How Did Colonial Conditions Affect Early American Life

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Pages: 8

Connecticut:
The first European settlement in the Connecticut Colony occurred in Windsor, and then in the Hartford and Wethersfield areas in 1633. The settlers were Dutch, having arrived from New Netherlands (present day New York).
In 1687 Sir Edward Andros, a government from another colony attempted to take control of the Connecticut Colony. He demanded the charter, but the charter was hidden in an oak tree. It later became known as the ‘Charter Oak’.
In 1614 a Dutchman named Adriaen Block became the first explorer of the Connecticut Valley.
The Connecticut Colony climate was the same as the other New England Colonies which included long cold winter and mild summers. The weather made it difficult for diseases to thrive, unlike in the Southern Colonies where the heat often helped diseases to spread rapidly.
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This made the climate ideal for farming. The cold winters made it more difficult for disease to thrive like it did in the Southern Colonies where it didn't get as cold in the winter.
It is estimated that from 1892 and 1954 millions of immigrants came to the United States via Ellis Island in New York.
Until 1804 that New Jersey passed a law to gradually abolish slavery.
Virgina:
The Virginia Colony was founded at Jamestown in 1607. It was the first English colony in the New World. Diseases, conflicts with Indians, and hunger almost destroyed Jamestown but new settlers arrived in 1710 with supplies and the colony began to thrive. The Virginia Colony’s first export was tobacco.
The Virginia Colony was not dominated by a specific religion like in the English Colonies. Several religions were practiced freely in the Virginia Colony including Anglicans and Baptists, among others.
Many of the crops on plantations were traded for items that could not be grown such as farming tools, shoes, and household goods such as dishes and pots and pans.
The Virginia Colony became a state on June 25th,