Trustee Georgia is the name of the period covering the first twenty years of Georgia history,
from 1732–1752
, because during that time the English Province of Georgia was governed by a board of trustees.
What was the time period of the Trustee colony?
Trustee Georgia,
1732-1752
.
What year did Georgia stop being a Trustee colony?
In
1752
, Georgia ceased to be a proprietary colony (governed by trustees) and became a royal colony (governed by the crown). The trustees were frustrated with the lack of economic and social successes. They chose to return the colony to the king, a year before the Charter of 1732 expired.
Who ran Georgia during the Trustee period?
Georgians had to rely on the officials the Trustees appointed from England to maintain authority. The Trustees ruled Georgia for 21 years, but the only Trustee who ever stepped foot in the colony was
General Oglethorpe
. Oglethorpe spent ten years in Georgia until he returned to England for good in 1744.
How did Georgia change after the Trustee period?
Georgia became a Royal Colony
when the Trustee Period ended in 1752. Definition: Royal Colony – Colony overseen by the crown of England. The British Parliament had to pass a charter in order for Georgia to become an official Royal Colony.
What were the trustees not allowed to do?
For example, the trustees did
not trust the colonists to make their own laws
. They therefore did not establish a representative assembly, although every other mainland colony had one. The trustees made all laws for the colony. Second, the settlements were laid out in compact, confined, and concentrated townships.
Why was rum banned in Georgia?
Because of the unhealthy water quality, many
people, including children, drank beer and wine. The trustees meant “hard liquor,” such as rum, was banned. Trustee period and the colony of Georgia profoundly changed during the Royal period.
What did the trustees ban in Georgia?
(1732-1751)- the time period when Georgia was governed by the trustees. The trustees created many regulations during the time period, including a
ban on slavery, liquor and liquor dealers, lawyers, and Catholics
.
What were the 3 main reasons for the settlement of Georgia?
Charity, Economics, Defense
: These 3 things are the 3 main reasons why King George II and James Oglethorpe wanted/needed to create the 13th colony of Georgia.
Why were the Highland Scots most valued when they arrived in Georgia in 1736?
Why were the Highland Scots MOST valued when they arrived in Georgia in 1736?
They were able to translate many different languages
. … Their military skill helped to defend the colony of Georgia. Their ability to farm in swamps was needed to help feed the colony.
Who was not allowed in the Georgia colony?
Who was not allowed in the Georgia colony? The Charter specifically
denied Catholics
the right to worship in the Georgia colony. Historically, the Spanish were Roman Catholic and Georgia’s founders feared that Catholic settlers might be sympathetic to the Spanish if conflict erupted between the two world powers.
When was slavery allowed in Georgia?
The colony of the Province of Georgia under James Oglethorpe banned slavery in 1735, the only one of the thirteen colonies to have done so. However, it was legalized by royal decree in
1751
, in part due to George Whitefield’s support for the institution of slavery.
Why did the trustee period end in 1751?
In response to these vocal and written demands, by 1750,
the Trustees had passed a law that allowed slavery
. The Trustee period would end by 1751, one year before the end of the Charter of 1732 was designed to end.
What were three problems that led to the end of the trustee period?
What difficulties did the colony of Georgia face that eventually led to the end of the Trustee Period?
Sickness, climate, and insects
caused troops to be withdrawn to SC in 1727, but they kept two lookouts at the fort until Oglethorpe arrived in Savannah in 1733.
Was slavery allowed in trustees in Georgia?
General James Oglethorpe, the earl of Egmont, and the other Trustees were not opposed to the Georgia Trustees enslavement of Africans as a matter of principle.
They banned slavery in Georgia
because it was inconsistent with their social and economic intentions.
Was Georgia under the Trustees a success?
The rigidity of Georgia’s peculiar system, however, betrayed the very intent of the Colony’s mercantilistic origins. Organized both as a compact society for military purposes and a producer of exotic products, the Colony proved
a dismal failure
.