The Mohawk, a tributary of the Hudson River, begins southwest of the Adirondack Mountains, near Rome NY in western New York state, nearly as far west as Oneida Lake (southeast of Lake Ontario). In 1825, it was connected to Lake Erie (even farther west) by the Erie Canal.
The river actually begins as two branches about 10 miles north of Rome, near Beartown and Mohawk Hill, and now flows into the manmade Delta Reservoir.
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the answer is: Mississippi river. and your welcome!
he travled to find the land of gold but instead found pearls and indians
In the far north of England - not too far from Hadrian's Wall or Scotland. Up the A1 road as far as 'Scotch Corner' then travel north-west. So not as far north as Newcastle.
Henry Kelsey went south and west of Hudson Bay and got as far as the Saskatchewan River.
The rivers of New York allowed settlers to go far inland. The Hudson River allowed settlement far north of the Albany area and the Mohawk River allowed settlement throughout western New York to the shores of the Great Lakes.