A Short History of the United States  by Edward Channing
page 19 of 450 (04%)
page 19 of 450 (04%)
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			of Florida and back to the West Indies. In 1521 he again visited 
			Florida, was wounded by an Indian arrow, and returned home to die. [Sidenote: Discovery of the Mississippi.] [Sidenote: Conquest of Mexico.] 12. Spanish Voyages and Conquests.--Spanish sailors and conquerors now appeared in quick succession on the northern and western shores of the Gulf of Mexico. One of them discovered the mouth of the Mississippi. Others of them stole Indians and carried them to the islands to work as slaves. The most famous of them all was Cortez. In 1519 he conquered Mexico after a thrilling campaign and found there great store of gold and silver. This discovery led to more expeditions and to the exploration of the southern half of the United States. [Sidenote: Coronado sets out from Mexico, 1540.] [Sidenote: The pueblo Indians. _Source Book_, 6.] 13. Coronado in the Southwest, 1540-42.--In 1540 Coronado set out from the Spanish towns on the Gulf of California to seek for more gold and silver. For seventy-three days he journeyed northward until he came to the pueblos (pweb'-lo) of the Southwest. These pueblos were huge buildings of stone and sun-dried clay. Some of them were large enough to shelter three hundred Indian families. Pueblos are still to be seen in Arizona and New Mexico, and the Indians living in them even to this day tell stories of Coronado's coming and of his cruelty. There was hardly any gold and silver in these "cities," so a great grief fell upon Coronado and his comrades.  | 
		
			
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