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THIRTEEN COLONIES

In 1775, the British claimed authority over the red and pink areas on this map and Spain ruled the orange. The red area is the area of the 13 colonies open to settlement after the Proclamation of 1763.

The 'Thirteen Colonies' were British colonies in North America founded between 1607 (Virginia), and 1732 (Georgia). Although Great Britain held several other colonies in North America and the West Indies, the colonies referred to as the "thirteen" are those that rebelled against British rule in 1775 (August 22) and proclaimed their independence on July 4, 1776. They subsequently constituted the first 13 states of the United States of America.

Contents
The Colonies
Other divisions prior to 1730
See also
Notes
References

The Colonies


Contemporaneous documents usually listed the colonies of British North America in geographical order, from north to south.

New England


Province of New Hampshire, later New Hampshire


Province of Massachusetts Bay, later Massachusetts and Maine


Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, later Rhode Island


Connecticut Colony, later Connecticut.

Middle Colonies


Province of New York, later named to New York and Vermont[1]


Province of New Jersey, later New Jersey


Province of Pennsylvania, later Pennsylvania


Delaware Colony (before 1776, the ''Lower Counties on Delaware''), later Delaware

Southern Colonies (depending on the subject under discussion, Virginia and Maryland may be separated as Chesapeake Colonies)


Province of Maryland, later Maryland


Colony and Dominion of Virginia, later Virginia, Kentucky and West Virginia


Province of North Carolina, later North Carolina and Tennessee


Province of South Carolina, later South Carolina


Province of Georgia, later Georgia

Other divisions prior to 1730


North American colonies 1763-76

; Dominion of New England : Created by King James II with the consolidation of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, East Jersey, and West Jersey into a single larger colony in 1685. The experiment was discontinued with the Glorious Revolution of 1688-89, and the nine former colonies re-established their separate identities in 1689.
; Maine : Settled in 1622. (An earlier attempt to settle the Popham Colony on Sagadahoc Island, Maine in 1607 was abandoned after only one year.) Massachusetts Bay colony encroached into Maine during the English Civil War, but, with the Restoration, autonomy was returned to Maine in 1664. Maine was officially merged into Massachusetts Bay Colony with the issuance of the Massachusetts Bay charter of 1691.
; Plymouth Colony : Settled in 1620 by the Pilgrims. Plymouth was absorbed by Massachusetts Bay Colony with the issuance of the Massachusetts Bay charter of 1691.
; New Haven : Settled in late 1637. New Haven was absorbed by Connecticut Colony with the issuance of the Connecticut Charter in 1662, partly as royal punishment by King Charles II for harboring the regicide judges who sentenced King Charles I to death.
; East and West Jersey : New Jersey was divided into two separate colonies in 1674. The Jerseys were reunited in 1702.
; Province of Carolina : Founded in 1663. Carolina colony was divided into North Carolina and South Carolina in 1712. (Both colonies became royal colonies in 1729.)

See also



British North America

Colonial America

Colonial government in America

History of the United States (1776-1789): Independence and the American Revolution

American Revolution

History of the United States

British colonization of the Americas

Notes


1. The present State of Vermont was disputed between the colonies of New York and New Hampshire. From 1777 to 1791, it existed as the ''de facto'' independent Vermont Republic.

References



★ Cooke, Jacob Ernest et al., ed. ''Encyclopedia of the North American Colonies.'' Scribner's, 1993. 3 vol; 2397 pp.

★ Gipson, Lawrence. ''The British Empire Before the American Revolution'' (15 volumes) (1936-1970), Pulitzer Prize; highly detailed discussion of every British colony in the New World

★ Greene, Evarts Boutelle. ''Provincial America, 1690-1740.'' 1905. online

★ Osgood, Herbert L. ''The American Colonies in the Seventeenth Century.'' 4 vol Columbia University Press, 1904-07. online

★ Vickers, Daniel, ed. ''A Companion to Colonial America.'' Blackwell, 2003. 576 pp.

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