John Rolfe taught the Virginians how to grow tobacco.
It taught people to stand up for their beliefs.
you should say to your teacher said that you taught me nothng from your one and only Gianna cusumano
In early Jamestown, Virginia, the number of children taught in one schoolroom could vary, but it was typically small due to limited resources and the fledgling nature of the settlement. Generally, classes would consist of about 10 to 20 children, as the focus was often on basic literacy and religious instruction. The informal setting and lack of formal schooling infrastructure in the early years contributed to these modest class sizes.
The natives. Jamestown would have failed if it weren't for the kindness and ignorance of the Native Americans. Kindness in the sense that they taught the settlers how to hunt, grow food, and basically how to survive. Ignorance in the sense that they did not know that the settlers were going to take over their land and massacre their people.
they taught them how to use fish to fertilze their crops
They taught them to grow crops.
It was Squanto ^^
Yes
It taught people to stand up for their beliefs.
It taught people to stand up for their beliefs.
The Native Americans who taught the white settlers how to grow indigenous crops, such as tobacco. Tobacco turned out to be a cash crop for the settlers to the point where it was even used as currency. Without the natives' help, their settlement would have failed like previous attempts in the area.
John Rolfe taught the Virginians how to grow tobacco.
It taught people to stand up for their beliefs.
The Powhatan Native Americans taught the English settlers at Jamestown how to grow corn, beans, and squash using the "Three Sisters" planting method, which involves planting all three crops together to support each other's growth. This knowledge played a crucial role in the survival of the early colony.
by a powerful leader named captain John Smith
Squanto taught colonists to grow food. Squanto was a Native American who's tribe had been wiped out. When Squanto found out that his tribe had been killed by disease, he went to live with the Wampanoag Indians.