"We have now several towns where the Christian Indians reside... They have some rule and government established among themselves; they choose their own rulers and officers... They have also schools for their children to learn to read and write in their own language and in English... Yet, despite these signs of civility, many of our English neighbors remain suspicious of them, believing their conversion to be a mere pretense to secure their lands, while others look with greed upon the very fields these Indians have cultivated."
—Daniel Gookin, Superintendent of the Indians in Massachusetts, *Historical Collections of the Indians in New England*, 1674
The developments described in the excerpt most directly reflect which of the following historical trends in the seventeenth-century British colonies?
- AThe formal implementation of the encomienda system by British authorities to organize agricultural labor
- BThe reliance of southern plantation economies on Native American labor to cultivate cash crops
- The tension between English colonists' desire for land and efforts to culturally assimilate Native American populationsCevap
- DA uniform response by all Native American groups in New England to completely reject European cultural practices