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History of Jamestown, Virginia (1607–1699)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the National Historic Site, seeHistoric Jamestown. For the adjacent living history museum, seeJamestown Settlement. For later history and commemorations, seeJamestown, Virginia § Aftermath and preservation.
The James Fortc. 1608 as depicted on the map by Pedro de Zúñiga

Jamestown, also known asJamestowne, was the first settlement of theVirginia Colony, founded in 1607, and the capital of Virginia until 1699 when the seat of government was moved toWilliamsburg.

Arrival and first landing

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Reenactment of the first landing on the 400th anniversary as part of theJamestown 2007 commemoration
See also:Timeline of Jamestown, Virginia;European colonization of the Americas; andList of Jamestown colonists

TheLondon Company sent an expedition to establish a settlement in theVirginia Colony in December 1606. The expedition consisted of three ships,Susan Constant (the largest ship, sometimes known asSarah Constant,Christopher Newport captain and in command of the group),Godspeed (Bartholomew Gosnold captain), andDiscovery (the smallest ship,John Ratcliffe captain). The ships leftBlackwall, now part of London, with 105 men and boys and 39 crew members.[1][2]

By April 6, 1607,Godspeed,Susan Constant, andDiscovery arrived at the Spanish colony ofPuerto Rico, where they stopped for provisions before continuing their journey. By the end of April, the expedition reached the southern edge of the mouth of what is now known as theChesapeake Bay. After an unusually long journey of more than four months, the 104 men and boys (one passenger of the original 105 died during the journey) arrived at their chosen settlement spot in Virginia.[3] There were no women on the first ships.[4]

They named the Virginia capes after the sons of their king, the northernCape Henry, forHenry Frederick, Prince of Wales, and the northernCape Charles, for his younger brother,Charles, Duke of York. On April 67 upon landing at Cape Henry, they set up a cross near the site of the currentCape Henry Memorial, and ChaplainRobert Hunt made the following declaration:

We do hereby dedicate this Land, and ourselves, to reach the People within these shores with the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to raise up Godly generations after us, and with these generations take the Kingdom of God to all the earth. May this Covenant of Dedication remain to all generations, as long as this earth remains. May all who see this Cross, remember what we have done here, and may those who come here to inhabit join us in this Covenant and in this most noble work that the Holy Scriptures may be fulfilled.

This site came to be known as the "first landing." A party of the men explored the area and had a minor conflict with some Virginia Indians.[5]

Exploration, seeking a site

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Map tracing the routes taken by theGodspeed,Susan Constant, andDiscovery, and commemorating their stopping inPuerto Rico from April 5–10, 1607 on their way to Virginia
History of Virginia
A new map of Virginia from the best authorities, 1761
flagVirginia portal

After the expedition arrived in what is now Virginia, sealed orders from the Virginia Company of London were opened. The orders named CaptainJohn Smith as a member of the governing council. He had been arrested for mutiny during the voyage and was incarcerated aboard one of the ships. He had been scheduled to be hanged upon arrival but was freed by Captain Newport after the opening of the orders. The same orders also directed the expedition to seek an inland site for their settlement, which would afford protection from enemy ships.

Obedient to their orders, the settlers and crew members reboarded their three ships and proceeded into Chesapeake Bay. They landed again at what is now calledOld Point Comfort inHampton. In the following days, seeking a suitable location for their settlement, the ships ventured upstream along theJames River. Both the James River and the settlement they sought to establish,Jamestown (originally called "James His Towne") were named in honor ofKing James I.

Selection of Jamestown

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On May 14, the colonists choseJamestown Island for their settlement largely because the Virginia Company advised them to select a location that could be easily defended from attacks by other European states that were also establishingNew World colonies and were periodically at war with England, notably theDutch Republic,France, andSpain.

The island fit the criteria as it had excellent visibility up and down the James River, and it was far enough inland to minimize the potential of contact and conflict with enemy ships. The water immediately adjacent to the land was deep enough to permit the colonists to anchor their ships, yet have an easy and quick departure if necessary. An additional benefit of the site was that the land was not occupied by theVirginia Indians, most of whom were affiliated with thePowhatan Confederacy. Largely cut off from the mainland, the shallow harbor afforded the earliest settlers docking of their ships. This was its greatest attraction, but it also created a number of challenging problems for the settlers.

