Jamestown was established in 1607 on the James River in Virginia, in what is currently James City County, about 45 miles (70 kilometers) southeast of Richmond, Virginia. Both the river and the new settlement were named for King James I who had recently ascended to the English throne.
The Virginia Colony at Jamestown was the first permanent English colony in what is now the United States to survive. It followed the failure of two earlier attempts including the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island to the south in what is now North Carolina. Jamestown is second only to St. Augustine, Florida as the oldest continuously occupied European settlement in the United States, the latter having been founded 42 years earlier (1565) by Spain. Although Jamestown was an important centre of government and commerce in the 17th century, the capital relocation to Williamsburg in 1699 sent Jamestown into a gradual loss of prominence, reverting it to a few large farms. Renewed interest in the historical aspects began with the 300th anniversary Jamestown Exposition which was held near the mouth of the James River at Sewell's Point on Hampton Roads in 1907.
The 350th anniversary celebration was held at Jamestown itself in 1957 with major projects created by non-profit, state and federal agencies. Since that time, Jamestown has been the site of several continuing historical attractions with archaeological work and discoveries generating new interest. In preparation for the upcoming Jamestown 2007 event commemorating America's 400th Anniversary, new accommodations, transportation facilities and attractions are planned, beginning with the sailing of the replica Godspeed to six East Coast cities.
Upon landing, secret orders from the Virginia Company were opened which named Captain John Smith as one of the "councelors". Smith had been arrested for mutiny on the voyage over by Christopher Newport and was scheduled to be hanged upon arrival but was freed after the opening of the orders. The group then proceeded in their ships into the Chesapeake Bay to Hampton Roads then up the James River where they explored upriver before arriving at the site of Jamestown on May 14.
The colonists chose Jamestown Island for their settlement largely because the Virginia Company advised them to select a location that could be easily defended from ocean-going navies of the other European states that were also establishing New World colonies and were periodically at war with England, notably the Dutch Republic, France and especially Spain. The island fit the bill as it had excellent visibility up and down what is today called the James River and it was far enough inland to avoid contact and conflict with the Spanish fleet, while the river 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 Native Americans. This was largely due to the inhospitable terrain that severely challenged the settlers. Jamestown Island is a swampy area isolated from most hunting game such as deer and bears which like to forage over much larger areas. The settlers quickly killed off all the large and smaller game that was to be found on the tiny peninsula. The low, marshy area was infested with mosquitoes and other airborne pests and the brackish water of the tidal James River was not a good source of drinking water. The settlers consisted mainly of English farmers and Polish woodcutters hired in Royal Prussia. The settlers who came over on the initial three ships were not well-equipped for the life they found in Jamestown and many suffered from saltwater poisoning which led to infection, fevers and dysentery. As a result of these conditions, most of the early settlers died of disease and starvation.
Despite the area being uninhabited, the settlers were attacked less than a fortnight after their arrival on May 26 by Paspahegh Indians who succeeded in killing one of the settlers and wounding eleven more. By June 15, the settlers finished the initial triangle fort at Jamestown and a week later Newport sailed back for London on the Susan Constant with a load of pyrite ("fools' gold") and other supposedly precious minerals.
Edward Maria Wingfield was named the first president of the colony and would remain in that position until September 1607 when he was found guilty of libel and was deposed. John Ratcliffe was elected to take his place until John Smith was elected to replace Ratcliffe a year later. While president of the colony, Smith led a food-gathering expedition up the Chickahominy River where his men were set upon by Powhatan Indians. As his party was being slaughtered around him, Smith strapped his Indian guide in front of him as a shield and escaped with his life but was captured by Opchanacanough, the Powhatan chief's half-brother. Smith gave him a compass which appeased the warrior and made him decide to let Smith live. However, when Smith was brought before Chief Powhatan, the chief decided to execute him, a course of action which was (as related by Smith) stopped by the pleas of Powhatan's young daughter, Pocahontas, who was originally named Matoaka but whose nickname meant "Playful one." After returning to his duties in Jamestown, Smith was wounded in an accident when his powder bag exploded and in the fall fo 1609, was sent back to England where he wrote A True Relation and The Proceedings of the English Colony of Virginia about his experiences in Jamestown.
After Smith returned to England, Ratcliffe became colony president again and tried to improve the colony's situation by trading with the natives. While on a trade mission shortly after being elected, Ratcliffe was captured by Chief Powhatan and tortured to death by women of the Powhatan tribe leaving the colony without strong leadership. The winter of 1609-1610 at Jamestown became known as the "starving time" as the settlers faced starvation.
