The religious dissenters mainly moved to New England. Which was, arguably, at MOST a third of the major efforts of North American colonization, though they are often given way more historical attention than the remaining two-thirds. In large part due to Whig History and the need to decrease the importance of the South in the early founding stories in order to make it less sympathetic in the 19th century.
Meanwhile you had second sons and fortune seekers moving to Virginia and the Southern colonies en mass. Georgia was a penal colony. The mid-Atlantic colonies from New England to Maryland saw all kinds move in, from families to second sons, to British Catholics seeking religious freedom.
The Indian Wars in Virginia and in many of the rest of these places was actually a complex mess of shifting alliances that doesn't lead itself to a good clean "Indians Good, Europeans Bad" narrative. Further, the chain migration/invasion/displacement set off by the Beaver Wars ended up wiping out or displacing many tribes along the Appalachians that were there when the colonists arrived and not there a generation or two later and they had nothing to do with them getting wiped out* but rather it was Native American in-fighting (which again, doesn't fit the narrative people like to tell about British colonization).
Also, at Scotty pointed out, pretty much everywhere save Maryland was colonized by "Protestants" and there were massive regional differences in how Indians were treated between New England, the Mid-Atlantic, and the South.
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* You can make the argument that European colonialism triggered the Beaver Wars, but not BRITISH Colonialism. It was triggered by some native tribes north of the Great Lakes seeking to monopolize the lucrative Beaver Fur and Pelt trade with the French, who, in order to secure that trade, drove out all competing tribes. The tribes then displaced south started a chain of invasion/displacements that echoed down the entire Appalachian mountains. The Beaver Wars are generally not talked about because they entirely EXPLODE the myth of "noble savage" as the wars were almost entirely motived by Native American greed and the Europeans had next to nothing to do with them aside from being the source of wealth being fought over.