North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, Kentucky, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, and Vermont all had land a part of New France.
Were once part of New France, in nowadays Canada: Terre Neuve et Labrador (Newfoundland and Labrador), Nouvelle-Écosse (Nova Scotia), Acadie (New Brunswick), Ile du Prince Édouard (prince Edward island), Québec, Ontario, (part of) Manitoba, (part of) Saskatchewan.
The link below goes to a map of New France circa 1750.
Yes, in the earlier days it was called new France but today it is called Canada!
France colony in North America was called New France. It spanned a large part of nowadays Canada, and a good part of the central eastern states of the US down to Louisiana.
new France became Canada and us....
Parts of canada and then eventualy the U.K. took most of it from them
simple, it went to the british. today new France makes up part of the country known as Canada.
no it's not in Canada
When Canada was called New France it was a French possession and the King of France was soveriegn over it.
british colony,part of the new world including the states
new france is a country also known as canada
The French president is Francois holland, elected in 2012.
France. Canada was known as New France, and New Orleans was sold to the US by Napoleon, Emperor of France.
there was never a King of New France( Quebec, Canada)
Because Canada gained independence.