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New England Colonies

Across
This colony was founded in 1638 by Captain John Mason and John Wheelwright and other colonists. By 1775 this colony was governed as a Royal Colony.
The 1621 Plymouth feast was prompted a by a good harvest. Pilgrims and Puritans who began emigrating from England in the 1620s and 1630s carried the tradition of Days of Feasting with them to New England.
This colony was originally settled by Dutch fur traders in 1614. They sailed up the colony River and built a fort near present-day Hartford. The first English settlers arrived in the colony in 1633 under the leadership of Reverend Thomas Hooker. They were Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
First colonial settlement in New England (founded 1620). The settlers were a group of about 100 Puritan Separatist Pilgrims, who sailed on the Mayflower and settled on what is now Cape Cod bay, Massachusetts. They named the first town after their port of departure.
This colony was the first of the 13 colonies to renounce its allegiance to the British Crown on May 4, 1776. It was also the last of the 13 colonies to ratify the United States Constitution on May 29, 1790, once assurances were made that a Bill of Rights would become part of the Constitution.
The settlement in the colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas.
The belief in and worship of a super human controlling power, especially a personal God or gods.
She was a Powhatan Native American woman, born around 1595, known for her involvement with English colonial settlement at Jamestown, Virginia. In a well-known historical anecdote, she saved the life of Englishman John Smith, by placing her head upon his own at the moment of his execution.
Down
The Bay Colony was settled in 1630 by a group of about 1,000 Puritan refugees from England.
Was an English ship that famously transported the first English Puritans, known today as the Pilgrims, from Plymouth, England to the New World in 1620
A person who journeys to a sacred place for religious reasons.I
A member of the Patuxet tribe of New England Indians, is famous for helping the early Pilgrims survive in the harsh New England environment. He is credited with showing the Pilgrims how to grow corn by fertilizing it with dead fish.
The of British America included Connecticut Colony, Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Massachusetts Bay Colony, and Province of New Hampshire, as well as a few smaller short-lived Colonies.
A member of a group of English Protestants of the late 16th and 17th centuries who regarded the Reformation of the Church of England under Elizabeth as incomplete and sought to simplify and regulate forms of worship. A person with censorious moral beliefs, especially about pleasure and sex.