The colony of Georgia was established in 1732 chiefly as a:
1)
Refuge for English Catholics
2)
Refuge for English Quakers
3)
Commercial trade outpost for the Dutch
4)
Utopian society for England's poor
There was a pattern of relations between English settlers and Native Americans going from tentative friendliness to hostility chiefly because:
1)
Colonial growth meant settler expansion into native lands
2)
The transition to crown colony status made the settlers hostile
3)
The growth of the colonies meant the decline of the fur trade
4)
Royal governors favored Native American rights over the settlers
The colony of Rhode Island was established in 1636 chiefly as a:
1)
Base for future exploration of the interior
2)
Haven for dissident Puritans
3)
Military outpost for use against the Wampanoag
4)
A fur trade outpost to ply the trade of the interior
New Hampshire remained separate from Massachusetts chiefly because the residents of New Hampshire:
1)
Pursued commercial interests and had little connection to Puritan culture
2)
Had remained loyal to King Charles I during the English Civil War
3)
Were bitterly opposed to the slave trade
4)
Were Puritan dissidents who sought religious freedom