The colonists provided basic education for girls as well as boys because protestant denominations wanted everyone to be able to read the Bible. Option C is correct.
Education in the Thirteen Colonies during the 17th and 18th centuries varied considerably.
How much education a child received depended on a person's social and family status. When educating, families favored boys.
Education was valued for the sake of religious study in order for thchildren to have a great command of Bible reading.
Answer: Let's break it down
Explanation:
The Southern colones were mostly based on economy, it grew a lot of Tabacco, Rice, and Indigo (A shirt dye), these big farms were called Plantations grew a lot of these and made a lot of money, these owners were incredibly rich and controlled most churches and some parts of the government by bribing them.
The middle colonies are like it's name, it mostly did shipbuilding, cutting down trees (lumber to be exact) and grew wheat, rye, and oats. This colonies were even called the Bread colonies. It's soil was not so good so it's didn't completely rely on agriculture.
The England colonies was the complete opposite of the Southern, and had bad, dead, rocky soil, this colonies also did shipbuilding and lumber and didn't completely rely on agriculture p too, this colony was mostly a religious colony, it had a lot of churches and a lot of people would go there. It had many strict rules about this like on Sundays, you couldn't do chores, go play with friends, or stay at home.
As they had in other Spanish colonies, missionaries built churches and forced the Pueblos to convert to Catholicism, requiring native people to discard their own religious practices entirely. They focused their conversion projects on young Pueblos, drawing them away from their parents and traditions.
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Answer:
They got crops and also tradeable items, which allowed them to be able to trade and transport heavy objects.
Explanation: