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Social Studies #2

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Question
Answer
Jacques Cartier   French explorer who sailed up the St. Lawrence River and began a fur-trading business with the Hurons. Looking for NW Passage-didn’t find. Located Canada.  
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Samuel de Champlain   French explorer who founded the first settlement at Quebec. Mapped places where beavers lived. Cartographer. Starts settlements Quebec & Montreal. Explores St. Lawrence River.  
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Sieur de La Salle   French explorer who found the mouth of the Mississippi River and claimed the whole Mississippi Valley for France.  
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Jacques Marquette   Catholic missionary who knew several Indian languages. With Joliet, he explored lakes and rivers for France.  
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Louis Joliet   French fur trader who explored lakes and rivers for France, with Marquette and five others.  
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Henry Hudson   Dutch explorer who sailed up the Hudson River, giving the Dutch a claim to the area.  
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Sir Walter Raleigh   English explorer who used his own money to set up Englands first colony in North America, on Roanoke Island near North Carolina.  
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John Smith   English explorer who, as leader of the Jamestown settlement, saved its people from starvation.  
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Squanto (Tisquantum)   Native American who spoke English and who helped the Plymouth colony.  
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Portage   The carrying of canoes and supplies around waterfalls and rapids or overland between rivers.  
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Proprietary Colony   A colony that was owned and ruled by one person who was chosen by a king or a queen.  
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Proprietor   An owner.  
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Mayflower Compact   An agreement by those on the Mayflower to make and obey laws for their colony. This was the first example of self-ruled by American colonists.  
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Interpreter   A person who translates from one language to another.  
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St. Lawrence River   A river in North America. Begins at Lake Ontario and flows into the Atlantic Ocean; forms part of the border between the U.S. and Canada.  
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Quebec   The capital of the province of Quebec, Canada, located on the Northern side of the St. Lawrence River; the first successful French settlement in the America’s; established in 1608. Founded by Champlain. Used as a trading post.  
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Montreal   The largest city in present-day Canada; located in Southern Quebec, on Montreal Island at the North bank of the St. Lawrence River. Founded by Champlain. Used as a trading post.  
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Mississippi River   The longest river in the U.S., located centrally, its source is Lake Itasca in Minnesota, flows South into the Gulf of Mexico.  
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Hudson River   A river in the Northeastern U.S. beginning in the upper New York and flowing into the Atlantic Ocean; named for the explorer Henry Hudson.  
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New Amsterdam   A Dutch city on Manhattan Islands that later became New York City.  
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Roanoke   An island near the coast of North Carolina; the site of the Lost Colony.  
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Jamestown   The first permanent English settlement in the Americas; located in Eastern Virginia, on the shore of the James River.  
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Plymouth   A town in Southeastern Massachusetts, on Plymouth Bay; site of the first settlement built by the pilgrims, who sailed on the Mayflower.  
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Northwest Passage   A water route that explorers wanted to find so that explorers could cut through North America.  
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