John Rolfe was a settler who had arrived in Jamestown in 1609 following the shipwreck of the Sea Venture. The Sea Venture was the new flagship of the Virginia Company which carried the Admiral of the Company, Sir George Somers, Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas Gates, William Strachey and other notable personages in the early history of English colonisation in North America. She had been separated from the seven other vessels of her fleet by a strong storm which lasted for three days. Deliberately driven onto the reefs of Bermuda to prevent her sinking, the 150 passengers and crew members were all landed safely but the ship was now permanently damaged. The Sea Venture's longboat was fitted with a mast and sent to find Virginia but it and its crew were never seen again. The survivors spent nine months on Bermuda building two smaller ships, the Deliverance and Patience from Bermuda cedar and materials salvaged from the Sea Venture. Leaving two men to maintain England's claim to the archipelago, the remainder sailed to Jamestown arriving on May 23, 1610. They found the colony in ruins and practically abandoned. Of 500 settlers who had preceded them to Jamestown, they found only 60 survivors with many of those sick or dying. It was decided to abandon the colony and everyone was placed aboard the two ships to return to England. However, the fortuitous arrival of Lord De La Warre with more vessels however granted the colony a reprieve. The Deliverance and Patience turned back and all the settlers were landed again at Jamestown while Sir George Somers returned to Bermuda with the Patience to obtain more food supplies but died on the island that summer. His nephew, Matthew Somers, Captain of the Patience, took the ship back to Lyme Regis, England instead of Virginia (leaving a third man behind). The Third Charter of the Virginia Company was then extended far enough across the Atlantic to include Bermuda in 1612. The first two successful English colonies would retain close ties for many more generations as can be seen when Virginian general George Washington called upon the people of Bermuda for aid during the American War of Independence in a letter.
In the meantime, the publication of Smith's book sparked a resurgence in interest in the colony leading to the dispatch of additional colonists, a doctor and a new governor, Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr in 1610. Lord De La Warr forced the remaining 90 settlers to stay, thwarting their plans to abandon the colony.
In 1611, a majority of the population of the Jamestown settlement was dead and its economic value was negligible with no active exports to England and very little internal economic activity. Only financial incentives including a promise of more land to the west from King James I to investors financing the new colony kept the project afloat. Those incentives paid off as by 1617, tobacco exports were beginning to generate enough profit to ensure the economic survival of the colony.
Although Pocahontas's life would be tied to the English after saving Smith's life, her contacts with Smith himself were minimal. During the winter of 1608 following an almost complete destruction of the colony by flames, Pocahontas brought food and clothing to the colonists. She later negotiated with Smith for the release of Native Americans who had been captured by the colonists during a raid to gain English weaponry. Pocahontas converted to Christianity and took the name "Rebecca" in 1613 under the tutelage of Reverend Alexander Whitaker who arrived in Jamestown in 1611 to found the first Presbyterian Church in Virginia. Pocahontas later married John Rolfe on April 24, 1614. Within two years, the couple left for London where Pocahontas died at Gravesend on March 17, 1617.
John Rolfe was the first man to successfully raise export tobacco in the Colony (although the colonists had begun to make glass artifacts immediately after their arrival). The tobacco raised in Virginia prior to that time, Nicotiana rustica, was not to the liking of the Europeans but Rolfe had brought some seed for Nicotiana tabacum with him from England. Although most people "wouldn't touch" the crop, Rolfe was able to make his fortune farming it (by 1617, the colonists exported 50,000 pounds of tobacco to England). Rolfe and Pocahontas left their Varina Farms plantation for England in 1616 but the now wealthy Rolfe returned to Jamestown the following year following Pocahontas' death from sickness in England. Once back in Jamestown, Rolfe married Jane Pierce and continued to improve the quality of his tobacco with the result that by the time of his death in 1622, Jamestown was thriving as a producer of tobacco.
Wheat was also grown in Virginia starting in 1618. The labor intensive tobacco plantations led to the importation of the colony's first black "indentured servants" as well as single women from England in 1619. That same year, the House of Burgesses, the first legislature of elected representatives in America, met in the Jamestown Church. Their first law was to set a minimum price for the sale of tobacco and set forth plans for the creation of the first ironworks of the colony.
The Indian Massacre of 1622, an uprising led by Opechancanough, led to the deaths of nearly 400 settlers, wiping out several entire communities, including Henricus and Wolstenholme Towne. However, Jamestown was spared from destruction due to the warnings of a Native American boy named Chanco who gave warning to colonist Richard Pace. 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. A year later, Captain William Tucker and Dr. John Potts worked out a truce with the Powhatan Native Americans and proposed a toast using liquor laced with poison. 200 Native Americans were killed by the poison and 50 more were slaughtered by the colonists. In 1624, the Virginia Company lost its charter and Virginia became a crown colony.
In the 1670s, the governor of Virginia was Sir William Berkeley, a scholar and playwright, serving his second term in that office. Berkeley, now in his seventies, had previously been governor in the 1640s and was a veteran of the English Civil War. 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.
