Virginia Emigration and Immigration: Difference between revisions

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''{{VA-sidebar}}''[[United States Genealogy|United States]]&nbsp; [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[United States Emigration and Immigration|U.S. Emigration and Immigration]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[Virginia Genealogy|Virginia]]&nbsp; [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[Virginia_Emigration_and_Immigration|Emigration and Immigration]]''  
''{{VA-sidebar}}<br>''[[United States Genealogy|United States]]&nbsp; [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[United States Emigration and Immigration|U.S. Emigration and Immigration]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[Virginia Genealogy|Virginia]]&nbsp; [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]&nbsp; [[Virginia_Emigration_and_Immigration|Emigration and Immigration]]''  


The original European settlers came in the early 17th century from the midland and southern counties of [[England Genealogy|England]].<ref>David Hackett Fischer, ''Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989). {{FHL|593285|item|disp=FHL Book 973 H2fis}}.</ref> They first settled in [[Virginia Genealogy|Virginia]]'s tidewater (coastal plain). Many colonists had connections to [[Barbados Genealogy|Barbados]].<ref>David L. Kent, ''Barbados and America'' (Arlington, Va.: C.M. Kent, 1980). {{FHL|316574|item|disp=FHL Book 972.981 X2b}}.</ref> Although the first blacks arrived in 1619, large numbers of [[Virginia African Americans|blacks]] were imported beginning about 1680. It has been estimated that 75% of white colonists arrived in bondage as indentured servants or transported convicts.<ref>Wesley Frank Craven, ''White, Red, and Black: The Seventeenth-Century Virginian'' (Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, 1971).</ref> Small landholders moved westward to the Piedmont, where they were joined by a new wave of English and [[Scotland|Scottish]] immigrants.  
The original European settlers came in the early 17th century from the midland and southern counties of [[England Genealogy|England]].<ref>David Hackett Fischer, ''Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989). {{FHL|593285|item|disp=FHL Book 973 H2fis}}.</ref> They first settled in [[Virginia Genealogy|Virginia]]'s tidewater (coastal plain). Many colonists had connections to [[Barbados Genealogy|Barbados]].<ref>David L. Kent, ''Barbados and America'' (Arlington, Va.: C.M. Kent, 1980). {{FHL|316574|item|disp=FHL Book 972.981 X2b}}.</ref> Although the first blacks arrived in 1619, large numbers of [[Virginia African Americans|blacks]] were imported beginning about 1680. It has been estimated that 75% of white colonists arrived in bondage as indentured servants or transported convicts.<ref>Wesley Frank Craven, ''White, Red, and Black: The Seventeenth-Century Virginian'' (Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, 1971).</ref> Small landholders moved westward to the Piedmont, where they were joined by a new wave of English and [[Scotland|Scottish]] immigrants.  
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