The first successful british colonly was Jamestown, VA!
John Maryland gave the colony its name. He was the first governor of the state. He was very successful because he restored the state's food industry.
President Lincoln was the 16th President of the United States of America, and his first name was Abraham.
The name "America" comes from the name of Amerigo Vespucci, the Italian navigator and cartographer who first created maps of the "New World".
(a) articles of confederartion (plato)
The first people to come to the Americas in the late 1400s were the Spaniards led by Christopher Columbus.
Jamestown was the first successful English settlement on the mainland of North America.[1] Named for King James I of England, Jamestown was founded in the Colony of Virginia on May 14, 1607.
Jamestown, Virginia.
The Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts, was the FIRST in the New England region, but the second successful English colony in North America following Jamestown, Virginia. The Jamestown colony was Britain's first permanent settlement in the Americas.
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The first permanent English colony established in America was Jamestown, founded in 1607 in Virginia. It was named after King James I of England and served as the capital of the Virginia Colony for many years. The colony faced significant challenges, including harsh conditions and conflicts with Indigenous peoples, but ultimately became a successful settlement that laid the groundwork for future colonization.
The colony established by the Pilgrims was called Plymouth Colony, and they arrived in America in 1620. They landed at Plymouth Rock in present-day Massachusetts after their journey aboard the Mayflower. This settlement became one of the earliest successful English colonies in North America.
I am assuming you mean in America right? Jamestown, founded in 1607
the city was Virgina
Jamestown i guess
I think it was called Vanguard 1.