Early Spanish, French, and English settlements adopted different patterns based on their goals and environments:
- Spanish settlements in the Southwest US clustered along irrigation networks, following the strict rules of the Law of the Indies, which dictated an organized grid layout.
- French settlements in Canada consisted mainly of fishing and fur trading posts along the St. Lawrence River, with little permanent agriculture.
- English settlements varied, with plantations relying on indentured servants and slaves in the Chesapeake and Carolinas, while family farms predominated in New England and the Mid-Atlantic colonies. Tobacco agriculture and slavery characterized the South, while the North featured smaller mixed farms and more religious communities.