8/13/25 - As we start our 23rd school year online, MrNussbaum.com is better than ever for 2025–26! New games, fresh activities, and even more interactive learning are waiting for you. For just $29 a year, you’ll have unlimited access to thousands of teacher-approved resources in an ad-free environment your students will love. Subscribe today and start the school year ahead! Use the coupon code "schoolisback" for an additional 15 percent off your subscription.

Advertisement

Remove ad

This is a short biography on Georgia founder James Oglethorpe.

James Oglethorpe

James Oglethorpe

The Birth of the Cotton Industry

James Oglethorpe was a wealthy British aristocrat, military officer, and member of Parliament who hoped to establish a colony in the New World for English debtors who were crowded into squalid prisons. In the end, few debtors ended in Georgia, but rather, European-born immigrants well-suited to the backbreaking work required to build and sustain a successful colony. Oglethorpe envision a society of farmers who would thrive in the agrarian environment and protect the colony from both the Spanish and Native Americans. It was here, where America's booming cotton industry was born. The colony's charter extended religious freedom to all settlers other than Roman Catholics. Oglethorpe and colonists first settled near present-day Savannah in late 1732.

Slavery in Georgia

Because Oglethorpe's original plan included the division of land parcels into manageable, family-run, 50-acre lots, slavery was initially banned in the colony. As the cotton industry grew in Georgia, however, the ban on slavery was lifted, becoming an integral part of the Georgia economic engine for the next 130 years.

James Oglethorpe Articles and Activities

13 Colonies People and Founders

Advertisement

Remove ad

Related activities

Advertisement

Remove ad