| HENGIST | Leader, with brother Horsa, of the first Jutish settlers in Britain |
| HORSA | Leader, with his brother Hengist, of the first Jutish settlers in Britain |
| ACADIAN | Any of the early French settlers in Nova Scotia, many of whom were deported to Louisiana in the 18th century |
| SEATTLE | Largest city of America's Pacific Northwest, founded by European settlers in 1851 (7) |
| DUNEDIN | City in New Zealand founded by Scottish settlers in 1848 (7) |
| NORMANS | Viking settlers in France (7) |
| TEATREE | Aromatic plant from which early settlers in Australia prepared a beverage (3-4) |
| BICARBS | Stomach settlers, in brief |
| VORTIGERN | Semi-legendary king of the Britons who enlisted the aid of Hengist and Horsa to protect his land against the Picts and Scots (9) |
| SAXONS | Early settlers in Britain |
| UKRAINE | Country of origin of a large group of Eastern European settlers in 1 across after WWII (7) |
| JUTES | Settlers in southern Britain in the late 4th century |
| SAXON | Number 10, when backing a settler in Britain (5) |
| PILGRIMFATHERS | Puritanical settlers in terrible plight fire arms (7,7) |
| JAMESTOWN | Sky 1 drama about the first female settlers in America (9) |
| AGHAST | Earliest of settlers in a mountain range in India, speechless (6) |
| WAGONTRAIN | A convoy of covered horse-drawn vehicles used by settlers in the U.S. (5,5) |
| MAORI | Migrant settlers in New Zealand who developed a rich culture before the arrival of Europeans (5) |
| LUSAKA | Capital of Zambia, founded by European settlers in 1905 (6) |
| EMIGRANTS | In German, it's translated as settlers in another land (9) |