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John Carteret -
one of the Lords Proprietors
South Carolina, part of the original
Province of Carolina, was founded in 1663 when
King Charles II gave the land to eight noble men
known as The Lords Proprietors. At the time, the
province included both North Carolina and South
Carolina. North and South Carolina became separate
royal colonies in 1729.
The Spanish and French vied over the rights to the coast of South Carolina in
the 1500's. In 1562, French soldiers unsuccessfully attempted to start a settlement
on Parris Island off the coast of present-day South Carolina. In 1566, The Spanish
built the colony of Santa Elena near the site of the original French settlement.
Santa Elena was abandoned in 1576 after being attacked by Indians. Although the
settlement was rebuilt, the Spanish concentrated their forces in Florida after
British pirate Sir Francis Drake destroyed St. Augustine. The British would be
the next to colonize the area.
In 1670, the first permanent English settlement in South Carolina was established
at Albemarle Point. Many of the original settlers came from the Caribbean island
of Barbados, including the new governor, William Sayle. A year before, in 1669,
prospective Carolina settlers including John Locke wrote the Fundamental Constitutions
of Carolina, which served as an early form of government for the Carolina colony.
In 1680, the colony moved to Charles Town (later Charleston). Charles Town would
quickly become the cultural and economic center of the southern colonies. Because
of the influence of the Caribbean settlers, the colony's original economy resembled
the plantation colonies of the West Indies. It would become a major center for
rice, tobacco and indigo production, and the colony's plantation owners were
among the wealthiest people in all the colonies. By the late 1700's, African-American
slaves represented the majority of the population in South Carolina, as the number
of cotton plantations increased. |