similarities between the Chesapeake and New England colonies in the 1600s, they either had an aristocracy or theocracy as a form of governance, varying economic structure based on agriculture or industry, and polar religious beliefs, that of the Anglican or Puritan Church. The Chesapeake and the New England colonies

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    did the New England and Chesapeake colonies differ so much? Although both these colonies where inhabited by people of English origin the similarities ended there. Such factors as motive of settlement, the settlers themselves and even geography of settlement all shaped these colonies into two very distinctive societies. The settlers who first landed in Jamestown had very different aspirations than the puritans who landed later in the New England area. Although both saw the new world as

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    the 17th century, England experienced a growth in development. Increasing population alongside a rising merchant class made territorial expansion beneficial both population-wise and economically. Two regions in the New World were colonized by settlers: New England and the Chesapeake. Both settlements had a goal of permanent settlement in mind, but by the 1700s had significant differences in their developments. The difference in developments between the New England and Chesapeake regions during the

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    different societies, especially in Chesapeake, which consisted of Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware, and New England, which consisted of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. These differences were primarily caused by the variations in family structures, the intertwining of politics and religion, and the contrast of crops grown in their respective areas. The Chesapeake area was colonized in the early 17th century, long before people would come to settle in New England. As a result, this area was

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    While the people of the New England area and of the Chesapeake area came from English origin, by 1700 both areas had moved in two different directions. Both of these groups were “blessed” with issues that were unique to their regions, and each was forced to reconstruct their societies. As a result, the differences in the motivation, geography, and government in the New England and Chesapeake regions caused great difference in the development of each. As the regions began to develop, the motivation

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    Although both the New England and the Chesapeake region colonies, which were located in Maryland, Virginia. Had been settled and ruled by the English, in the year 1700 the colonies had evolved into two very separate distinct societies. The first major cause of this differentiation lays in the very first reasons in which the founding of the two region's colonies were originally discussed and planned. For example in 1607 the London Company of Virginia, which is a joint-stock company, had been

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    In the beginning of the 17th century, European nations were quickly colonizing the eastern coast of North America. They sailed to two specific regions known as the Chesapeake Bay region and New England. The Chesapeake Bay region consisted of Virginia and Maryland while New England included Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. Europeans would settle a region for a specific reason, which led them to have very different lifestyles. They were set apart by social, political, religious

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    The thirteen colonies were all largely settled by an English population, sharing much of their English identity amongst each other. As time progressed into the 18th century, though, the New England and Chesapeake colonies have branched into two distinct societies. Due to several factors (geography, climate), the two regions changed much in social, political, and economic aspects. Social life in the Chesapeake and New England colonies differed greatly. In the New England colonies, much of the immigrants

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