WEEK 1 READING
THE TIMES
In
1603, a Queen Elizabeth died and King James VI of Scotland became King James I
of England. A terrible plague invaded London. In 1604, the new King authorized
the translation of the Bible into English, and scholars from Oxford and
Cambridge began their historic undertaking. In late 1605, as Shakespeare was
finishing a new play, entitled Macbeth, a certain Guido Fawkes – “Guy” as we
know him – organized a plot to blow up Parliament. He wanted to destabilize the
government and restore Roman Catholicism. Galileo was writing a book on the
supernova, and perfecting something called a proportional compass. He had not yet
built a telescope (1609). In 1606, Macbeth opened, Guy Fawkes was executed, and
the scholars were still at work. And a group of business men in London began to
look to the commercial colonization of the New World. One of them, Bartholomew
Gosnold, would not only conceive and launch the plan, but would go on to
captain one of the ships that would sail under something called the Virginia
Company.
THE VIRGINIA COLONY
The
Virginia Company, so called to honor the Virgin Queen (Elizabeth), was issued a
Charter by King James on April 10, 1606.
The Company was a joint
stock corporation charged with the settlement of Virginia. It had the power to
appoint the Council of Virginia, the Governor and other officials, and the
responsibility to provide settlers, supplies and ships for the venture. The
initial reaction to the Company was favorable but as the mortality rate rose
and the prospect for profit grew dim, the support for it waned. The leadership
resorted to lotteries, searching for gold, and silkworm production to increase
profits. (reference)
It
was, as the charter made clear, organized for three purposes: 1) profit; 2) to
find a trade route through Virginia to the Pacific; and 3) to convert the
“naturals” or natives to the Christian religion.
The
Company acquired three ships, the Susan Constant, the Discovery and the
Godspeed. It also recruited some 106 men, among whom were 4 boys, and 39 crew
to make the journey. (The exact numbers differ; the figures here are an
estimate based on several sources.) The Captain in charge of the fleet was
Christopher Newport, a seasoned seaman. The other two ships were captained by
Bartholomew Gosnold (Godspeed) and John Ratliffe (Discovery). Newport was 46
years old, and Gosnold, 35 years old. The Susan Constant was the largest of the
three, at 120 tons; it was 116 feet in length, about a quarter of that length
outside the actual deck. The other two ships were considerably smaller, the
Godspeed having a deck size of 52 feet in length and 15 feet wide. The Susan
Constant would carry 71 passengers; the Godspeed 51, and the Discovery 20. The
conditions aboard these ships were, to say the least, cramped.
The
roster of passengers was not promising. A prominent member was Captain John
Smith. He was a colorful character who, despite being only about 26 years old
at the time of the departure, had already lived an intriguing and adventurous
military life. He would become the most famous of the colonists, and would
publish the most accounts of the first permanent English colony. Another
important member on the roster was the Rev. Robert Hunt, the first Church of
England clergyman to go to the New World. But of the rest, half were
“gentlemen,” men who thought of themselves as possessing an exalted rank in
life and who would not expect, or be expected, to actually do anything, like
work!
The
ships left London in December, 1606. Almost immediately, the ships and the
Company suffered their first trial. The three ships were stalled in the English
Channel for several days due to poor winds. This frustrated the passengers to
such an extent that many proposed calling off the venture for the time being
and postponing the launch until a better time. John Smith and Robert Hunt were
apparently the only ones who vigorously opposed this idea, and Hunt played a
prominent role in convincing the others to stay the course.
Eventually,
the little fleet got underway. They set sail for the Canary Islands in order to
take advantage of the prevailing trade winds which, on the eastern side of the
Atlantic flow west by southwest. They stopped to take on fresh water for the
crossing. They then proceeded to the Caribbean, rounding Martinique on March 23
and putting into Dominica, Nevis, St. Croix, Mona and Monito Islands. They
replenished their water and food in each case as was possible and in some
instances had some interchange with the “naturals” or natives of the place.
