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Jamestown:
First English Colony in America
Explorers
had been landing in America for some time before English
settlers arrived in what is now Jamestown, Virginia, in
1607. But it was in that spot on the James River that
English colonization began and with it, the history of
America.
James
I was king of England at that time, and he had granted
approval for a group of businesspeople to settle in this new
land. They were part of the Virginia Company, and they got
the go-ahead in 1606. By December of that year, the
expedition was ready.
In
all, 214 people set sail for America. They reached it on May
14, 1607. Very soon after they landed, the English found
themselves under attack from Algonquins, a Native American
tribe who had been living in that area for some time and who
didn't exactly welcome new settlers. The English managed to
drive off the attackers, who came back every now and then.
The English, however, were there to stay.
Under
the leadership of Captain John
Smith, the English
built a fort and other buildings designed to protect their
new colony. They also found friendly Native Americans, like
Powhatan, who was willing to trade with them.
The
terrible winter of 1609 convinced most of the settlers to
abandon their new life, however. Only 60 of the 214 settlers
survived this harsh winter, which was also hard on
Powhatan's tribe and other neighboring Native
Americans.
(It
is this Powhatan, also, whose daughter Pocahontas eventually
married John Rolfe.)
One
of the main crops grown by the English settlers was tobacco,
which they sold to Native Americans and to people back in
England, beginning in 1612. Tobacco became a very popular
crop because it was easy to grow and because it brought in
so much money.
Once the money started
flowing in regularly, the Jamestown colony grew, as did
other settlements in Virginia and in other states along the
eastern seaboard.
America's
first elected assembly, the House
of Burgesses, met
in Jamestown for the first time on July 30, 1619. This group
boasted many famous members through the years, including
Patrick
Henry,
George
Washington, and
Thomas
Jefferson.
The
year 1619 also saw another significant development: the
first arrival of black workers on boats from Africa. These
men and women were originally indentured servants, who
worked a plot of land for a few years and then got to keep
the land as owners. (The slave trade didn't get into full
swing in this part of America until the 1680s.)
Jamestown
was also the capital of Virginia and remained so until
1698.
Graphics
courtesy of ClipArt.com
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copyright 2002-9,
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