In the 1500s, the English and Dutch primarily settled in North America, particularly in areas that are now part of the northeastern United States. The English established colonies such as Jamestown in Virginia in 1607 and Plymouth in Massachusetts in 1620. The Dutch focused on areas like New Amsterdam, which is present-day New York City, and parts of the Hudson River Valley, where they established trade and settlements. These settlements were part of broader European efforts to explore and colonize the New World.
New York
The French and Spanish were generally Roman Catholic so where they settled was generally Catholic. The English and the Dutch were Protestant and for the most part so were their colonies.
According to the 2002 edition of History Alive! The United States, Dutch and English came there in search of new lives. The Dutch. Dutch, it was once known as New Amsterdam. The Dutch settled New Amsterdam, which became New York City after the Dutch surrendered the land to the English.
The Dutch settled in Africa because the Dutch were eager for profits. They treated their black slaves harshly. All they cared about was money(gold and diamonds). Lern2read. It said "Where," not "Why."
The Dutch colony of New Amsterdam became the English colony of New York.
New York
the dutch did settle in canada.
Pennsylvania
'from English to Dutch' is 'van Engels naar Nederlands' in dutch
English- expiremented Dutch- experimenteerde
Many European settlements did occur between the years 1500 and 1770. However, most of the European migration and settlement happened between the 1640s and 1770, as English began to settle the islands in the New World.
1624
On Manhattan
New York
"Engels" is Dutch for "English".
The dutch first settled in new york. Get it, got it, good.
The area the Dutch first settled in was New Yorkc: