Answer:
Wars between the colonists and the American Indians stemmed mainly from land disputes and colonists’ enslavement of American Indians. The Carolinas became royal colonies. Most rice and sugar plantations were located in the south.
Step-by-step explanation:
The colonization of the Carolinas was difficult as there were many different groups of American Indians living in the area and there were even officially declared wars with the Tuscarora people who executed an early colonist surveyor of the area, John Lawson in 1711. The Carolinas had been proprietary colonies up until 17 was a type of English colony mostly in North America and the Caribbean where the King would reward allies by giving them control over large stretches of the colonies like William Penn in Pennsylvania. In 1729 North Carolina became a Royal or Crown colony giving more control directly back to the British King and making them dependencies. South Carolina had become a Royal Colony ten years earlier. North and South Carolina developed large plantations growing cash crops like sugar and rice after becoming Royal Colonies.