Carolina
Virginia colony split into West Virginia and Virginia.
Carolina split into North and South.
Slavery expanded most rapidly in the Southern colonies during the 1700s, due to the labor-intensive nature of agriculture, particularly cash crops like tobacco, rice, and later cotton. The Southern colonies had a larger demand for enslaved labor compared to the Northern colonies.
The Province of Georgia (later known as Georgia) was the southernmost settlement in the 13 original colonies.
Georgia Colony was one of the Southern colonies in British America. It was the last of the thirteen original colonies established by Great Britain in what later became the United States. In the original grant, a narrow strip of the province extended to the Mississippi River.
The Carolina colonies were named in honor of King Charles I of England. The name "Carolina" is derived from the Latin version of Charles, which is "Carolus." The colonies, originally part of a single proprietary colony, were later divided into North and South Carolina.
Georgia is the southern most of the 13 colonies.
* New England * Province of New Hampshire, later New Hampshire * Province of Massachusetts Bay, later Massachusetts and Maine * Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, later Rhode Island * Connecticut Colony, later Connecticut. * Middle Colonies * Province of New York, later named to New York and Vermont[1] * Province of New Jersey, later New Jersey * Province of Pennsylvania, later Pennsylvania * Delaware Colony (before 1776, the Lower Counties on Delaware), later Delaware * Southern Colonies (depending on the subject under discussion, Virginia and Maryland may be separated as the Chesapeake Colonies) * Province of Maryland, later Maryland * Colony and Dominion of Virginia, later Virginia, Kentucky and West Virginia * Province of North Carolina, later North Carolina and Tennessee * Province of South Carolina, later South Carolina * Province of Georgia, later Georgia Source: Wikipedia
Delaware was originally a proprietary colony, but later on, in the early 1700s, it became a Royal Colony. (just a comment, corporate colonies are called charter colonies)
Before the 1770s, all of the 13 American colonies were ruled by the King of England. Colonial Georgia was one of these 13 colonies. It was at approximately the same land that Georgia occupies now.
The British controlled the colonies on the Eastern Coast. The Spanish had colonies in Florida and later in the Southwest, while the Dutch had colonies in the far northeast.