Table of Contents
- 1 What was the Backcountry colonies economy based on?
- 2 What natural resources did the northern colonies have?
- 3 How did the Backcountry make a living?
- 4 What natural resources were available in the southern colonies?
- 5 Why were portable resources ideal for England’s purposes?
- 6 What was the main cash crop in the southern colonies?
What was the Backcountry colonies economy based on?
Most southern colonists lived on small family farms in the backcountry, away from the tidewater. Backcountry colonists farmed with the help of family members and perhaps one or two servants or slaves. They grew their own food and sometimes small amounts of a cash crop, such as tobacco.
What natural resources did the northern colonies have?
The natural resources of the New England Colonies included fish, whales, trees and furs. The natural resources were more important than agricultural crops to colonists in New England because of poor, rocky soil and the short growing season.
What geographic feature separated the Backcountry from the rest of the 13 colonies?
What geographic feature separated the backcountry from the rest of the 13 colonies? Thus, the geographic feature that formed the westward boundary of the thirteen British colonies was the Appalachian Mountains.
How did the Backcountry make a living?
The first Europeans in the Back- country made a living by trading with the Native Americans. Backcountry settlers paid for goods with deerskins. A unit of value was one buckskin or, for short, a “buck.” As the number of settle- ments grew, the farmers often clashed with the Native Americans whose land they were taking.
What natural resources were available in the southern colonies?
Fewer natural resources were available in the southern colonies. Most of the natural resources in the southern colonies were already used up. Fertile plains and long summers allowed southern colonies to focus on agriculture. Hot summers and disease-carrying insects kept populations in the southern colonies low.
What was life like in the backcountry in the 1600s?
Backcountry life may have been harsh, but by the late 1600s many families had chosen to move there. Some of them went to escape plantation life, which had crowded out many small farmers closer to the seacoast. then, in the 1700s, a new group of emigrants – the Scots-Irish – began to move into the Backcountry.
Why were portable resources ideal for England’s purposes?
These portable resources were ideal for England’s purposes, because nascent British industries could take these raw materials, turn them into finished goods and sell them back to the colonies and other nations.
What was the main cash crop in the southern colonies?
In Virginia and Maryland, the main cash crop was tobacco. In South Carolina and Georgia, the main cash crops were indigo and rice. The cash crops grown in each colony depended on which crop grew best in that colonies’ type of soil. There were fewer towns and cities in the southern colonies because farming took a lot of land that was spread apart.