According to historians, the major groups of immigrants that came to Britainâ??s American colonies in the 1700s included the Africans who made up 47% of the immigrant population followed by the Scottish and Scot-Irish. There was also a large number of Germans who migrated as well.
half of immigrants are indentured servants
Scott Irish
more immigrants are English people
Africans, ScotsIrish, and Germans
Some Native American groups that were in the middle colonies, were the Algonquin and the Iroquois tribes. (:
The Quakers and the Mennonites were two religious groups that openly condemned slavery in the American colonies.
It helped trade and businesses in the Middle Colonies.
immigrants did not want to be considered American.
Immigrants to America from 1713 until after the American Revolution we Germans, though Scotch-Irish and other groups immigrated, too.
According to historians, the major groups of immigrants that came to Britainâ??s American colonies in the 1700s included the Africans who made up 47% of the immigrant population followed by the Scottish and Scot-Irish. There was also a large number of Germans who migrated as well.
Some Native American groups that were in the middle colonies, were the Algonquin and the Iroquois tribes. (:
The Quakers and the Mennonites were two religious groups that openly condemned slavery in the American colonies.
It helped trade and businesses in the Middle Colonies.
i realy dont know????????? you sould
immigrants did not want to be considered American.
Some came to the Americas as explorers. Other groups of colonists came to America searching for the right to practice their religion without persecution. Many of the other immigrants to the American colonies came for reasons that were economic.
false
Cherokee, Iroquois, Seminole
Immigrants to America from 1713 until after the American Revolution we Germans, though Scotch-Irish and other groups immigrated, too.
The largest groups of people immigrating to the UK are from Republic of Ireland, India, Pakistan, the Caribbean and the USA.
Images like "Group of Cannibal Indians" perpetuated stereotypes that dehumanized indigenous peoples, which in turn influenced the dehumanization of Africans and the justification of their enslavement in the British North American colonies. This representation of non-European peoples as savage and less civilized helped to reinforce the idea of racial superiority and the exploitation of different groups for economic gain.