The people came to NJ because they didn't want to be ruled by there queen and they didn't want to pay for the war.
Scottish Presbyterians, French Huguenots, and members of the Methodist, Baptist, and Catholic Church began to come in the early 1700s.
Massachusetts was not a colony in 1692. The British had not come over until the 1700s.
The 'Scotch-Irish' are the Protestants planted in North Ireland by the British in the early 1600s. They were of Scottish Lowland origin. The term came about in the U.S.to distinguish them from the native Catholic Irish.
To have the ability to come to america..
All of the answers are correct IVLA/A+
They came to Texas in the early 1600s
1700s
Yes, but only for the weekend.
Scottish Presbyterians, French Huguenots, and members of the Methodist, Baptist, and Catholic Church began to come in the early 1700s.
Cartesian coordinates are named after French mathematician Rene Descartes, who lived in the early 1600s & developed many modern conventions of mathematical notation.
Many African immigrants came to the US in the 1600s and 1700s primarily due to the transatlantic slave trade, where millions were forcibly transported to work on plantations, particularly in the Southern colonies. They were sought after for their labor in cultivating cash crops like tobacco and cotton. Additionally, some Africans arrived as free individuals or through indentured servitude, seeking better opportunities and escaping difficult conditions in their homelands. Overall, the primary motivation for the majority was economic exploitation and forced labor.
Russia and Alaska
around the 1700s
Massachusetts was not a colony in 1692. The British had not come over until the 1700s.
The Pilgrims were people who came over from Europe (on "The Mayflower" ship) in the early 1600s to escape religious prosecution.
It came to America with the first Jews, in the 17th Century.
The early records of Provence, France shows that someone with this surname had held a family seat there. Some of the family moved to Louisiana in North America in the early 1700s. Family motto: "Dangers shall strike me unappalled!"