All all of them. 90% of the colonies were farms.
well it all starts when one man loves another man very much.......
In Northern Europe towns declined after the collapse of the Roman Empire, and in England many towns became extremely small - little more than villages. A place with 2,000 or more inhabitants was considered really big and important.
An advantage to living near other people in small towns would be similar styles, joint efforts, "like minded" friends and potential spouses without the familiarity of a too close group. It mixes the pool of families with common interests, experiences and somewhat similar roots.
most towns were overgrown villages
The major towns of Britain in 1750 were: London, Bristol, Liverpool, Leeds, Birmingham and Glasgow.
New England
They prefered small towns.
Small towns surrounded by small farms
The towns were small fishing villages, trade markets, or centers of economic activity.
Mostly market towns and lots of trading involving many cash crops and lumber.
Is Justin Bieber going to Fargo? He probley would he comes mostly to small towns and big towns hes the biggest star i saw who accualy tours to small towns or medium towns
well the nothern colonies had harsh climate and had small farms because of that. The Southern Colonies had the opposite of that their was sunshine no rain thats the reason why they have large farms and small towns and since they had small towns that meant that thewy had no schools! yeah awsome right wrong because unlike the northern colonies the southern colonies didn't have alot of jobs.
mostly in the city. but sometimes you can find it in small towns.
No, the opposite. The population was 90% farmers. There were also homeless wondering about the colonies so much that individuals towns put in laws against the homeless.
On Earth. Mostly in Asia. And in villages or small towns.
Villages are very small towns which have very small population and very little buildings. They are mostly seen in the countryside, particularly in Europe.
In towns in texes