They landed on Mona on April 7, and left on April 9. They went to
neighboring Monito, the last stop before reaching Virginia. They spent ten days
at sea, three days longer than they had anticipated. Again dissension over
whether to continue sprang up among the passengers. Commonsense seemed to
prevail – after all, it had taken so much time to cross the Atlantic and the
prospect of doing it again did not seem inviting. They gave themselves a few more
days. Finally, on April 26 they sighted land. They entered Chesapeake Bay and
dropped anchor at Cape Henry, so named in honor of one of King James’ sons. It
is conjectured that the colonists would have had some sort of celebration –
perhaps prayers, perhaps a communion service – but there is no evidence that
such was the case.
In
the Canaries, John Smith had been accused of “insurrection” and for the
duration imprisoned aboard the Susan Constant. When the party finally landed at
their destination, the official instructions from the Company in England, which
had been placed in a locked box, were taken out and read. The President of the
Colony was appointed by the Company in advance, and revealed to be Edward-Maria
Wingfield. The Council was also appointed, numbering seven of the men, and
included Smith. At this early stage, Smith was not informed of this appointment
and remained aboard ship. The instructions also included some very practical
advice, notably:
- Take time to find
the best site for the base of operations, avoiding marsh lands
- The Discovery would
remain with the party for exploration (especially of the supposed passage
to the Pacific)
- They were not to
offend the “naturals” and should initiate trade with them as soon as
possible
The
assumption in the instructions was that the colonists would have nothing to
fear from the natives, but they were advised that they should be on guard
against incursions from the Spanish, or from the Spanish using the “naturals”
to effect their own designs. In the event, however, the newly landed colonists
were almost immediately involved in a skirmish with some local natives.
Days
went by, then weeks, then months with very little accomplished. The critical
issues were water, food and shelter. The colonists settled on a peninsula that
afforded easy access, due to deep water, to ships. There was plenty of drinking
water, at least in the Spring of the year. This would become a problem as
Summer went on and the water turned brackish. Wild game was abundant. Berries
were available. But there was little else. Eventually, efforts were made to
trade for grain among the natives. An initial crop of wheat was sown. But in
the matter of shelter, the men lived mostly in tents. A short fence was erected
for defense, and would be called “the fort.” It was little more than a barrier
or shield. No houses were constructed. Instead, Wingfield wanted to put men to
work to make clapboards for sending back on the Susan Constant when Newport
returned to England, to demonstrate his commitment to “turning a profit” for
the Company. Some exploration took place, principally up the James River. The
colonists discovered that the site they had chosen was surrounded by natives
who would be or become their enemies. Those tribes who might be considered friendly
to their effort tended to be farther away. And, despite the advice in the
instructions, the peninsula on which Jamestown was founded, was indeed very
marshy – a breeding ground for mosquitoes and all the consequences that go
along with them.
Smith
was eventually released from captivity and seated on the Council as the
instructions had provided. In May, several men, including Smith, went on an
extended exploration up river. While they were gone, a band of warriors
attacked the settlement. About seventeen colonists were wounded and one of them
died later. In addition, one of the boys had been killed. The attackers were
warded off by canons from the ships. This attack led the colonists to build a
palisade – a stronger defense work – but little else.
Newport
left in June. Wingfield was deposed as President and Archer put in his place.
As the Summer rolled on, more and more men got sick and fewer and fewer were
available for any labor. Ironically, even though malnutrition was taking its
toll, few of the men – especially the “gentlemen” – did anything to rectify the
situation. In August, about 13 men died from dysentery, or typhoid, or from
drinking the brackish water (salt laden). Gosnold was among them.
Smith
became an important leader to the community. In December, he went on an
expedition to trade with the natives farther away and to bring back much needed
grain. A hunting party hostile to the English happened upon him and his men.
They captured all of them, and brutally killed all but Smith, whom they
discerned to be a man of importance. The warriors and a local chief eventually
brought Smith to Powhatan, the “chief of chiefs,” and went through an ordeal.
Legend – and Smith himself – says that Powhatan’s daughter, Pocahantas,
interceded for the Captain. In any case, Smith emerged as a “subordinate” chief
of the tribe and enjoyed good, if not always tenuous, relationships with
Powhatan.