Original council

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King James I had outlined the members of the council to govern the settlement in the sealed orders which leftLondon with the colonists in 1606.[6]

Those named for the initial council were:

Early settlement

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Construction of the fort

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The settlers came ashore and quickly set about constructing their initial fort. Many of the settlers who came over on the initial three ships were not well-equipped for the life they found in Jamestown. A number of the original settlers were upper-class gentlemen who were not accustomed to manual labor; the group included very few farmers or skilled laborers.[7] Also notable among the first settlers wasRobert Hunt,chaplain who gave the first Christian prayer at Cape Henry on April 26, 1607, and held open-air services at Jamestown until achurch was built there.

Despite the immediate area of Jamestown being uninhabited, the settlers were attacked less than two weeks after their arrival on May 14 byPaspahegh Indians who succeeded in killing one of the settlers and wounding eleven more. Within a month, James Fort covered an acre on Jamestown Island. By June 15, the settlers finished building the triangular James Fort. The wooden palisaded walls formed a triangle around a storehouse, church, and several houses. A week later, Newport sailed back for London onSusan Constant with a load ofpyrite ("fools' gold") and other supposedly precious minerals, leaving behind 104 colonists andDiscovery.

It soon became apparent why the Virginia Indians did not occupy the site: Jamestown Island, then a peninsula, is a swampy area, and its isolation from the mainland meant that there was limited hunting available, as most game animals require large foraging areas. The settlers quickly hunted and killed off all the large and smaller game animals that were found on the tiny peninsula. In addition, the low, marshy area was infested with airborne pests, including mosquitoes which carriedmalaria, and thebrackish water of the tidal James River was not a good source of water. Over 135 settlers died from malaria, and drinking the salinated and contaminated water caused more deaths fromsalt poisoning, fevers, anddysentery. Despite their original intentions to grow food and trade with the Virginia Indians, the barely surviving colonists became dependent upon supply missions.

First supply

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Main article:Jamestown supply missions § First supply mission

Newport returned twice from England with additional supplies in the following 18 months, leading what were termed the first and second supply missions. The "first supply" arrived on January 2, 1608. It contained insufficient provisions and more than 70 new colonists.[8] Shortly after its arrival, the fort burned down.[9] The council received additional members.

Second supply

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Main article:Second Supply
Working reconstruction of theJamestown Glasshouse atHistoric Jamestowne, located next to the ruins of the original glassworks constructed in 1608 by settlers from the Second Supply

On October 1, 1608, 70 additional settlers arrived aboard theMary and Margaret with the second supply, following a journey of approximately three months. Colonists on the ship includedThomas Graves,Thomas Forrest, Esq and "Mistress Forrest andAnne Burras her maide". Mistress Forrest and Anne Burras were the first two women known to have come to the Jamestown Colony. Remains unearthed at Jamestown in 1997 may be those of Mistress Forrest.[10]

Also included were the first non-English settlers. The company recruited these as skilled craftsmen and industry specialists: soap-ash, glass, lumber milling (wainscot, clapboard, and 'deal' — planks, especially soft wood planks) and naval stores (pitch, turpentine, and tar).[11][12][13][14][15][16] Among these additional settlers were eight "Dutch-men" (consisting of unnamed craftsmen and three who were probably the wood-mill-men — Adam, Franz and Samuel) "Dutch-men" (probably meaningGerman or German-speakers),[17]Polish andSlovak craftsmen,[11][12][13][14][15][16] who had been hired by the Virginia Company of London's leaders to help develop and manufacture profitable export products. There has been debate about the nationality of the specific craftsmen, and both the Germans and Poles claim the glassmaker for one of their own, but the evidence is insufficient.[18] Ethnicity is further complicated by the fact that the German minority in Royal Prussia lived under Polish control during this period. Originally, the colony's Polish craftsmen were barred from participating in the elections, but after the craftsmen refused to work, colonial leadership agreed to enfranchise them.[19] These workers staged thefirst recorded strike in Colonial America for the right to vote in the colony's 1619 election.

William Volday (Wilhelm Waldi), a Swiss German mineral prospector, was among those who arrived in 1608. His mission was seeking a silver reservoir that was believed to be within the proximity of Jamestown.[20] Some of the settlers were artisans who built a glass furnace which became the first proto-factory in British North America. Additional craftsmen produced soap, pitch, and wood building supplies. Among all of these were the first made-in-America products to be exported to Europe.[21] However, despite all these efforts, profits from exports were not sufficient to meet the expenses and expectations of the investors back in England, and no silver or gold had been discovered, as earlier hoped.

