Want this question answered?
It was the first permanent one because the colony at Roanoke disappeared and nobody has an idea of what happened to it.
Roger Williams was banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636 because he stood for the idea that government should not interfere with religion.
"In 1636, Roger Williams, after being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for his religious views, settled at the tip of Narragansett Bay, on land granted to him by the Narragansett tribe. He called the site Providence and declared it a place of religious freedom. Detractors of the idea of liberty of conscience sometimes referred to it as "Rogue's Island".[14]"-Wikipedia
when, 1621. not sure what month. where, i have no idea.
this just shows how bad these answers can be wrong because i have no idea what the answer is! (:
Pilgrim settlers from England first intended to settle Provincetown, MA, but gave up the idea in favor of settling Plymouth, MA. Plymouth became the first permanent English settlement in MA in 1620.
It was the first permanent one because the colony at Roanoke disappeared and nobody has an idea of what happened to it.
Roger Williams was banished from Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636 because he stood for the idea that government should not interfere with religion.
The "pilgrims" at Plymouth Colony were Separatists; they had given up on the idea of reforming the Church of England and wished to separate themselves from it.The colonists of Massachusetts Bay Colony (founded ten years later) were Puritans; they believed that the Church of England could still be reformed ("purified"). However, they did not think of themselves as "pilgrims"; the Massachusetts Bay Colony was primarily a business venture.
John Winthrop was one of the early Puritan leaders who played a key role in the establishment of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. His famous sermon "A Model of Christian Charity" emphasized the idea of building a "city upon a hill" as an example for others to follow.
Since Plymouth colony was an early colony (1620) the US didn't exist in that time so it didn't change anything as far as the country is concerned, but what it did was set a format for the future. It laid out the basic ideas of how a society/government should run and that people had a say in that governance. This was a new idea for the time since the world was managed by kings/queens and the common man usually had no say in his government. The Pilgrims were not a true Democratic society, but they did try to give the male land holding members of the colony a means to have a say in the daily government of the colony.
I have no fu***** idea
To be the first English colony
Massachusetts is called The Bay State because of it's many bays. For example, Cape Cod Bay and the Massachusetts Bay. The bays are important to the people who live in Massachusetts because it allows boats to travel to ports. Several species of sea animals live in bays. Sea birds, seals, fish, and lobster would live in the bays of Massachusetts.
it is an idea.
It is difficult to assign a single principle to the people of the American colonies. Assuming it's meant the 13 British colonies that went on to form the USA. It must be understood that each colony was a separate legal and cultural entity and that the people in South Carolina were not any more attached to people from Massachusetts then people in the Bahamas. The idea of a Pan-colonial identify only began to emerge in the build-up to the war for independence, it is a primary factor for it. The foundations of the colonies vary, Virginia and South Carolina for example where economic. Massachusetts/Plymouth and Maryland were religious, while Georgia was a military colony to provide a southern buffer against Native Americans. In the end in the states generally began adopting shared beliefs that became associated with them due to isolation and immigration: tolerance in Pennsylvania, the "protestant work ethic" in Massachusetts. If a single block principle could be applied to the colonies it would perhaps be loyalty to the crown and British Common Law.
The American English is the law for the colony. This is what sets the idea of self government.