Toggle navigation
Histories.ca
Home
Canadian History
Canadian Dictionary
Historic Tales
Scottish History
History of Toronto
History of Germany
Colonization of North America
History of Egypt
History of PEI
History of Puerto Rico
United States History
History of the Balkans
History of Australia
History India
History of the Irish
All Colonization of North America Page 5
Reorganization Of The Carolinas
<p>Separation of the Carolinas.—Economically the Carolinas had been drifting apart. Between the Albemarle and Cape Fear districts lay a primeval wilderness two hundred miles in width. The northern district was devoted to the production of naval ...
Repeal Of The Stamp Act
<p>The Stamp Act Congress.—The Stamp Act Congress met at New York on October 7, 1765. Nine colonies were represented, Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, and New Hampshire failing to send delegates. Prominent among those in attendance were John D...
Royal Interference In New England
<p>Massachusetts and the king.—During the Cromwellian period the New England colonies had followed their own devices, but when Charles II came to the throne, they could not expect to pursue their independent course. To forestall trouble, Massach...
Search For A Northwest Passage
<p>Frobisher.—The unsuccessful attempts of the Muscovy Company to reach the East by a northeast passage led to the search for a northwestern route. The great exponent of the idea was Martin Frobisher. After vainly seeking many years for a patron...
Settlements In The Connecticut Valley
<p>Early claimants.—One of the patentees who had received lands from the Council of New England was the Earl of Warwick, whose grant covered a large part of the Connecticut Valley. In 1631 he transferred his rights to Lord Saye and Sele, Lord Br...
Significance Of The Settlement Of The Piedmont
<p>By the middle of the century results of great significance had come about. All the way from New England to Georgia a back country society had been formed, with characteristics in many ways distinct from that of the Tidewater settlements. A large po...
South Carolina
<p>Population.—Economically and socially South Carolina was associated with the West Indies rather than with the mainland colonies. At the close of the seventeenth century the white population was about 5,500. Most of the inhabitants came from B...
Spain And The Colonies In The Seventeenth Century
<p>Decline of Spanish power in Europe.—After the reign of Philip II the power of Spain steadily declined. The long period of hostility with the Dutch and the war with Cromwell greatly weakened her power upon the sea. The continental wars sapped ...
Spain And The Powers 1715-1739
<p>Spanish dynastic ambitions.—From 1715 to 1739 the relations of England and Spain were frequently strained, due to the clashing of commercial and colonial interests, or to the ambitions of Spanish rulers. Philip V hoped to become the king of F...
Spain During The Conquest
<p>The discoveries of Columbus opened to Spain the opportunity to found a great colonial empire in the new world. For this work Spain had been prepared by the welding of the nation which was perfected during the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella.</p> <...
Spain In The War
<p></p> <p>Spain enters the war.—When Spain became a factor in the war in 1779, a new element entered the contest in the West. During 1778 Vergennes did not relax his efforts to induce Spain to become a belligerent. But Carlos III and Florida B...
Spanish Achievements In The Sixteenth Century
<p>Population and industries.—The heroic age of Spanish colonization had now passed. The surprising results achieved in the New World during the first eighty years, not counting the work of exploration, are set forth in a description of the colo...
State Governments During The Revolution
<p>Organization of state governments.—As resistance to British authority intensified during 1775, the colonies took steps to organize for resistance. The colonial governors were forced to leave and the committees of safety assumed temporary exec...
The Advance Toward New Mexico
<p>The western fur trade.—For a decade and a half after the Bourgmont expedition the French made no noteworthy western exploration. Meanwhile, however, the traders quietly carried on their trade among the western tribes. Important items in this ...
The Approach Of Another Conflict
<p>Acadia.—Acadia, the upper valley of the Ohio, and the Cherokee country were debatable territories. To insure English possession of Acadia, Lord Halifax, the president of the Board of Trade, insisted upon the strengthening of the peninsula of ...
« Previous
Next »
Showing
61
to
75
of
161
results
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Most Viewed
Hudson's Bay Company
The West Indies
The Massachusetts Bay Colony
The Mines Of Northern Mexico
The Founding Of Alta California
The Conquest Of The Valley Of Mexico
Spain During The Conquest
The Settlement Of The Atlantic Seaboard
Least Viewed
The Struggle With The English On The Carolina Border
The Occupation Of The Floridas
Trans-alleghany Settlement
Beginning Of Organized Resistance
The Trans-mississippi West
The War Of The English Succession
Western Trade And Exploration
The Struggle With Rivals In The West Indies