Ongoing struggles

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Engraving depicting Capt. John Smith

Smith's role

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John Smith's map of Virginia, ca. 1609

In the months before becoming president of the colony for a year in September 1608, Smith did considerable exploration up the Chesapeake Bay and along the various rivers. He is credited by legend with namingStingray Point (near present-dayDeltaville inMiddlesex County) for an incident there. Smith was always seeking a supply of food for the colonists, and he successfully traded for food with theNansemond Indians, who lived along theNansemond River near the modern-daySuffolk, and several other groups. However, while leading one food-gathering expedition in December 1607 (before his term as colony president), this time up theChickahominy River west of Jamestown, his men were set upon by thePowhatan. As his party was being slaughtered around him, Smith strapped his Native guide in front of him as a shield and escaped with his life but was captured byOpechancanough, the Powhatan chief's half-brother. Smith gave him a compass which pleased the warrior and made him decide to let Smith live.

Smith was taken before Wahunsunacock, who was commonly referred to asChief Powhatan, at thePowhatan Confederacy's seat of government atWerowocomoco on theYork River. However, 17 years later, in 1624, Smith first related that when the chief decided to execute him, this course of action was stopped by the pleas of Chief Powhatan's young daughter,Pocahontas, who was originally named "Matoaka" but whose nickname meant "Playful Mischief". Many historians today find this account dubious, especially as it was omitted in all his previous versions. Smith returned to Jamestown just in time for the first supply in January 1608.

In September 1609, Smith was wounded in an accident. He was walking with his gun in the river, and the powder was in a pouch on his belt. His powder bag exploded. In October, he was sent back to England for medical treatment. While back in England, Smith wroteA True Relation andThe Proceedings of the English Colony of Virginia about his experiences in Jamestown. These books, whose accuracy has been questioned by some historians due to some extent by Smith's boastful prose, were to generate public interest and new investment for the colony.

Virginia Company of London's unrealistic expectations

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The investors of the Virginia Company of London expected to reap rewards from their speculative investments. With the second supply, they expressed their frustrations and made demands upon the leaders of Jamestown in written form. It fell to the third president of the council to deliver a reply. By this time, Wingfield and Ratcliffe had been replaced by Smith. Ever bold, Smith delivered what must have been a wake-up call to the investors in London. In what has been termed "Smith's Rude Answer", he composed a letter, writing (in part):

When you send again I entreat you rather send but thirty Carpenters, husbandmen, gardiners, fishermen, blacksmiths, masons and diggers up of trees, roots, well provided; than a thousand of such awe have: for except wee be able both to lodge them and feed them, the most will consume with want of necessaries before they can be made good for anything.[6]

Smith did begin his letter with something of an apology, saying "I humbly intreat your Pardons if I offend you with my rude Answer...",[22] although at the time, the word 'rude' was acknowledged to mean 'unfinished' or 'rural', in the same way modern English uses 'rustic'. There are strong indications that those in London comprehended and embraced Smith's message. Their third supply mission was by far the largest and best equipped. They even had a new purpose-built flagship constructed,Sea Venture, placed in the most experienced of hands,Christopher Newport. With a fleet of no fewer than eight ships, the third supply, led bySea Venture, leftPlymouth in June 1609.

Pocahontas

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Depiction of Pocahontas in European garb

Although the life of Chief Powhatan's young daughter, Pocahontas, would be largely tied to the English after legend credits her with saving Smith's life after his capture by Opechancanough, her contacts with Smith were minimal. However, records indicate that she became something of an emissary to the colonists at Jamestown Island. During their first winter, following an almost complete destruction of their fort by a fire in January 1608, Pocahontas brought food and clothing to the colonists. She later negotiated with Smith for the release of Virginia Indians who had been captured by the colonists during a raid to gain English weaponry.

During the next several years, the relationship between the Virginia Indians and the colonists became more strained, never more so than during the period of poor crops for both the natives and colonists which became known as theStarving Time in late 1609 and early 1610. Chief Powhatan relocated his principal capital from Werowocomoco, which was relatively close to Jamestown along the north shore of the York River, to a point more inland and secure along the upper reaches of the Chickahominy River.

In April 1613, Pocahontas and her husband, Kocoum were residing atPassapatanzy, a village of thePatawomecks, a Powhatan Confederacy tribe which did some trading with Powhatans[citation needed]. They lived in present-dayStafford County on thePotomac River nearFredericksburg, about 65 miles (105 km) from Werowocomoco[citation needed]. She was abducted by Englishmen whose leader wasSamuel Argall and transported about 90 miles (140 km) south to the English settlement atHenricus on the James River. There, Pocahontas converted to Christianity and took the name "Rebecca" under the tutelage of ReverendAlexander Whitaker who had arrived in Jamestown in 1611.

