The charter for the Georgia colony prohibited trustees from receiving any land or profit from the colony’s activities. This restriction was intended to ensure that the trustees acted in the best interest of the settlers and the colony's goals, rather than for personal gain. Additionally, the charter banned the trustees from engaging in the sale of rum and from holding slaves, further emphasizing the colony's focus on social reform and moral principles.
it became a royal colony
The person who granted the charter to the trustees of the colony was King George II of Great Britain. The colony was named Georgia in his honor. Established in 1732, it was intended as a place for debtors and the poor, providing them with a fresh start in the New World.
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they have a lot of money
false because it was twenty-one trustees instead
1732
it became a royal colony
The person who granted the charter to the trustees of the colony was King George II of Great Britain. The colony was named Georgia in his honor. Established in 1732, it was intended as a place for debtors and the poor, providing them with a fresh start in the New World.
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It was John Charles Brown the third.
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they have a lot of money
they have a lot of money
Colonial Georgia was governed by the trustees who founded the colony, until 1752, when it became a royal colony.
James Oglethorpe and 21 other trustees
One significant document associated with Georgia's colony is the Charter of 1732. This charter was granted by King George II to James Oglethorpe and a group of trustees, establishing the colony of Georgia as a buffer against Spanish Florida and a place for the poor and indebted to start anew. It outlined the colony's governance, land distribution, and regulations regarding slavery and alcohol, reflecting the social and economic ideals of the time.