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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper that speculates how the issue of slavery might have been different had the Puritan influence been over the plantations of the south. Included is a comparison of the type of people who colonized Jamestown and the type who colonized New England. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_LCJTown.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
George" might have been born into freedom if not for the timing and greed of one English monarch. The ancestors of author Alex Haley, mentioned above, and countless other individuals
sold into slavery during the formative years of the United States of America might have followed a different destiny if the circumstances surrounding two of the major events in American
history had been reversed. Had the Mayflower sailed south to Jamestown and John Smith led his company north to Massachusetts, what effect would this have had on the growth
and expansion of slavery in the New World? In 1603, James the First of England took the reigns of monarchy in England. Described as a rude, overindulgent and greedy
ruler, in 1606 he set about granting charters for settlement and trade in America (Lossing PG). One, the South Virginia Company, later known as the London Adventurers Company, was
given exclusive rights to the area we now know as Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia. The other, the Plymouth Adventurers Company, was given the trade area of what eventually
became New England. Colonization resulting from these two charters was to eventually give birth to the original thirteen American colonies (Lossing PG). Twenty years after the failed colonization attempt
that ended with the disappearance of the Roanoke Colony, a band of settlers once again took to the sea on a quest for the settlement of the New World.
It was December of 1606 when three small wooden ships set sail from England for Virginia. One hundred and four emigrants were aboard (Barisic PG). Of this number,
only half a dozen were laborers and only a few mechanics by trade. The majority of the emigrants were idle "gentlemen", a term used to describe those who thought
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