She married prominent planterJohn Rolfe who had lost his first wife and child in the journey from England several years earlier, which served to greatly improve relations between the Virginia Native Americans and the colonists for several years. However, when she and Rolfe took their young sonThomas Rolfe on a public relations trip to England to help raise more investment money for the Virginia Company, she became ill and died just as they were leaving to return to Virginia. Her interment was atSt George's Church inGravesend.

Starving Time

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What became known as the "Starving Time" in the Virginia Colony occurred during the winter of 1609–10, when only 60 of 500 English colonists survived.[23][24][25] The colonists had never planned to grow all of their own food. Instead, their plans depended upon trade with the local Virginia Indians to supply them with enough food between the arrival of periodic supply ships from England, upon which they also relied. This period of extreme hardship for the colonists began in 1609 with a drought which caused their already limited farming activities to produce even fewer crops than usual. Then, there were problems with both of their other sources for food. An unexpected delay occurred during the Virginia Company of London's third supply mission from England, so much-needed food and supplies were unavailable for the winter.

After Smith left for England to tend to his injuries, Chief Powhatan severely curtailed trading with the colonists for food. Instead, the Powhatans used the prospect of trading for corn to betray an expedition led by Smith's successor, John Ratcliffe.[26] Ratcliffe was lured by the prospect of food but was kidnapped, tortured, and murdered by the Powhatans.[27] Neither the missingSea Venture nor any other supply ship arrived as winter set upon the inhabitants of the young colony in late 1609.

Third supply

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Sylvester Jordain'sA Discovery of the Barmudas

Leaving England in 1609, Vice-AdmiralChristopher Newport was in charge of a nine-vessel fleet. Aboard the flagshipSea Venture was the Admiral of the company,George Somers,Lieutenant-GeneralThomas Gates,William Strachey and other notable personages in the early history of English colonization in North America.

While at sea, the fleet encountered a strong storm, perhaps a hurricane, which lasted for three days.Sea Venture and one other ship were separated from the seven other vessels of the fleet.Sea Venture was deliberately driven onto the reefs ofBermuda to prevent her sinking. The 150 passengers and crew members were all landed safely, but the ship was permanently damaged.[28]Sea Venture's longboat was later fitted with a mast and sent to find Virginia, but it and its crew were never seen again. The remaining survivors spent nine months on Bermuda building two smaller ships,Deliverance andPatience, fromBermuda cedar and materials salvaged fromSea Venture.

The survivors of the shipwreck ofSea Venture finally arrived at Jamestown the following May 23, 1610. They found the Virginia Colony in ruins and practically abandoned: of 500 settlers who had preceded them to Jamestown, they found fewer than 100 survivors, many of whom were sick or dying. Worse yet, the Bermuda survivors had brought few supplies and only a small amount of food with them, expecting to find a thriving colony at Jamestown.

Thus, even with the arrival of the two small ships from Bermuda under Newport, they were faced with leaving Jamestown and returning to England. On June 7, having abandoned the fort and many of their possessions, both groups of survivors (from Jamestown and Bermuda) boarded ships, and they all set sail down the James River toward the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.

Lord De La Warr

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See also:Jamestown supply missions § "Fourth" supply mission

During the same period thatSea Venture suffered its misfortune and its survivors were struggling in Bermuda to continue on to Virginia, back in England, the publication of Captain John Smith's books of his adventures in Virginia sparked a resurgence in interest in the colony. This helped lead to the dispatch in early 1610 of additional colonists, more supplies, and a new governor,Thomas West, Baron De La Warr. Fortuitously, on June 9, 1610, De La Warr arrived on the James River just as the settlers had abandoned Jamestown. Intercepting them about 10 miles (16 km) downstream from Jamestown nearMulberry Island (adjacent to present-dayFort Eustis in Newport News), the new governor forced the remaining 90 settlers to return.Deliverance andPatience turned back, and all the settlers were landed again at Jamestown.[29] With the new supply mission, the De La Warr brought additional colonists, a doctor, food, and much-needed supplies. De La Warr proved to be a new kind of leader for Virginia.

Somers returned to Bermuda withPatience to obtain more food supplies, but he died on the island that summer. His nephew, Matthew Somers, captain ofPatience, took the ship back toLyme Regis, England instead of Virginia (leaving a third man behind). TheThird Charter of the Virginia Company was then extended far enough across the Atlantic to include Bermuda in 1612. (Although a separate company, theSomers Isles Company, would bespun off to administer Bermuda from 1615, the first two successful English colonies would retain close ties for many more generations, as was demonstrated when Virginian generalGeorge Washington called upon the people of Bermuda for aid during theAmerican War of Independence). In 1613,Thomas Dale founded the settlement ofBermuda Hundred on the James River, which, a year later, became the firstincorporated town in Virginia.

