The first settlement in New France was Quebec
The first permanent French settlement was in France.
Samuel De Champlain
because it's the first permanent French settlement in North America
Isabela, in the Dominican Republic.
The first French settlement in New France was founded in 1608 at the site of an Iroquois village, which is present-day Quebec City. This settlement, established by Samuel de Champlain, marked the beginning of permanent French presence in North America.
Location
France built it's first North American settlement in what is now Florida.
The majority of New France colonists settled along the Saint Lawrence River. The establishment of New France began with the founding of the first French permanent settlement near Quebec in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain.
True. Although the king of France claimed the lands explored by Giovanni da Verrazzano and Jacques Cartier in the 16th century, it took several decades before France established its first permanent settlement in the New World. The first successful settlement, Quebec, was founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608, highlighting the delay in colonization despite earlier explorations.
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New France was one of the first European settlements in Canada. Between the years 1700 and 1760 the settlement's population grew by 100 percent.