When the Europeans invaded the New World in 1492, they brought their culture and lifestyle. Europeans are not ready to meet previously developed cultures, this is the home of the Indians. As soon as Christopher Columbus discovered the new world, the Europeans formed a negative stereotypes of Indians as savage and barbaans soon sticky. These negative stereotypes believed Europeans to believe that the Indians are almost not human beings (Axtell, Invasion 302) believed that "civilized individuals do not want to become Indian".
By the time of the American Revolution, about 5 million settlers lived in the new world. They pressed "civilization" against the land and its inhabitants, became ill, participated in the war and worked hard to gain foreign land. Anne and her husband's home mark the edge of the state of Virginia marked by the cutting edge of colonial westward, lawless. In 1774, the Governor of Virginia asked for the formation of militias crossing the border to resist Shawnee and Mingo Indian tribes. James Torotto and many other men joined. Immediately, 1,100 men started marching. And it leads them to cross the 160 - mile Appalachian Mountains. The last bloody battle takes the life of a trotter
When settlers began arriving in New England (around 1620) they were surprised to learn that the land was occupied by various indigenous peoples. Because the life of indigenous people in the 16th century was familiar to settlers and seemed primitive, they thought they were not as good as white Europeans. For example, tribes that maintain a good relationship with settlers often try to help them adapt to the new environment by providing advice on agricultural techniques. Because they think they are better, colonists rarely accept this advice and struggle as soon as possible. Broadly speaking, the belief that Caucasians are superior to other races has a major impact on the expansion of the territory, especially through the 19th century.