People stick to its own kind. Although we are all human, there are other aspects that bring people together. Religion, beliefs, ethnicity, interests, etc. Those same things affected how things worked in each colony. Catholics, for example, fled to Maryland to be safe from persecutors. Everything was Bible-based in the north, and I mean everything! Everyone was welcome in the middle colonies, they didn't really care about your race, religion, or gender. Well, they did, but you were welcome regardless. Anne Hutchinson was basically kicked off of Massachusetts Bay for taking a stand. She teamed up with Rogers-- who believed in separation of church and state-- and colonized Rhode Island. Both of them were kicked out and their similar beliefs brought them together. The Bible set rules for what you can and can’t do, religion made the northern colonies …show more content…
Because of him, the demand for tobacco rose. And if I do the math correctly, crops equals work, and work equals more slaves. Unlike the North, the south did not really care if you went to church or what you believed in. It was all about work in the south. As John Smith said, “If you do not work, you do not eat!” Clearly, the economy was the main factor in the south’s colonization. But it’s not only the slaves, Georgia was colony were people with debt would be sent to pay it off. People would work there. The colonies also provided the opportunity to start a life of your own, all you have to do is work for a couple of years. Whatever work you’re doing it eventually gets sold or bought. Work will always connect to the