The 'Southern Colonies' of British North America were the
North Carolina,
South Carolina,
Georgia,
Maryland, and
Virginia, where the first permanent settlement among them was at
Jamestown.
The hope of gold, resources, and virgin lands drew English colonists to the Southern Colonies. Their economy was driven by
plantations, initially worked by
indentured servants, a labor force which was largely replaced in the early 18th century by
slaves imported from
Africa, except for Georgia, where most plantations were worked by debtors. Colonial South Carolina relied mainly on the
Indian slave trade and
deerskin trade until the
Yamasee War of 1715. Thereafter the colony economy diversified. Rice plantations, and later other cash crops like cotton, worked by African slaves overtook the Indian trade as the colony's economic foundation.
The ports of
Charleston, South Carolina and
Savannah, Georgia traded with
Great Britain, slave ships from
Africa, and the
Caribbean. Their cash crops were
tobacco,
cotton,
indigo,
rice, and
sugar cane.
Colony and Dominion of Virginia and
Province of Maryland are sometimes considered part of the Southern Colonies.
The first representative legislative body met at Jamestown in 1619, and became known as the
House of Burgesses, a precursor to the
Virginia General Assembly. Throughout the colonies, the
government, subject to the Crown and Royal Governors, was dominated mainly by
planters and
farmers, and consisted only of men and landowners.