It was most of the east coast (save for Florida) Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Georgia, Connecticut, Massachusetts Bay, Maryland, South Carolina, New Hampshire, Virginia, New York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
yes the land west of the thirteen colonies was claimed by the british and french
The country that claimed the land west and north of the 13 colonies was France and Spain claimed the land south of the colonies
True
Well, I did a school project and Peter Stuyvesant fist owned New Jersey when the dutch had claimed it. Then, John Berkeley and George Carteret got New Jersey after the English won the war for that land.
Spain never purchased land in the thirteen colonies.
France
The population had grown so much in the Thirteen Colonies that the people living there needed more land. The population in Quebec had grown but not as much as the Thirteen Colonies had.
The land forms were very rough during the time of the 13 original colonies. This is because the Native Americans did not alter nature the way that the English did.
Yes, the 13 colonies were on the east coast. There were a few that were in land but the majority was by the ocean.
The British wanted more land. The thirteen colonies was the result of it.
The British claimed the land west of the English colonies, the Spanish claimed the land south. I don't know about the north. ------------------------------- -I'm not sure what this has to do with WW2. Quebec settled in 1608 by France.New Orleans settled in 1718 by France. It was called New France, mainly 1608-1764. Exploration started in 1524. Answer: France
No, John Cabot claimed land in Newfoundland for England in 1497. This was in Canada and was nowhere near the founding of the thirteen colonies.