1632: Isaac de Razilly sails from France with 300 people hoping to establish a permanent French settlement in Acadia.[5][6]
1632: Starting this year, Dutch colonists begin to demand more farmlands.[7][8]
1633–: English and French settlers enlist mainland Indians, mostly
Micmac to massacre
Beothuk people of
Newfoundland, who are now extinct. "Red" Indian apparently derives from these people, who painted their bodies with red ochre.
Shanawdithit, the last Beothuk, died in 1829. Little is known of their customs, language, religion. Beothuk was not likely their tribal self-name.[9][10][11]
c. 1635: English fishing interests secure a virtual prohibition on efforts to colonize
Newfoundland.[20][21]
1636–37:
Pequot War in New England against the English (Niantics, Narragansetts later joined). Capt. John Mason burnt sleeping Pequot village at Mystic River, pinning the people inside the flames by gunfire, killing more than 600 people in a surprise attack.
Mohawks behead fleeing Pequot leaders to prove they were not involved.[22][23][24]
1639: Marie de l'Incarnation founds an Ursuline convent and a school for French and Indian girls in the settlement of Quebec.[31][32][33]
1639: Smallpox epidemic decimates Huron people; population reduced by 50%.[12][13][14]
1639: Dutch governor-general
William Kieft adopts policy of exterminating the hostile Indians and taxing the rest. Dutch soldiers aid Mohawk allies to carry out Pavonia massacre, where Dutch soldiers played kickball with the heads of the women and children refugees they had killed.[34][35][36]
1632: Isaac de Razilly sails from France with 300 people hoping to establish a permanent French settlement in Acadia.[5][6]
1632: Starting this year, Dutch colonists begin to demand more farmlands.[7][8]
1633–: English and French settlers enlist mainland Indians, mostly
Micmac to massacre
Beothuk people of
Newfoundland, who are now extinct. "Red" Indian apparently derives from these people, who painted their bodies with red ochre.
Shanawdithit, the last Beothuk, died in 1829. Little is known of their customs, language, religion. Beothuk was not likely their tribal self-name.[9][10][11]
c. 1635: English fishing interests secure a virtual prohibition on efforts to colonize
Newfoundland.[20][21]
1636–37:
Pequot War in New England against the English (Niantics, Narragansetts later joined). Capt. John Mason burnt sleeping Pequot village at Mystic River, pinning the people inside the flames by gunfire, killing more than 600 people in a surprise attack.
Mohawks behead fleeing Pequot leaders to prove they were not involved.[22][23][24]
1639: Marie de l'Incarnation founds an Ursuline convent and a school for French and Indian girls in the settlement of Quebec.[31][32][33]
1639: Smallpox epidemic decimates Huron people; population reduced by 50%.[12][13][14]
1639: Dutch governor-general
William Kieft adopts policy of exterminating the hostile Indians and taxing the rest. Dutch soldiers aid Mohawk allies to carry out Pavonia massacre, where Dutch soldiers played kickball with the heads of the women and children refugees they had killed.[34][35][36]