England was a nation hundreds of years before the American Continent (North and South) was discovered in the 1490s, and the USA became a country in 1776.
England wasn't established like America, it just evolved.
The first recorded paint mill in America was established in Boston in 1700 by Thomas Child, who had emigrated from England.
The first colony established in America was Virginia.
England established settlements in South America in present-day Guyana.
What year was the first college in north america established?
The first lending library in America was Philadelphia's Library Company. The city of Philadelphia established the first library in America.
The first modern factory was established in Rhode Island, it is called Slater Mill. The plans for a factory wee brought to America by Samuel Slater from England, in a time where England had tight controls over any indutrialized material leaving the country.
Virginia was the first established colony in America.
If you are referring to the 13 colonies which later became the United States, it was England and from 1707 Great Britain which established them. They weren't the first setllements, though: Spain and France had already established themselves on the continent too.
If by America you mean the USA, then England has more history because it was established long before the USA was.
In 1607 England established a colony in America. Later England established other colonies on the East coast of America.
The Washington family emigrated from England to America in 1656. They settled in the Virginia Colony, where they became prominent landowners and established their legacy. This family lineage eventually produced George Washington, the first President of the United States.