When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Pennsylvania

    History of Pennsylvania. The Birth of Pennsylvania, a portrait of William Penn (standing with document in hand), who founded the Province of Pennsylvania in 1681 as a refuge for Quakers after receiving a royal deed to it from King Charles II. The history of Pennsylvania stems back thousands of years when the first indigenous peoples occupied ...

  3. History of Hispanic and Latino Americans in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Hispanic_and...

    The history of Hispanics and Latinos in the United States is wide-ranging, spanning more than four hundred years of American colonial and post-colonial history. Hispanics (whether criollo, mulatto, afro-mestizo or mestizo) became the first American citizens in the newly acquired Southwest territory after the Mexican–American War, and remained ...

  4. History of the Jews in Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in...

    Jews settled there when the city was still called Harrison or Slocum's Hollow, the present name having been given to the city about 1850. The first Jew to hold public office was Joseph Rosenthal, who was Scranton's first, and for a long time its only, policeman. This was in 1860, when the population numbered but 8,500.

  5. Susquehannock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susquehannock

    The Susquehannock, also known as the Conestoga, Minquas, and Andaste, were an Iroquoian people who lived in the lower Susquehanna River watershed in what is now Pennsylvania. Their name means “people of the muddy river.”. The Susquehannock were first described by John Smith, who explored the upper reaches of Chesapeake Bay in 1608.

  6. Penn's Creek massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penn's_Creek_massacre

    The Penn's Creek massacre was an October 16, 1755 raid by Lenape (Delaware) Native Americans on a settlement along Penn's Creek, [n 1] a tributary of the Susquehanna River in central Pennsylvania. It was the first of a series of deadly raids on Pennsylvania settlements by Native Americans allied with the French in the French and Indian War.

  7. Juan Garrido - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Garrido

    Hernan Cortés. Juan Garrido (c. 1480 [1] – c. 1550 [2]) was an Afro-Spaniard conquistador known as the first documented black person in what would become the United States. Born in West Africa, he went to Portugal as a young man. In converting to Catholicism, he chose the Spanish name Juan Garrido. Juan Garrido joined a Spanish expedition ...

  8. Northkill Amish Settlement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northkill_Amish_Settlement

    Coordinates: 40.51206°N 76.11954°W. Northkill Amish. The Northkill Amish Settlement was established in 1740 in Berks County, Pennsylvania. As the first identifiable Amish community in the new world, [1] it was the foundation of Amish settlement in the Americas. By the 1780s it had become the largest Amish settlement, but declined as families ...

  9. History of Pittsburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Pittsburgh

    The history of Pittsburgh began with centuries of Native American civilization in the modern Pittsburgh region, known as Jaödeogë’ in the Seneca language. [1] Eventually, European explorers encountered the strategic confluence where the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers meet to form the Ohio, which leads to the Mississippi River.