It was the Treaty of Greenville.
Treaty of Peace and Amity, signed at the Convetion of Kanagawa in 1854, opened Japan to the Western World.
Gregory Blaxland, along with William Lawson and William Wentworth, were the first explorers to successfully cross the Blue Mountains in Australia. On 31 May 1813, they reached Mount Blaxland, from where they could see the the rich grasslands on the other side of the mountain barrier. Blaxland wrote in his journal that they "discovered what [they] had supposed to be sandy barren land below the mountain was forest land, covered with good grass". Beyond the mountains the explorers found a great expanse of open country, which they surveyed. Their exploration was important because it opened up the grazing lands of inland New South Wales, and allowed the colony to expand beyond the Blue Mountains. It meant that many, many more free settlers could come to New South Wales, because there was ample land and opportunity for all. The route they traversed is basically the one still used by travellers today. In January 1814, colony surveyor George Evans recommended building a road which would follow the ridge track located by Blaxland, Lawson and Wentworth. Soon after this, William Cox was commissioned to build the road to Bathurst. The original Great Western Highway covered 161 km and incorporated twelve bridges, and provided ready access to the west.
Daniel Boon was not a sailor. He was a backwoods explorer. He opened the Wilderness Road to settlers for the Transylvania Company in America in 1775.
it opened the way to other explorers. Spain wanted the riches of the land so they sent Columbus to start a colony in the West Indies.
mountain men
mountain men
When we were opened for settlers.
Well there were the reports by the explorers, such as Lewis and Clark, that there was plenty of good land west of the Mississippi River. So that brought about the Louisiana Purchase opening up the Midwest to settlers. Eventually the purchase of the Oregon territory, opening up the Pacific Northwest to settlers. Travel was by foot, horse, wagon and oxen, eventually the railroads opened the west more and more settlers. The lasting effect was the settling and taming of the wild west.
1889 in the land run was when it was opened up.
During the early 1700s, explorers opened up new continents to settlement by people from Western nations (i.e. the Europeans, as it was defined then). The term "Western" came to encompass nations and former colonies (such as the U.S., Canada, and Australia) which were populated mostly by immigrants from Europe and their descendants.
he opened trade routes for explorers.
Explorers like Christopher Columbus discovered new territories like the Americas, while Vasco da Gama found a sea route to India. Magellan's expedition circumnavigated the globe, while Lewis and Clark mapped the western territories of the United States. These explorers helped expand knowledge of the world and opened up new trade routes.
The Treaty of Greenville.
It was the Treaty of Greenville.
The Treaty of Greenville
The first university in Western Australia, the University of Western Australia, opened in 1911.