3.4.6 - Quiz: The French, Dutch, and English Colonies Quiz

Social Studies 8 Q1 / 3. The Early Americas and European Settlement / 3.4. The French, Dutch, and English Colonies

France took the lead in colonizing the Upper Midwest region. From the early sixteenth century on, French soldiers, missionaries and fur traders left their slight mark upon the St. Lawrence valley, the upper Great Lakes and points west. For the early French explorers, the more continent they discovered the more their hopes were frustrated. They had hoped that the vast St. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway was part of a Northwest Passage to the wealth of the Orient. The French presence was asserted by a network of forts, trading posts and missions dotting the lake and river routes traversing the continental interior.

—Library of Congress

Question
Use the passage to answer the question.

Based on your text and this reading, why was land near water so important for French settlers?

(1 point)
Responses

Settlers relied on water routes for transportation.

Settlers used water routes to hunt for food.

Settlers depended on water from rivers and lakes for their crops.

Settlers continued to look for a Northwest Passage across the continent.

Settlers relied on water routes for transportation.

The passage states that French explorers hoped that the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes waterway was part of a Northwest Passage to the wealth of the Orient. Therefore, based on this information, the answer is: Settlers continued to look for a Northwest Passage across the continent.

Based on the passage, the correct answer is: Settlers relied on water routes for transportation.