In 1652 Robert Cole, an English Catholic, moved with his family and servants to St. Marys County, Maryland. Using this familys story as a case study, the authors of Robert Coles World provide an intimate portrait of the social and economic life of a middling planter in the seveneenthcentury Chesapeake, including work routines and agricultural techniques, the upbringing of children, neighborhood relationships and community formation, and the role of religion.The Cole Plantation account, a record that details what the plantation produced, consumed, purchased, and sold over a twelve-year period, is the only known surviving document of its kind for seventeenthcentury British America. Along with Coles will, it serves as the framework around which the authors build their analysis. Drawing on these and other records, they present Cole as an exemplar of the ordinary planter whose success created the capital base for the slave-based plantation society of the eighteenth century.