In the St. Lawrence Valley a version was played in which the head took up two thirds of the stick.
It is the only windmill on the American side of the St. Lawrence Valley.
It would have been at least as hard for the English to move north and attack the St. Lawrence Valley.
By the end of the 17th century, a census showed that around 10,000 French settlers were farming along the lower St. Lawrence Valley.
By the late 16th century, they had disappeared from the St. Lawrence Valley.
The Iroquois by then used the St. Lawrence Valley as a hunting ground.
Each Iroquois village was required to send two members of a leading family to live among in the St. Lawrence Valley.
He was known for painting watercolour landscapes of the St. Lawrence Valley.
He travelled around the St. Lawrence Valley by bicycle.
In the mid- to late-16th century, the St. Lawrence Valley was likely an area of open conflict among tribes closer to the river.