Smith
would be elected President of the colony in 1608. He ruled with a strong hand,
strengthened the defenses and instituted a stern policy of work: “He who does
not work does not eat!” The first women, two of them arrived in Virginia in
1608. Smith was injured accidentally in 1609 and was forced to return to
England. He never returned to Virginia but promoted the colony in England for
the rest of his life (died in 1631).
The
following year, 1610, the Virginia Company reorganized itself under a new
Charter and gave new powers to the Governor, now virtually a dictator. Thomas
West, Lord de la Warr (for whom a river, a bay and eventually a colony would be
named - "Delaware") became Governor. Although intended to attract
more colonists and make the colony profitable, these changes had the opposite
effect. Colonists continued to come, but they also continued to die. About this
time, 1612, John Rolfe (who had married Pocahontas) hit upon a new strain of
tobacco. This opened the way to developing a cash commodity for lucrative
export. Many of the farmers began to grow tobacco. This was so successful, they
devoted their energies to the cash crop and failed to plant food crops. In
1618, the Company changed policies again. Sir Edwyn Sandys (son of the
Archbishop and member of Parliament), the Company’s London treasurer, set up
offers of tracts of land to those who would go to Virginia and work. This
became very attractive and the Colony grew steadily. The Company also
authorized an Assembly to govern the colony and make its own rules. In 1619,
the Assembly declared the Anglican Church to be the Church in Virginia. There
were then about 5 clergy and 3,000 residents. In 1619 for the first time a
Dutch ship came to Jamestown carrying African slaves. Slave labor had already
been instituted in the Caribbean by the Portuguese for sugar plantations. By
the end of the century, slave labor would be important in Virginia as well, and
lead to its eventual success.
Trouble
with the natives continued. In 1622 the colony came under native attack. Nearly
a quarter of the colonists died – 347 of them. This came to be known as the
Indian Massacre. Soon after this, the Virginia Company’s charter was revoked
and the Colony came under the authority of the Crown. The policy of the Crown
was very harsh toward the remaining Powhatan tribe. It is estimated that the
tribe numbered 25,000 in 1607. That number fell to a few thousand by 1630. A
final attack came about in 1644, and the ageing chief was jailed. The Powhatan
dominance in Virginia ended.
THE PLYMOUTH COLONY
At about the time the Virginia Colony was finally getting on
its feet, another group of adventurers put together a plan for establishing a
colony.
At the time the Charter for the Virginia Company was issued
in 1606, the charter envisioned two separate but related entities. The first
would be called the Virginia Company of London, and the second the Virginia
Company of Plymouth. The first granted the settlement of land in the South and
the second granted the settlement of the land in the North. The areas overlapped
and the overlap area (in pink) was subject to special rules.
In 1607 a colony was established in Maine, called Popham.
But it collapsed in 1608. The northern area, therefore, lay fallow for the
years after 1608. It was, however, well known to many Europeans – some of whom
had explored the area (Capt John Smith had named the area “New England” when he
visited and surveyed it in 1614). Fishermen were familiar with the waters and
may have contributed to the spread of small pox and other diseases among some
of the natives.
A group of separatists who would come to be known as
“Pilgrims” meanwhile left England (Scrooby in Nottinghamshire) for the
Netherlands in 1609. Seeking to escape what they felt as persecution for their
religious views, they settled first in Amsterdam and then in Leiden.
They were free to worship and assemble as they wished in
this Protestant stronghold. But they in time grew concerned as their children
were picking up Dutch culture and language. They determined to find a way to
move to the New World, aided by contacts who had remained in England, largely
in hiding. They obtained a land patent in 1619 to settle at the mouth of the
Hudson River, and a group of Puritans known as the Merchant Adventurers put
together the money to finance the trip. A ship, the Speedwell, brought the
Pilgrims to England to meet up with the Mayflower, take on board the needed
supplies and the passengers and proceed to New England.
