Thomas West | |
3rd Baron De La Warr | |
Birth Date: | 9 July 1576 |
Birth Place: | England |
Death Place: | Atlantic Ocean, en route to Jamestown, Virginia, from London, England |
Burial Place: | Jamestown, Virginia |
Noble Family: | De La Warr |
Father: | Thomas West, 2nd Baron De La Warr |
Mother: | Anne Knollys |
Signature: | Signature of Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr.png |
Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr (;[1] [2] [3] 9 July 1576 – 7 June 1618), was an English nobleman, for whom the bay, the river, and, consequently, a Native American people and U.S. state, all later called "Delaware", were named. A member of the House of Lords, from the death of his father in 1602 until his own death in 1618, he served as the governor of Virginia from 1610 to 1611.
There have been two creations of Baron De La Warr, and West came from the second. He was the son of Thomas West, 2nd Baron De La Warr, of Wherwell Abbey in Hampshire, and Anne Knollys, daughter of Catherine Knollys; making him a great-grandson of Mary Boleyn, the sister of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of King Henry VIII. He was born at Wherwell, Hampshire, England, and died at sea while travelling from England to Virginia. Counting from the original creation of the title, West would be the 12th Baron.
As the eldest son of the 2nd Baron De La Warr, Thomas West received his education at Queen's College, Oxford. He served in the English army under Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, and, in 1601, was charged with supporting Essex's ill-fated insurrection against Queen Elizabeth I, but acquitted of those charges.[4] He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Lymington in 1597.[5]
He succeeded his father as Baron De La Warr in 1602.[6] It was said that he became a member of the Privy Council, but this has been disproved.[7] In 1645 Dame Cicly petitioned the House of Lords to continue the pension that King James had granted her husband.[8]
Lord De La Warr was the largest investor in the London Company, which received two charters to settle colonists in the New World, and furnished and sent several vessels to accomplish that aim. He was appointed governor-for-life and captain-general of the Virginia, to replace the governing council of the colony under the presidency of Captain John Smith.[9] Subsequently, in November 1609, the Powhatans killed John Ratcliffe, the Jamestown Colony's Council President, and attacked the colony in what became the First Anglo-Powhatan War.[10] As part of England's response, De La Warr recruited and equipped a contingent of 150 men and outfitted three ships at his own expense, and sailed from England in March 1610.[11]
In 1610 captain Samuel Argall named Delaware Bay in honor of Lord De La Warr. Shortly afterwards Dutch settlers along the bay gave it a different name, but the name Delaware Bay was restored when the English took control of the area in 1665.[12] Lord De La Warr contracted malaria or scurvy in 1611. He left the colony on a ship captained by Sir Samuel Argall headed to the West Indies to recover but was blown off course by a storm and forced to return to England.[13]
Later that year, De La Warr published a book titled The Relation of the Right Honourable the Lord De-La-Warre, Lord Governour and Captaine Generall of the Colonie, planted in Virginea.[14] Although attributed to De La Warr, the book was actually written by company employee Samuel Calvert.[7]
In the Autumn of 1616, Baron De La Warr and his wife Lady Cecilia, introduced John Rolfe and his wife, Pocahontas, into English society. The visitors from Virginia were in London to raise funds for the Virginia Company of London and to encourage colonization of Virginia. De La Warr remained the nominal governor, and after receiving complaints from the Virginia settlers about Argall's tyranny in governing them on his behalf, he set sail for Virginia again in 1618 aboard the Neptune to investigate those charges. He died at sea on 7 June[4]
It was thought for many years that Lord De La Warr had been buried in the Azores or at sea.[4] By 2006, researchers had concluded that his body was brought to Jamestown for burial. In October 2017, archaeologists excavated remains from underneath one of the churches at Historic Jamestowne. While two sets of remains were De La Warr's relatives, Sir Ferdinando Wainman and Captain William West, none were identified as Lord De La Warr.[15] [16]
On 25 November 1596, De La Warr married Cecily Shirley (born c. 1579 died), the daughter of Sir Thomas Shirley of Wiston, Sussex, and his wife Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Kempe. They had 9 known children:
Lord De La Warr's brother, John West, later became governor and married Anne Percy, daughter of George Percy.[20]