In July 1675, Doeg Indians raided the plantation of Thomas Mathews in order to gain payment for several items Mathews had obtained from the tribe. Several Doegs were killed in the raid and the colonists then raided the Susquehanaugs in "retaliation" which led to large-scale Indian raids. Berkeley tried to calm the situation but many of the colonists refused to listen to him and Bacon disregarded a direct order and captured some Appomattox Indians.
Following the establishment of the Long Assembly in 1676, war was declared on "all hostile Indians" and trade with Indian tribes became regulated, often seen by the colonists to favor those friends of Berkeley. Bacon opposed Berkeley and led a group in opposition to the governor. Bacon and his troops set themselves up at Henrico until Berkeley arrived which sent Bacon and his men fleeing upon which Berkeley declared them in rebellion and offered a pardon to any who returned to Jamestown peaceably.
Bacon led numerous raids on Indians friendly to the colonists in an attempt to bring down Berkeley. The governor offered him amnesty but the House 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 a coup a month later but was unsuccessful. In September, however, Berkeley was successful and Bacon dug in for a siege which resulted in his burning Jamestown to the ground on September 19, 1676. Bacon died of the flux and lice on October 26, 1676 and his body is believed to have been burned. Berkeley hanged the major leaders of the rebellion and was then relieved of his governorship and returned to London where he died in July, 1677.
"Jimsonweed" is a corruption of "Jamestown weed," named for the village after some British soldiers sent to quell Bacon's Rebellion in 1676 failed in their mission after being fed leaves of the plant which grew wild in great quantity there. They were "intoxicated" for about a week and claimed afterward to have no memory of that period.
The first phase of Jamestown's history ended in 1699 when a decision was made not to rebuild the statehouse which had burned down in 1698 but instead to accept a proposal by students of the College of William and Mary to move the capital of Virginia to higher ground to about 12 miles (20 km) away where their school was located at Middle Plantation which would soon be renamed Williamsburg.
Once in Federal hands, Jamestown became a meeting place for runaway slaves who burned the Ambler house, an eighteenth century plantation which along with the old church were the few remaining signs of Jamestown. When Allen sent men to assess damage in late 1862, they were killed by the former slaves. For the most part, Jamestown did not have an active role in the Civil War although both sides used it for feints. Following the surrender at Appomattox Courthouse, the oath of allegiance was administered to former Confederate soldiers at Jamestown.
No one thought that the actual isolated and long-abandoned original site would be suitable because Jamestown Island had no facilities for large crowds and the fort housing the Jamestown Settlement was believed to have been long-ago swallowed by the James River.
The decision was made to locate the international exposition on a mile-long frontage at Sewell's Point near the mouth of Hampton Roads. The Jamestown Exposition was held there from April 26, 1907 to December 1, 1907.
Early on, the project discovered early colonial artifacts. This was something of a surprise to some historians as it had been widely thought that the original site had been entirely lost due to erosion by the James River. Many others suspected that at least portions of the fort site remained and subsequent excavations have shown that only one corner of the first triangular fort (which contained the original settlement) turned out to have been destroyed.
The extended archaeological campaign has made many discoveries including retrieving hundreds of thousands of artifacts, a large fraction of them from the first few years of the settlement's history. In addition, it has uncovered much of the fort, the remains of several houses and wells, a palisade wall line attached to the fort and the graves of several of the early settlers.
Among the discoveries, a gravesite with indications of an important figure was located. Some theorizes the remains to be that of Captain Bartholomew Gosnold though others have claimed it to be the remains of Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr. It had long been thought that Baron De La Warr, who died en route back to the colony from England on his second trip, had been buried elsewhere but some recent research concluded that his body was in fact brought to Jamestown for burial. [http://www.vagazette.com/news/va-news1_032206mar22,0,6921190.story?coll=va-news. The studies are ongoing as of 2006.
Archaeological work at the site continues and is greatly expanding knowledge of what happened at Jamestown in its earliest days. Many of the hundreds of thousands of artifacts found by Jamestown Rediscovery archaeologists are now on display in the Archaearium at Historic Jamestowne.
A feature length film, The New World, covers the story of Jamestown's colonization. Although historically accurate in many ways, the plot focuses on a dramatized relationship between John Smith, played by Colin Farrell, and Pocahontas. A limited release of the film took place in December, 2005, with the full release in January, 2006. Many scenes were filmed on-location nearby along the James and Chickahominy Rivers and at Henricus Historical Park in Henrico County, Virginia.
History of Virginia | James City County, Virginia | Lost cities and towns | Pre-revolutionary history of the United States | Archaeological sites in the United States | Cities on the James River | James River (Virginia) | 1607 establishments | Bermuda
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