Early Explorers
Mississippi River From Pike's Peak
Map of Western North America, ca. 1790
Europeans Come to Iowa
Influence of European Culture
Conflict Between Cultures
European Explorers Meet Early Iowans
Spanish Meet Indians
French and Early Iowans
Early French Explorers Visit Iowa
Explorers Meet Iowa Natives
La Salle Claims Land for France
Dubuque Seeks Opportunity
![]()
You will need a program capable of playing Microsoft Silverlight files to view this video.
Download Microsoft Silverlight for free at www.microsoft.com.

European Explorers Meet Early Iowans
This video player uses Microsoft Silverlight.
Time Frame: Early 1500's
The first European explorers met the native Indians and learned from them in the early 1500s.
Transcript
This is the land between two rivers: the Might Mississippi and the Missouri. Land that Indians called their home for thousands of years, we now call Iowa. They were not a single unified nation, but a race of many nations and many languages. When the first European explores landed on this continent they were viewed with a mixture of curiosity and friendship by the natives. The first Europeans called these people Indians for they believed they had landed in the East Indies. The Indians gladly shared the land with the white man and taught them how to live in the new land; to raise corn, beans and tobacco, and how to build birch-bark canoes. The early white settlers, learned well from their red brothers, soon sent word back across the waters to their motherland of the new land they had found.
Iowa Pathways: Iowa History Resources for Students and Teachers
Home ~ My Path ~ Artifacts ~ Timeline ~ Quest ~ Teacher Resources ~ Project Information ~ SponsorsIowa Pathways © 2005 - 2013 Iowa Public Television





