Beginning in the 1660s the british settled

The Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles, first published in 1624, was written by Captain John Smith, a colonist, military veteran, adventurer, and the man largely responsible for the survival of Jamestown, the first permanent British colony in the New World. The work as a whole consists of six books; included here are excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of the third book, which describe the journey from England to the New World (including charges of mutiny brought against Smith), the settlers’ arrival in Virginia, and their encounters with the Indians. Also detailed is the well-known story of Pocahontas, the favorite daughter of Algonquin chief Powhatan. Smith had been captured by Powhatan's men in 1607. He was on the verge of execution when she interceded and saved his life, despite being only about twelve years old at the time. In the wake of this event, relations between the settlers and the tribe improved.

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Beginning in the 1660s the british settled

Charles II

proprietary colony, in British American colonial history, a type of settlement dominating the period 1660–90, in which favourites of the British crown were awarded huge tracts of land in the New World to supervise and develop. Before that time, most of the colonies had been financed and settled under the jurisdiction of joint-stock companies operating under charters granted by the crown. After the Restoration (1660), Charles II used proprietaries as a device to meet pent-up demands for territorial expansion as well as to repay political and economic debts incurred in the struggle for the throne. Vast tracts of land in , , , and North Carolina and South Carolina were distributed in this way.

The first permanent European settlement in what became New Jersey was established by the Dutch at Bergen (now Jersey City) in 1660. The colony was brought under English rule in 1664 (although for the next nine years the Dutch disputed that claim), when Charles II granted the territory that later became New York and New Jersey to his brother James (later King James II), who conveyed New Jersey to Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. In 1674 Berkeley sold western New Jersey to the Quakers John Fenwick and Edward Byllynge.

The earliest European settlements within the present limits of the state of Pennsylvania were some small trading posts established by the Swedes and the Dutch in the lower valley of the Delaware River in 1623–81. Between 1650 and 1660 George Fox and a few other prominent members of the Society of Friends had begun to urge the establishment of a colony in America to serve as a refuge for Quakers who were suffering persecution under the Clarendon Code. William Penn became interested in the plan at least as early as 1666, and in 1681 Charles II signed a charter giving any unoccupied regions to Penn in payment of a debt owed by the king to Penn’s father, Adm. Sir William Penn.

In 1663 Charles II granted Edward Hyde, 1st earl of Clarendon, and seven other members of the British nobility a charter to establish the colony of Carolina in a vast territory lying between the 31st and the 36th parallels and extending from theAtlantic to the Pacific Ocean. A second charter in 1665 extended the limits to latitudes 29° and 36°30’ N. The eight grantees were known as the lords proprietor of Carolina, and they were free to dispose of the land as they pleased.

Although proprietorships were feudal in origin, American proprietors were forced to yield power and privileges to their colonists. By the turn of the century most British officials, fearing the proprietaries’ independence from parliamentary authority, favoured an end to the granting of new proprietary colonies despite their success. One important result of the proprietary movement was the diversification of settlers, who were attracted from several different countries rather than from England alone, thus helping to bring a more cosmopolitan character to the new country.

What was happening in 1660s in America?

English America had four times as many people in 1660 as it did in 1642. It now produced crops like sugar, had one colony with as many slaves as Englishmen, was held together by English trade networks, and had lost its autonomy to a mother country with an increasingly centralized government and imperial vision.

What was the first British settlement?

In 1607, 104 English men and boys arrived in North America to start a settlement. On May 13 they picked Jamestown, Virginia for their settlement, which was named after their King, James I. The settlement became the first permanent English settlement in North America.

Why did English settlers come to America in the 1600s?

Colonists came to America because they wanted political liberty. They wanted religious freedom and economic opportunity. The United States is a country where individual rights and self-government are important.

What settlement was founded in the early 1600s?

In the early 1600s, in rapid succession, the English began a colony (Jamestown) in Chesapeake Bay in 1607, the French built Quebec in 1608, and the Dutch began their interest in the region that became present-day New York.