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Virginia
Religious toleration in Quaker-dominated (in fact, Quaker-founded) Pennsylvania meant that colonists there could practice their religious beliefs according to the dictates of their own consciences without fear of social disapproval or governmental persecution. As a result especially of William Penn's leadership in the colony, persons of diverse nationalities and religious faiths flocked to Pennsylvania in the late 1600s and early 1700s.
South Carolina was not "discovered" in the 1600s. The area that is now South Carolina was inhabited by indigenous peoples for thousands of years before European exploration. Spanish explorers were likely the first Europeans to visit the region in the early 1500s, but permanent European settlements were not established until the English arrived in the late 1600s.
It didn't really affect the US. The colony was a failure. It wasn't until Jamestown was established in the early 1600s that English colonization had a foothold in what would ultimately become the United States.
pennslyvania
No he was not he was a Quaker fighting for peace in America before the revolution (late 1600s)
The first two colonies the British created in North Carolina did not survive. Later, in the 1600s, settlers that had been living in Virginia moved into North Carolina. The new settlements began to grow and finally became part of the British Carolina Colony.
Are religious settlements established to convert people to a particular faith.
hi I am happy they settled it in the 1600s
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A royal colony is a colony ruled by the king's appointed officials.
The first major settlements were established by the English in the 1630's.
a chater from the british king
the Jamestown colony grew the tobacco in the 1600s
Dont know what it is help
Tobacco.