The history of Native American has spanned two continents for tens of thousands of years. This is a diverse and dynamic cultural story that creates complex economic relationships and complex political alliances. Through all of these, the relationship between indigenous peoples and land is still a central theme. Known as the New England area today, the Native American has similar languages and cultures known as East Algonquin, but they are not political or social groups. Instead, they contain many subgroups.
When Europeans came to the Americas, they used One Pam as a fund to deal with New England and New York's indigenous peoples. One Pam was a legal currency of New England from 1637 to 1661; it continued as New York's currency until 1673, eight white or four black one-pambs equals the speed of the cheat, white is the same value as the coin It had. New Jersey's colonial government issued a notice to set the interest rate from 6 white or 3 blacks to 1 penny; the announcement also applies to Delaware. Black shells are rarer than white shells, so its value is high, it is worth whitening black shells and making them thinner.
There was a tension between the Puritans and indigenous peoples who dominated southern New England. Puritan continued to expand the settlements, the relationship became worse as the regional life became increasingly confusing in European way. These tensions led to the war of King Philippe (1675-1676), a large-scale regional conflict that was almost successful in kicking out England from New England. When Puritan began in the 1620s and the 1630s, the local Algonquin was looking at them as a potential alliance of conflicts that had been brewed among competing indigenous peoples. In 1621, Wampanoag led by MassaSight reached a peace treaty with pilgrims of Plymouth. In the 1760 's, Massachusetts and Purimus' Puritan recently expanded his request for southern New England, opposing Pequot, and an alliance with the people of Narragansett and Mohegan.
Like their Spanish and French Catholic opponents, the British Puritans in the United States took measures to convert indigenous people to their Christian version. New England-led Puritan missionary John Elliott lives in a "prayer town" established by the British authorities for conversion of the Indians, so that Massachusetts local residents use Puritans to emphasize the centrality of the Bible I urged. With Protestant focusing on reading the Bible, he translated the Bible into local Algonquin and published his work in 1663. Through his efforts Elliott hopes that some local residents in New England will become missionaries.