Expansion beyond Jamestown

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By 1611, a majority of the colonists who had arrived at the Jamestown settlement had died, and its economic value was negligible with no active exports to England and very little internal economic activity. Only financial incentives to investors financing the new colony, including a promise of more land to the west fromKing James I, kept the project afloat.

First Anglo-Powhatan War

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Main article:First Anglo-Powhatan War

TheAnglo-Powhatan Wars were three wars fought between English settlers of the Virginia Colony, and Indians of the Powhatan Confederacy in the early seventeenth century. The First War started in 1610, and ended in a peace settlement in 1614.

Tobacco

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Cultivation of tobacco at Jamestown (19th century engraving)

In 1610,John Rolfe, whose wife and a child had died in Bermuda during passage in the third supply to Virginia, was just one of the settlers who had arrived in Jamestown following the shipwreck ofSea Venture. Rolfe was the first man to successfully raiseexporttobacco in the colony (although the colonists had begun to make glass artifacts to export immediately after their arrival). The native tobacco raised in Virginia prior to that time,Nicotiana rustica, was not to the liking of the Europeans, but Rolfe had brought some seed ofNicotiana tabacum with him from Bermuda. Although most people "wouldn't touch" the crop, Rolfe was able to make his fortune farming it, successfully exporting beginning in 1612. Soon almost all other colonists followed suit, as windfall profits in tobacco briefly lent Jamestown something like a gold rush atmosphere.

Governor Dale, Dale's Code

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In 1611, the Virginia Company of London sentThomas Dale to act as deputy-governor or ashigh marshall for the Virginia Colony under the authority of Lord De La Warr. He arrived at Jamestown on May 19 with three ships, additional men, cattle, and provisions. Finding the conditions unhealthy and greatly in need of improvement, he immediately called for a meeting of the Jamestown Council and established crews to rebuild Jamestown.

He served as governor for 3 months in 1611 and again for a two-year period between 1614 and 1616. It was during his administration that the first code of laws of Virginia, nominally in force from 1611 to 1619, was effectively tested. This code, entitled "Articles, Lawes, and Orders Divine, Politique, and Martiall" (popularly known asDale's Code), was notable for its pitiless severity and seems to have been prepared in large part by Dale.

Henricus

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Seeking a better site than Jamestown with the thought of possibly relocating the capital, Dale sailed up the James to the area now known asChesterfield County. He was apparently impressed with the possibilities of the general area where theAppomattox River joins the James River, occupied by theAppomattoc Indians, and there are published references to the name "New Bermudas" although it apparently was never formalized. A short distance further up the James, in 1611 he began the construction of a progressive development at Henricus on and about what was later known asFarrar's Island. Henricus was envisioned as possible replacement capital for Jamestown, though it was eventually destroyed during theIndian massacre of 1622, during which a third of the colonists were killed.

An investor relations trip to England

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In 1616, Governor Dale joined Rolfe and Pocahontas and their young son Thomas as they left their Varina Farms plantation for a public relations mission to England, where Pocahontas was received and treated as a form of visiting royalty byQueen Anne. This stimulated more interest in investments in the Virginia Company, the desired effect. However, as the couple prepared to return to Virginia, Pocahontas died of an illness atGravesend on March 17, 1617, where she was buried. John Rolfe returned to Virginia alone once again, leaving their son in England to obtain an education.

Once back in Virginia, Rolfe marriedJane Pierce and continued to improve the quality of his tobacco with the result that by the time of his death in 1622, the colony was thriving as a producer of tobacco. Orphaned by the age of 8, young Thomas later returned to Virginia and settled across the James River not far from his parents' farm at Varina, where he married Jane Poythress and they had one daughter,Jane Rolfe, who was born in 1650. Many of theFirst Families of Virginia trace their lineage through Thomas Rolfe to both Pocahontas and John Rolfe, joining English and Virginia Indian heritage.

Changing social and political order

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See also:First Africans in Virginia andTobacco brides
The Inside of the currentJamestown Church, upon the general site of the original and the location where the first law in America was made

Virginia's population grew rapidly from 1618 until 1622, rising from a few hundred to nearly 1,400 people. Wheat was also grown in Virginia starting in 1618. TheGeneral Assembly, the first elected representative legislature in the New World, met in the choir of theJamestown Church from July 30 to August 4, 1619. This legislative body continues as today'sVirginia General Assembly.[30]

In August 1619,"20 and odd Negroes" arrived on a Dutchman-of-war ship at Point Comfort, several miles south of the Jamestown colony. This is the earliest record of Africans in colonial America.[31] These colonists werefreemen andindentured servants.[32][33][34][35] At this time the slave trade between Africa and the English colonies had not yet been established.