Joining the Pilgrims were another group, including Myles
Standish, collectively know as the Strangers. This group was not characterized
by the same religious motivation that marked the Pilgrims; they were a various
lot who possessed skills or experience the Adventurers thought necessary to the
success of the colony.
The whole group on two ships was intended to set sail in
July, 1620. But disputes and issues concerning organization and funding delayed
the launch until August 15. When they finally got underway, the Speedwell began
to leak and the fleet had to return to England. The Speedwell was determined to
be un-seaworthy, and some of the passengers abandoned the effort. ( It is
believed the crew sabotaged the ship in order to get out of the extension of
their contract.) The rest were bundled aboard the Mayflower, which got underway
on September 6, 1620.
Although the exact dimensions of this ship are unknown, it
is likely to have been about 180 tons, with a length of around 100 feet, and a
width of 25 feet. Typically, it would have a crew of between 25 and 30 men.
There were on board a total of 102 souls as passengers in addition to the crew.
The ship was captained by Christopher Jones.
Unlike the ships going to Virginia, Jones decided to risk a
direct crossing, no doubt due to the late time in the year. So it is not
surprising that the arrival of the Mayflower off the North American coast was
much farther north than was intended. It anchored in what is now called
Provincetown Harbor, at the tip of Cape Cod, on Saturday, November 11, 1620.
The passengers remained aboard on Sunday, for worship.
Immediately, the recognition that they were much farther
away from their intended destination raised problems. There was no authority to
create a settlement here. While aboard ship, the famous Mayflower Compact was
created – a kind of charter for the new community. While having no authority in
its own right, and was very similar to traditional English town charters, it
seemed to remove a pint of anxiety for most of those on board.
For the next many days, while living aboard the cramped
quarters, some of the men undertook several exploratory expeditions. Finding no
place suitable for a settlement, the ship set out again and anchored in
Plymouth Harbor, across from the tip of Cape Cod, on December 17. They explored
the area for their settlement. They rejected several, but selected an abandoned
native site, Patuxet, which had two hills. (The natives had died of smallpox
not long before the arrival of the English.) They would locate the village on the
one, and place a canon for defense on the other. The compelling factor of this
site was that it had been cleared by its former inhabitants, making the
planting of crops much easier.
Astonishingly, many of the passengers remained aboard the
ship, many for as many as six months! Some work began on the building of
shelters, but the weather made a concerted effort difficult. Through the first
winter only seven houses and four “common houses” were built, and all were very
simple, rudimentary structures. Many of the laborers, and the women and
children, were weakened by malnutrition or died of disease. Only 51 colonists
survived the first few months.
The Plymouth colony had many encounters with their native
neighbors. Eventually, the colonists were able to forge a relationship with the
leading sachem, or chieftain, of the Wampanoag confederacy of tribes.
Massasoit, the great sachem, looked to an alliance with the English to protect
his tribes from their enemies, the Narragansett. Massasoit is credited with helping
to preserve the colony from starvation in its earliest stages. Ninety of
Massasoit’s warriors celebrated with the 51 surviving colonists at a harvest
feast in 1621.
The next colonists to arrive, 37 of them, came in November
of 1621, and this was greeted with joy and relief. (Among them, one Philip de
la Noye; his name eventually changed to Delano, and one of his descendants was
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.) A further 90 or so settlers arrived in 1623. By
1630, the colony had 300 residents. In 1692, when the colony was absorbed into
the Massachusetts Bay Colony, it had about 3050 residents. The whole of New
England was incorporated into something called the Dominion in 1686 and
included Massachusetts Bay, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Hampshire and
the Jerseys (East & West). It had a President who was very unpopular,
however, and Plymouth returned to self rule. In 1691, following the accession
of William of Orange (and the overthrow of James II), Plymouth was included in
the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
At first, the colonists found fur trade to be economically
beneficial. They also tried fishing, but found that they had little or no skill
in this and abandoned the effort. With the arrival of cattle around 1627, and
subsequently pigs and sheep, their economy became more diversified. The
Plymouth colony also benefitted from trade with the natives and with the Dutch
colony of New Amsterdam. After the first rocky years, the colony became largely
self-sustaining.
