Only a few of the former officers thought that the settlers should continue to be treated as convicts.
Businesses and settlers continued to follow, and the town was incorporated May 31, 1910.
Throughout 1840s and the 1850s settlers continued to come to Ann Arbor.
The law was not enforced and settlers continued to encroach upon tribal lands.
Meanwhile, other settlers continued to occupy this region, where a small settlement persisted through the decades.
The settlements began until around 1740s as the dispute between the proprietors and the settlers continued.
After the war, development resumed and settlers continued to arrive.
Jewish settlers to these areas retain their citizenship, and can continue to vote.
More English settlers continued to arrive and by 1650 some 20,000 people had settled on the island.
During the five-year peace, some settlers continued to call for removal.