"The Coming of the First White Man" - Research Article from Colonial America Reference Library

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 10 pages of information about "The Coming of the First White Man".

"The Coming of the First White Man" - Research Article from Colonial America Reference Library

This encyclopedia article consists of approximately 10 pages of information about "The Coming of the First White Man".
This section contains 2,839 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the "The Coming of the First White Man" Encyclopedia Article

Told by George R. Betts and translated by Nora Dauenhauer

Reprinted in American Literature: A Prentice Hall Anthology

Published in 1987

"Next/They told everything./After that,/they all went out on their canoes./This was the very first time the white man came ashore,/through Lituya Bay;"

According to some scholars, native peoples arrived in North America from Asia via the Bering Sea Land Bridge around 30,000 B.C. In about A.D. 986 the Thule Inuit in Greenland were the first Native Americans to come in contact with Europeans. Inuit hunters encountered the Norse (inhabitants of presentday Scandinavia; also called Vikings) expedition led by Eric the Red, who founded a settlement in Greenland. Inuit, Beothuk, and Micmac peoples are said to have met him and members of his party along the eastern coast...

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This section contains 2,839 words
(approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the "The Coming of the First White Man" Encyclopedia Article
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"The Coming of the First White Man" from UXL. ©2005-2006 by U•X•L. U•X•L is an imprint of Thomson Gale, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved.