uhhh... Peter Griffin
Anne Hutchinson.
African Americans and Women
Jamestown, founded in 1607, is notable for being the first permanent English settlement in North America. It was also the first site of representative government in the Americas, establishing the House of Burgesses in 1619. Additionally, Jamestown was the first settlement to introduce African slaves to English America, marking the beginning of a system of forced labor. Lastly, it was the first location to cultivate tobacco as a cash crop, which became crucial to the colony's economy.
Plymouth colony
The Dutch established a trading post called Fort Nassau on the site of modern Albany in 1614. It did not last though. Their first permanent settlement was Fort Orange, which was also where Albany is today.
Jamestown, founded in the colony that became Virginia in 1607
Eager to move beyond the mysterious disappearance of the first settlement of Roanoke, Jamestown was established in 1607. It became the first permanent English settlement in the Americas. It served as the capital of Virginia Colony from 1616 until 1699.
Jean Baptiste Point Dusable, a gentleman born in St. Marc, Haiti in 1745
zackary ledbetter
this person founded a settlement that later joined with providence and became part of rhode island
Quebec, Canada, was founded by Samuel de Champlain in 1608. There is also some speculation that Port-Royale, in the Annapolis Valley of Nova Scotia, which was founded in 1605 also by Champlain, has had some permanent settlers ever since.
The year 1607 was when the Jamestown settlement began in what became Virginia. It was the first successful permanent settlement in the English New World.
Roanoke Island was one of the first English attempts to establish a permanent settlement in North America in 1585. It was founded as part of Sir Walter Raleigh's plan to establish a colony in the New World. The settlement ultimately failed and became known as the "Lost Colony" due to the mysterious disappearance of its inhabitants.
David Thompson
Providence Plantations.
On his third trip in 1608, Champlain founded a settlement and trading post along the St. Lawrence River that eventually became the city of Quebec. It was the first permanent white settlement in Canada, which makes Quebec the oldest city in Canada.
The first settlement was Kalichino Settlement near modern day Philedaphia. No traces remain