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King
Charles II
March
24, 1663
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On
March 24, 1663, Charles II granted to the Lords Proprietors a slice
of North America running from the Atlantic to the Pacific, lying
between 36 degrees north latitude on the north and 31 degrees on
the south. This huge section of continent was granted absolutely
to the following men, to be financed by them, and for them to profit
by, and to rule, with the help or interference of such a local government
as they might permit. Above them was only the King. In the order
named in Charles' charter they were: the Earl of Clarendon, the
Duke of Albemarle, Lord Craven, Lord Berkeley, Lord Ashley, Sir
George Carteret, Sir William Berkeley and Sir John Colleton. The
most important of these was Lord Ashley (Anthony Ashley Cooper),
who specified the street plan for the new city and whose secretary,
the philosopher John Locke, wrote the Fundamental Constitution of
Carolina.
Two years
later, the charter was amended to raise the north line 30 minutes
and the south line by two degrees. In other words, the huge slice
of North America that was Carolina included: the present states
of North and South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana and Arkansas, a small part of Missouri, most of Oklahoma,
Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, the southern half of California,
the southern tip of Nevada, the north part of Florida, and a slice
of northern Mexico.

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