When Columbus set out west, he was seeking a new, faster route to Asia. He did discover an important route to somewhere. While the route to the Americas was not a quicker way to Asia, as Columbus had presumed, its now established course would undoubtedly change the world forever. The unexpected discovery of a course to the Americas opened trade unimaginable to Columbus' contemporary Europe. Many new spices, foods, and animals were introduced to Europe as a result of what Columbus and previous Vikings discovered by sailing west. This is one of the reasons colonies were established in the Americas. As royal families were introduced to these new experiences, like potatoes and sugar, they funded explorers, such as Columbus, to make new discoveries and claim land as unrightfully theirs.
A new experience was not the only thing that caused the establishment of new colonies. Another was people who sought after religious freedom, such as the Quakers. In England, the Religious Society of Friends faced persecution because they desired to practice their own denomination of Christian faith. Because of their local government's oppression towards their society, they fled west, where they dreamed of practicing their own religion without opposition. When they arrived, what they aspired eventually became reality. Roger Williams, who founded Rhode Island, and William Penn, who founded Pennsylvania, both created colonies that allowed religious freedom.
Ambitions of wealth and greed were other reasons for colonial establishment in the Americas. Countries not only wished to claim land, but also desired gold and silver. Spanish conquests