The decisive battle of the Tuscarora War. South Carolina's Colonel James Moore Jr. led a predominantly Native American force in a siege and assault on the Tuscarora's strongest fortification at Fort Neoheroka. An estimated 392 Tuscarora were killed and 392 enslaved. The battle effectively destroyed Tuscarora power in North Carolina; survivors fled north to join the Iroquois Confederacy as the Sixth Nation.
European colonization of North America accelerated after 1600, with England, France, Spain, and the Netherlands establishing competing settlements along the Atlantic coast, the St. Lawrence River, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Mississippi Valley. The first permanent English settlement at Jamestown, Virginia (1607) struggled with starvation and conflict; the Plymouth colony (1620) and the Massachusetts Bay Colony (1630) followed. By the mid-1700s, thirteen English colonies stretched along the Atlantic seaboard, governed through a mix of royal charters, proprietary grants, and elected assemblies. The colonial economy depended on tobacco in Virginia and Maryland, rice and indigo in the Carolinas, and maritime trade in New England — all increasingly reliant on enslaved African labor after 1619. Conflict with Indigenous peoples over land was continuous, punctuated by major wars including King Philip's War (1675–1676) in New England and the Yamasee War (1715–1717) in the South. The French and Indian War (1754–1763), part of the global Seven Years' War, ended French power in North America and left Britain deeply in debt — triggering the taxation disputes that would lead to revolution.
~392 Tuscarora killed; ~392 enslaved; significant Yamasee losses
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