was Anglican church and too many religion there were in Georgia
this is not a good answer.
^^ i agree, that answer sucks.
idk ,i think all religions were welcome, except for the Catholics.
Actually, the Anglican church is correct! They escaped from England for freedom of relegion, and this created the protestants, which fyi is still Christian, and catholics are christians. So any relegious person could go there, but Georgia was founded for freedom of rlegion............ANSWER: Protestants/Anglican church..............
hey. im pretty sure Georgia had religious freedom :D kthxbai (;
The colony of Georgia was a colony of religious freedom. It became a melting pot of many religions and still cherishes religious freedom to this day.
um pie i guess?
i dont reealy know so look at researching
The Dutch and the Swedes were the first white settlers in the area that became New Jersey. When the British took over control of the colony, the King gave control of the colony to his brother, the Duke of York, who in turn gave the colony to his two friends, Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. They allowed settlers religious and political freedom in the colony, so many different groups settled the area. The early religious groups were Anglican, Puritan, Quaker, and Calvinist.
Georgia was a success because it gave debtors hope. They farmed the land and made a great new colony for early America.
Georgia
Maryland was the colony where Catholics played important leadership roles in the early days. It was founded as a haven for English Catholics escaping religious persecution, with Lord Baltimore granting them religious freedom. The colony's government and society were predominantly Catholic during its early years.
Georgia and the Carolinas colonies were early growers of tobacco in North America.
The answers is C) Growing crops to send to England. This is the answer for USAtestprep.
by having direct access to the Atlantic Ocean for trade
Early in the 17th century, a colony was founded at Plymouth (in the area of modern-day Massachusetts) by religious settlers from England. These colonists were primarily seeking to practice their religion without interference or persecution from the religious authorities in England.
There is some evidence of cultural and religious diversity in the New York Colony, as well as in Georgia and Rhode Island. It should be noted that the colonies did not give black people or women equal rights, but some of the early colonies, including the ones mentioned, had residents from a variety of religions (including Jews), and immigrants from numerous European and South American countries.
There were two reasons Catholics were initially banned from Georgia Colony. First of all, it was never formed as a refuge for religious tolerance. Rather, a second chance for debtors. Unfortunately, religious tolerance didn't spread far enough in most of the colonies to include either Catholics or Jews. A second reason is a land dispute with Spain over Florida. Catholics were suspect, and some believed they would be loyal to practitioners of their faith like the Spanish rather than their neighbors.
This colony could protect the other British colonies from Spanish attack. Great Britain had been at war in the early 1700's. Georgia would serve as a military barrier.
If you really want to hear about the early stages, it was mainly Protestant Christianity. Savannah was the first city in what became the colony of Georgia, and General James Oglethorpe set the place up as a colony for people trapped in the debtor's prisons of England.. that's beside point. At any rate, when the colony was founded, Catholics were strictly not allowed, due to the fact that Georgia would, among other things, serve as a buffer colony between the Spanish (Catholics) in Florida and the English (Protestants) in Charleston, SC. Jews were also allowed into the colony against the will of Oglethorpe. The story goes that a ship of Jewish physicans and philosphers fleeing the Spanish Inquistion landed in Savannah about three years after the colony was founded. They couldn't go south to Florida since the Spanish were there, and Charleston had turned them away. On the way to Savannah, the ship was badly damaged, and Oglethorpe felt if he turned them away they would die. So he allowed Jews into the colony as well. The Yamacraws who were living in coastal Georgia at the time maintained a mutual beneficial working relationship with early settlers, so they also were free to practice their own religious beliefs and traditions. Hope that helps...?