Records from 1623 and 1624 listed the African inhabitants of the colony as servants, not slaves. In the case ofWilliam Tucker, the first black person born in the colonies, freedom was his birthright.[36] He was son of "Antony and Isabell", a married couple from Angola who worked as indentured servants for Captain William Tucker whom he was named after. Yet, court records show that at least one African had been declared a slave by 1640;John Punch. He was an indentured servant who ran away along with two white indentured servants, and he was sentenced by the governing council to lifelong servitude. This action is what officially marked the institution of slavery in Jamestown and the future United States.

By 1620, more German settlers arrived fromHamburg, Germany, who were recruited by the Virginia Company set up and operated one of the first sawmills in the region.[37] Among the Germans were several other skilled craftsmencarpenters, and pitch/tar/soap-ash makers, who produced some of the colony's first exports of these products. The Italians included a team of glass makers.[38] On June 30, 1619,Slovak andPolish artisans conductedthe first labor strike in American history[39][19] fordemocratic rights[39][40] in Jamestown.[40][41][42][43] Theworkers were granted equalvoting rights on July 21, 1619.[44] Afterwards, the labor strike was ended, and the artisans resumed their work.[41][42][45][46]

During 1621 fifty-seven unmarried women sailed to Virginia under the auspices of the Virginia Company, who paid for their transport and provided them with a small bundle of clothing and other goods to take with them. A colonist who married one of the women would be responsible for repaying the Virginia Company for his wife's transport and provisions. The women traveled on three ships,The Marmaduke,The Warwick, andThe Tyger. Many of the women were not "maids" but widows. Some others were children, for example Priscilla, the eleven-year-old daughter of Joan and Thomas Palmer on theTyger. Some were women who were traveling with family or relatives: Ursula Clawson, "kinswoman" ofancient planterRichard Pace, traveled with Pace and his wife on theMarmaduke. There were a total of twelve unmarried women on theMarmaduke, one of whom was Ann Jackson, daughter of William Jackson of London. She joined her brother John Jackson who was already in Virginia, living at Martin's Hundred. Ann was one of nineteen women kidnapped by the Powhatans during the Indian massacre of 1622 and was not returned until 1628, when the council ordered her brother John to keep Ann in safety until she returned to England on the first available ship.[47] Some of the women sent to Virginia did marry. Most disappeared from the records—perhaps killed in the massacre, perhaps dead from other causes, perhaps returned to England. In other words, they shared the fate of most of their fellow colonists.[48]

Indian massacre of 1622

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Main article:Indian massacre of 1622
Indian massacre of 1622, depicted in a 1628 woodcut byMatthäus Merian out ofTheodore de Bry's workshop

The relations with the natives took a turn for the worse after the death of Pocahontas in England and the return of Rolfe and other colonial leaders in May 1617. Disease, poor harvests and the growing demand for tobacco lands caused hostilities to escalate. AfterWahunsunacock's death in 1618, his younger brother,Opitchapam, briefly became chief. However, he was soon succeeded by his own younger brother,Opechancanough. Opechancanough was not interested in attempting peaceful coexistence with the English settlers. Instead, he was determined to eradicate the colonists from Indian lands. As a result, another war between the two powers lasted from 1622 to 1632.

Chief Opechancanough organized and led a well-coordinated series of surprise attacks on multiple English settlements along both sides of a 50-mile (80 km) long stretch of the James River which took place early on the morning of March 22, 1622. This event resulted in the deaths of 347 colonists (including men, women, and children) and the abduction of many others. The massacre caught most of the Virginia Colony by surprise and virtually wiped out several entire communities, including Henricus andWolstenholme Towne atMartin's Hundred. A letter byRichard Frethorne, written in 1623, reports, "we live in fear of the enemy every hour."[49]

However, Jamestown was spared from destruction because an Indian boy namedChanco, after learning of the planned attacks from his brother, gave warning to colonist Richard Pace, with whom he lived. Pace, after securing himself and his neighbors on the south side of the James River, took a canoe across river to warn Jamestown, which narrowly escaped destruction, although there was no time to warn the other settlements. Apparently, Opechancanough subsequently was unaware of Chanco's actions, as the young man continued to serve as his courier for some time after.