The relations between the Plymouth colony with the native
Americans, like that in Virginia, was mixed and complicated. Myles Standish
early on led a sharp and deadly attack on unsuspecting native neighbors. This
unfortunate event colored English-native relations for years to come with
suspicion and intrigues. As noted, it was the determination of Massasoit,
however, that assured the survival of the colonists in the first tenuous months
and years, unfortunately to the detriment of his own people.
COMPARISONS OF THE TWO FIRST PERMANENT COLONIES
SIMILARITIES
1. Both colonies were
established by men (and in the case of Plymouth, women) who were ill equipped
to undertake such a mission. There was no preparation for the journey, and
little capacity among the passengers for dealing with the basic challenge: the
bringing into being of a community that was self-sustaining.
2. Both colonies lacked
sufficient support, especially in terms of military aid and training. Virginia
had its Captain John Smith, and Plymouth its Myles Standish. Smith had a
somewhat broader military experience than Standish and both were quite
self-confident, indeed boastful about their abilities. It is interesting to
note that John Smith had actually applied to be the military advisor for the
Plymouth colony, but despite his experience was turned down in favor of
Standish. In any case, besides these two, neither group had seasoned,
experienced or capable military men to assist in advising and preparing the
colonists for self-defense.
3. In both cases, the
colonists themselves were slow to sense the perils around them, even including
the hardships presented by the weather, and neither showed any great exertion
to build a stable and secure community. In both cases, it would be months
before their settlements would even begin to take shape.
4. Both colonies
suffered greatly from disease made worse by malnutrition. Surprisingly, no
provision had been made for a physician to accompany them. What remedies they
could find often came from the practices of the native peoples.
5. With respect to the
native population, both groups shared certain basic assumptions which would
become problematic:
a. The English regard
for “naturals” differed from the Spanish. The Spanish typically saw the natives
of a land as less intelligent, indeed less than human, and fair game for
subjugation. Interestingly, the English understood “savagery” as a lower rung
in social development rather than in racial terms. “Savages could not rightfully be
enslaved.” In fact, the English settlers actually thought that the natives of
North America were “white” men, since their babies were born “white.” They
thought the “red” in "redmen" was due to the habit of painting – the
incessant use of dyes on their bodies. The English understood themselves to
have been once “savages” until the arrival and civilizing influence of the
Romans. So they saw their efforts in North America, as it were, in this light.
b. The colonists were hampered
by inadequate information about the native populations in their respective
areas. No one seems to have known of the numbers of tribes and the size of
populations, let alone of the languages, cultures, organization and level of
sophistication among the tribes. Both colonies had been encouraged by their
backers in England – indeed expected – to begin trade with the native peoples
where possible. But with their presuppositions concerning the “primitive” state
of affairs among the tribes, no one thought to gather significant information
about these often complex societies. Some, John Smith among them, actually
tried to acquire some of the native languages and to understand the social
structures and relationships. But these efforts were pretty minimal.
DIFFERENCES
1. The primary
difference between these colonies lay in the motives behind the founding of
each.
a. The Virginia Colony
was a business enterprise, intended to turn a profit for its investors. Some of
the colonists were “gentlemen” who had actually themselves invested in the
project.
b. The Plymouth Colony was
envisioned as a religious community where Puritan Separatists could be free to
practice their religion without interference of the State. This vision drove
the Pilgrim colonists even though they, too, were expected to make a return on the
investments of their backers.
2. The southern colony
would be a bastion of Anglicanism from the beginning; the northern colony a
bastion of Calvinist theology and all the tensions that went with the
differences in emphasis between competing groups (Separatist Puritans and
non-Separatist Puritans-Congregationalists).
3. The northern colony
right from the start was characterized by settled families; the southern colony
by male adventurers.
SOURCE: http://bishop.jmstanton.com/bishop/smu/smu_2_colonial_2.htm,
WHICH IS A COLONIAL HISTORY COURSE AT SMU
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