Yes
yes, with a sickness for two years. disease unknown
no he no challanges. This is so wrong one one the mane challanges that Champlain had was that he spent the winter in quebec it was very cold for them! who ever did the first sentence is dumb. your welcome
we don't think so. he only ever got married to Helene she was twelve and he was 40. she went to Canda with him but did not like it so she moved back to France.
The Huron were eager to cooperate with the French because thier military weapons were extrordinary, when the French help the Native's/Huron to defeat the Iroquis, Samuel de Champlain (a French explorer) grabbed thier latest weapon in the 1623 arquebus, the first shotgun the Huron and the Natives have ever saw, Samuel de Champlain fire 2 rounds and killed 23 Iroquis. The Huron were impressed and where eager to trade the French. Also, Frances dressing were far more comfertable than the Huron's France had beatiful fur coats, nice snoozy boot's and puffy pants to help them survive for the winter. This is my awnser, hoped it helped!
Quebec, Canada, was founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608. There is also some speculation that Port-Royale, in the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia, which was founded in 1605 also by Champlain, has had some permanent settlers ever since.
Assuming you're asking about Chase's impeachment trial in the Senate, he was found not guilty (no one is ever found innocent) of the charges against him in 1805.
no he was not ever maried
no
yes samuel adams did get hurt
No
Samuel de Champlain,Like Cartier a century before him, Samuel de Champlain originally set out to find riches for France and a route to the Orient. From 1603 to his death in 1635, Champlain crossed the Atlantic Ocean many times. Through these voyages he accomplished a great deal. His skills as a cartographer (map-maker) provided detailed maps of the Atlantic coast, the waterways of the St. Lawrence and its tributaries, and a view of the interior of the continent that had, until then, not been available to Europeans. In his initial voyages, he explored the coastal regions of eastern North America. He founded a settlement at Québec City, the first permanent settlement for Europeans in what was to become Canada. He established a military alliance with the Huron people. In 1609 he joined them in an attack near a lake that would eventually bear his name. In this attack, Champlain used his arquebus (an early type of shotgun). He loaded it with two rounds of shot and fired it into the group of Iroquois attacking his party. This one shot instantly killed two Iroquois chiefs. The attacking force, not ever having experienced anything like this before, retreated, giving the victory to the Huron alliance. Over the next 20 years Champlain worked tirelessly to build a colony for France. By the time of his death, he had established the basis of a successful colony, and Champlain's legacy as the "Father of New France" was secured.
No