Royal colony

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Some historians have noted that, as the settlers of the Virginia Colony were allowed some representative government, and they prospered, King James I was reluctant to lose either power or future financial potential. In any case, in 1624, the Virginia Company lost its charter, and Virginia became acrown colony. In 1634, the English Crown created eightshires which had a total population of approximately 5,000.James City Shire was established and included Jamestown. Around 1642–43, the name of the James City Shire was changed toJames City County.

New Town and palisade

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The original Jamestown fort seems to have existed into the middle of the 1620s, but as Jamestown grew into a "New Town" to the east, written references to the original fort disappear. By 1634, a palisade (stockade) was completed across theVirginia Peninsula, which was about 6 miles (9.7 km) wide at that point betweenQueen's Creek which fed into theYork River and Archer's Hope Creek, (since renamedCollege Creek) which fed into the James River. The palisade provided some security from attacks by the Virginia Indians for colonists farming and fishing lower on the peninsula from that point.

Third Anglo-Powhatan War

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Main article:Third Anglo-Powhatan War

On April 18, 1644, Opechancanough again tried to force the colonists to abandon the region with another series of coordinated attacks, killing almost 500 colonists. However, this was a much less devastating portion of the growing population than had been the case in the 1622 attacks. Furthermore, the forces of Royal Governor of VirginiaWilliam Berkeley captured Opechancanough in 1646,[50] variously thought to be between 90 and 100 years old. In October, while a prisoner, Opechancanough was killed by a soldier (shot in the back) assigned to guard him. Opechancanough was succeeded asweroance (chief) byNecotowance and then byTotopotomoi and later by his daughterCockacoeske.

In 1646, the first treaties were signed between the Virginia Indians and the English. The treaties set up reservations, some of the oldest in America, for the surviving Powhatan. It also set up tribute payments for the Virginia Indians to be made yearly to the English.[51] That war resulted in a boundary being defined between the Indians and English lands that could only be crossed for official business with a special pass.

Bacon's Rebellion

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Bacon's Rebellion was an armed rebellion in 1676 by Virginia settlers led byNathaniel Bacon against the rule of Governor William Berkeley. In the 1670s, the governor was serving his second term in office. Berkeley had previously been governor in the 1640s and had experimented with export crops at hisGreen Spring Plantation near Jamestown. In the mid-1670s, a young cousin through marriage, Nathaniel Bacon, Jr., arrived in Virginia sent by his father in the hope that he would "mature" under the tutelage of the governor. Although lazy, Bacon was intelligent, and Berkeley provided him with a land grant and a seat on the Virginia Colony council. However, the two became at odds over relationships with the Virginia Indians, which were most strained at the outer frontier points of the colony.

In July 1675,Doeg Indians crossed from Maryland and raided the plantation ofThomas Mathews in the northern portion of the colony along thePotomac River, stealing some hogs in order to gain payment for several items Mathews had obtained from the tribe. Mathews pursued them and killed several Doegs, who retaliated by killing Mathews' son and two of his servants, including Robert Hen. A Virginian militia then went to Maryland and besieged theSusquehanaugs (a different tribe) in "retaliation" which led to even more large-scale Indian raids, and a protest from the governor of Maryland colony. Berkeley tried to calm the situation, but many of the colonists, particularly the frontiersmen, refused to listen to him. Bacon disregarded a direct order and captured someAppomattoc Indians who were located many miles south of the site of the initial incident and almost certainly not involved.

Following the establishment of theLong Assembly in 1676, war was declared on "all hostile Indians," and trade with Indian tribes became regulated, often seen by the colonists to favor friends of Berkeley. Bacon led a group in opposition to the governor. Bacon led numerous raids on Indians friendly to the colonists in an attempt to bring down Berkeley. The governor offered himamnesty, but theHouse of Burgesses refused; insisting that Bacon must acknowledge his mistakes. At about the same time, Bacon was actually elected to the House of Burgesses and attended the June 1676 assembly where he was captured, forced to apologize and was then pardoned by Berkeley.

Bacon then demanded a military commission, but Berkeley refused. Bacon and his supporters surrounded the statehouse and threatened to start shooting the Burgesses if Berkeley did not acknowledge Bacon as "General of all forces against the Indians". Berkeley eventually acceded, and then left Jamestown. He attempted acoup a month later but was unsuccessful. In September, however, Berkeley was successful and occupied Jamestown. Bacon's forces arrived and dug in for asiege, which resulted in Bacon's capturing and burning Jamestown to the ground on September 19, 1676.[52] Bacon died ofdysentery on October 26, 1676, and his body is believed to have been burned.

