Great Britain's colonies in North America were growing much more rapidly when compared with England and Scotland
false
The transatlantic slave trade was not a vital part of world commerce.
false
Most of the slaves carried to the New World were destined for mainland North America.
false
Rice was the crop in South Carolina that increased the demand for slaves.
True
Initially, the proprietors of Georgia banned the introduction of liquor and slaves.
true
Most slaves in eighteenth-century British America had been born in the colonies.
false
Increasingly in the eighteenth-century, liberty was being used to express a right to protest the government
true
John Locke believed that slaves could not be considered part of civil society
false
A higher percentage of the population in Britain enjoyed the suffrage as compared to the American colonies.
false
In the northern colonies the law did not prohibit black people from voting but local custom did.
true
Deists concluded that the best form of religious devotion was to devoutly worship in organized churches.
false
By the 1750s, the Great Awakening had resulted in the consolidation of all American Protestant churches into three denominations: Anglican, Congregationalist, and Quaker.
false
The Spanish and French North American empires were densely populated.
false