Are there any answer choices?
Answer:
the third option is the correct one
Roger Sherman was significant in the Constitutional Convention because he was an American politician whose plan for representation of large and small states prevented a deadlock at the U.S. Constitutional Convention of 1787.
Also, Sherman served as a delegate to the 1787 Philadelphia Convention, which created the United States Constitution. He ultimately supported the establishment of a new constitution, and proposed the Connecticut Compromise, which won the approval of both the larger states and the smaller states.
I think the answer would be false
From the beginning,
the Lords Proprietors had difficulty in managing their new colony.
There were border disputes with Virginia, Indian wars with the
Tuscarora and the Yamassee, and piracy at the hands of the notorious
Blackbeard and Stede Bonnet.
A portion of Carolina had emerged as its own organizational
unit and became the royal colony of South Carolina in 1719. Advisors
to the British king recommended direct royal control of the colonies.
In 1729 seven of the eight Lord Proprietors sold their colonial
holdings in Carolina to the Crown. The lone Proprietor was John
Carteret, Earl Granville, who retained the Granville Tract in
North Carolina without governing control until the American Revolution.
In
South Carolina the last Governor appointed by the Lord Proprietors
ended his term in 1719, whereas the last Governor appointed by
the Lords Proprietors in North Carolina ended his term in 1731.
In 1719, the new Governor of South Carolina was "elected
by the people," and was considered to be the first governor
of South Carolina in the "Royal Period," that is -
after "the Split."