Berkeley returned and hanged William Drummond and the other major leaders of the rebellion (23 in total) at Middle Plantation. With Jamestown unusable due to the burning by Bacon, the Governor convened a session of the General Assembly at hisGreen Spring Plantation in February, 1677, and another was later held at Middle Plantation. However, upon learning of his actions, KingCharles II was reportedly displeased at the degree of retaliation and number of executions, and he recalled Berkeley to England. He returned to London where he died in July 1677.

The capital moves from Jamestown to high ground

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See also:Middle Plantation (Virginia) andHistory of Williamsburg, Virginia

Despite the periodic need to relocate the legislature from Jamestown due to contingencies such as fires, (usually to Middle Plantation), throughout the 17th century, Virginians had been reluctant to permanently move the capital from its "ancient and accustomed place." After all, Jamestown had always been Virginia's capital. It had a state house (except when it periodically burned) and a church, and it offered easy access to ships that came up the James River bringing goods from England and taking on tobacco bound for market.[53] However, Jamestown's status had been in some decline. In 1662, Jamestown's status as mandatoryport of entry for Virginia had been ended.

On October 20, 1698, the statehouse (capitol building) in Jamestown burned for the fourth time. Once again removing itself to a familiar alternate location, the legislature met at Middle Plantation, this time in theCollege Building at theCollege of William & Mary, which had begun meeting there in temporary quarters in 1694. While meeting there, a group of five students from the college submitted a well-presented and logical proposal to the legislators outlining a plan and good reasons to move the capital permanently to Middle Plantation. The students argued that the change to the high ground at Middle Plantation would escape the dreaded malaria and mosquitoes that had always plagued the swampy, low-lying Jamestown site. The students pointed out that, while not located immediately upon a river, Middle Plantation offered nearby access to not one, buttwo rivers, via two deep water (6-7' depth) creeks, Queen's Creek leading to the York River, and College Creek which led to the James River.

Several prominent individuals likeJohn Page,Thomas Ludwell,Philip Ludwell, andOtho Thorpe had built fine brick homes and created a substantial town at Middle Plantation. Other advocates of the move included the Reverend Dr.James Blair and GovernorFrancis Nicholson. The proposal to move the capital of Virginia to higher ground (about 12 miles (20 km) away) at Middle Plantation was received favorably by theHouse of Burgesses. In 1699, the capital of the Virginia Colony was officially relocated there. The town was renamedWilliamsburg, in honor of KingWilliam III.

Later history

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Main article:Jamestown,_Virginia § Aftermath_and_preservation

By the 1750s the land was owned and heavily cultivated, primarily by the Travis and Ambler families. A military post was located on the island during theAmerican Revolutionary War and American and British prisoners were exchanged there. During theAmerican Civil War the island was occupied byConfederate soldiers who built an earth fort near the church as part of the defense system to block the Union advance up the river toRichmond. Little further attention was paid to Jamestown until preservation was undertaken in the 21st century.

Jamestown commemorative stamps, issue of 1907
The U.S. Post Office issued a set of stamps on the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Jamestown Colony.

References

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Further reading

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  • Bernard Bailyn,The Barbarous Years: The Peopling of British North America: The Conflict of Civilizations, 1600-1675 (Vintage, 2012)
  • Warren M. Billings (Editor),The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century: A Documentary History of Virginia, 1606-1700 (University of North Carolina Press, 2007)
  • James Horn,A Land as God Made It (Perseus Books, 2005)
  • Margaret Huber,Powhatan Lords of Life and Death: Command and Consent in Seventeenth-Century Virginia (University of Nebraska Press, 2008)
  • William M. Kelso,Jamestown, The Buried Truth (University of Virginia Press, 2006)
  • David A. Price,Love and Hate in Jamestown (Alfred A. Knopf, 2003)
  • Helen C. Rountree,The Powhatan Indians of Virginia: Their Traditional Culture (University of Oklahoma Press, 2013)
  • Ed Southern (Editor),Jamestown Adventure, The: Accounts of the Virginia Colony, 1605-1614 (Blair, 2011)
  • Jocelyn R. Wingfield,Virginia's True Founder:Edward Maria Wingfield and His Times (Booksurge, 2007)
  • Benjamin Woolley,Savage Kingdom: The True Story of Jamestown, 1607, and the Settlement of America (Harper Perennial, 2008)
  • William M. Kelso, Nicholas M. Luccketti, Beverly A. Straube, The Jamestown Rediscovery Archaeology Project

External links

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