A 'charter colony' was one of the three types of
colonies that existed in the
British Empire during its height of power. The others were
proprietary colonies and
royal colonies.
Charter colonies were promoted through private enterprise under charters from the crown. Generally, they were established by groups of
settlers who were granted
charters by the
king and had more control over their own affairs than did the other types of colonies, which were ruled more directly by the
British. They were founded by trading companies, by lords proprietors and by squatters later incorporated. Colonies of the first type for the most part either disappeared or changed their status early. The
Virginia Company lost its charter in
1624, the
Plymouth Council for New England surrendered its patent in
1635, the
Providence Island colony was conquered by
Spain in
1641 and the
Massachusetts Bay Company became a
theocracy, leaving the
Somers Isles Company as the only one of its kind in control of a colony through the greater part of the 17th century.
Connecticut and
Rhode Island, founded as squatter colonies by dissenters from
Puritan Massachusetts, received charters of incorporation early in the
English Restoration (
restoration colony).
The predominating type throughout the 17th century was the proprietary colony. Of this sort was Carlisle's Caribbean grant,
Maryland.
Maine, in the early part of the century, and after
1660 the
Carolinas,
New York, the
Jerseys, the
Bahamas and
Pennsylvania. Similar institutions of government developed in all of the charter colonies. All ultimately had
governor, council and
house of representatives, the two former chosen by company or
Lords Proprietor, and in the corporation colonies, indirectly by the people. The house of representatives, first the voluntary concession of the trading company, as in Virginia and Bermuda, later became a generally accepted institution in all chartered colonies except
New York. Government in the corporation colonies was the freest from outside control. Perhaps because they were settled without the mediation of trading company or proprietor, the inhabitants of those colonies from the beginning cherished a conception of government based on sovereignty of the people. When the restoration English government turned its attention to the building of a colonial policy, it found charters obstacles in the path. Several colonies were royalized, and, with the view of ultimate consolidation of all colonial possessions into a few large units, the
Dominion of New England was established. Its failure brought temporary reaction in favor of charter colonies, but throughout the 18th century the process of royalization went on until by
1776 only two proprieties, Maryland and Pennsylvania, and two corporation colonies, Connecticut and Rhode Island, remained. Except in the corporation colonies the people seem to have preferred royal rule.
References
★ Dictionary of American History by
James Truslow Adams, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940
See also
★
Commonwealth