Timeline of Jamestown, Virginia explained
This is a timeline of events related to the settlement of Jamestown, in what today is the U.S. state of Virginia. Dates use the Old Style calendar (e.g., the settlement naming occurred).[1]
Before 1606
See also: Timeline of the European colonization of North America.
1606
See also: List of Jamestown colonists.
1607
See also: Timeline of Hampton, Virginia.
- [10]
- August 1607: About 100 Englishmen arrive to settle Popham Colony (in present day Maine)
- 1607-12-10 John Smith takes nine men on a shallop to explore and find food up the Chickahominy River. George Cassen is captured and tortured to death
1608
See also: Jamestown supply missions.
- January 1608: only 38 to 40 colonists are alive. Ratcliffe and the Council plan to return to England on Discovery.
- 1608-01-05: John Smith uses a compass to confound Opecanchanough and his hunting party, avoiding death
- January 1608: John Smith returns to Jamestown from his encounter with Powhatan
- January 1608: President John Ratcliffe holds John Smith responsible for the deaths of two English explorers, and sentences him to death by hanging
- January 7, 1608: At James Fort, a major fire occurs through carelessness, burning down most wattle shelters and the food storehouse. Colonists must live in the ruins to overwinter.[11]
- Feb 1608: Newport and Smith trade with Powhatan. Thomas Savage (a teenaged boy) is sent to live with natives; while Namontack (a page to Powhatan) is sent to live with English.
- 1608 Printing of John Smith's True Relation of Virginia in London, England.
- June 8-10 1608: At Roaring Point, natives attempt to repel Smith and English explorers with archers waiting on the shore. The next evening, Smith comes ashore and leaves a basket of trade goods. Eventually, four Nanticoke men unaware of the situation meet with Smith and spread the word that he does not wish to attack. Hundreds of native people come to talk and trade.
- June 17 1608: At Nomini Bay, two native men invite Smith's shallop crew to go up the creek. They are led into an ambush. However, gunfire disarms the native, and ceasing fire, they exchange hostages. The weroance explains that paramount chief Powhatan had ordered the ambush.
- June 18 to July 16 1608: Smith's exploration in the shallop continues, with charting of the Potomac River and towns along the way. The explorers meet a Wicocomico man named "Mosco". Smith guesses that he is partly of European descent due to facial hair. Mosco guides the English along a portion of the Potomac.
- July 17 1608: Smith is wounded by stingray near the mouth of the Rappahannock River. He is treated by a doctor and survives. The area is named Stingray Point.
- July 18-21 1608: Smith's shallop returns to Jamestown
- July 1608: John Ratcliffe leaves office (either by resignation or deposition) in July 1608, two months before the end of his term
- Sept 10, 1608: John Smith is elected to serve a one-year term as president of the council. His term was to end September 10, 1609.[11]
- [12]
- 1608: Hog Island contains a drove of 60 pigs, which go unused by colonists[8]
- autumn 1608: Jamestown Glasshouse is built by German glassmakers[13]
- November 1608: Jamestown's first wedding (of two English): Anne Burras marries John Laydon, a carpenter
1609
- June 1609: Samuel Argall departs England for Virginia, attempting a more northerly, more direct route via Bermuda.[14]
- July 1609: In the Chesapeake Bay, Spanish reconnaissance ship, La Asunción de Cristo, is driven off by the timely arrival of Mary and John (captained by Samuel Argall), preventing the Spanish Empire from discovering a weakened Jamestown.[15] Pedro de Zúñiga y de la Cueva, the Spanish ambassador to England, was desperately seeking the location in order to authorize an attack by Philip III of Spain.
- summer 1609: In Bermuda, Stephen Hopkins is accused of mutiny for wanting to remain a Bermuda colonist, arguing the Virginia Company contract voided by shipwreck
- fall 1609: Fort Algernon is built nearby Jamestown
- October 1609: John Smith is severely wounded by a gunpowder accident, and must return to England for proper treatment. The Faulcon, Unitie, Blessinge, and Lion depart Virginia, while the Swallow and Virginia (pinnace) remain behind.[16]
- Oct 1609: Master George Percy takes over as president of the governing council[11]
- Oct 4 1609: Seven of the nine ships of the "third supply" mission arrive, delivering approximately 350 colonists but little supply. Four of the ships harbor sufferers of yellow fever,[17] while the Diamond and Unity bring bubonic plague to the colony, killing at least 30 emigrants on the journey (and more over the following months).[18]
- winter 1609-10 Gabriel Archer dies
1610
- Feb 1610: In the Somers Isles, Bermuda Rolfe (baby girl) is born to John Rolfe and Mistress Sarah Hacker Rolfe, but soon perishes
- Feb 1610: In the Somers Isles, Bermudas Eason (baby boy) is born to Edward Eason and wife
- March: About 60 out of 500 to 600 colonists remain alive. Francis West and 36 men aren't counted as they had absconded to England.
- May 10 1610: In the Somers Isles, Thomas Gates, Newport, Somers, and other castaway-colonists (totaling 137) board the Deliverance and Patience to sail to Jamestown. Two sailors (Christopher Carter and Edward-Robert Waters) remain behind on Bermuda.
- May 24 1610: Thomas Gates and Thomas Dale issue Lawes Divine, Morall and Martiall, also known as "Dale's Code", a martial law/authoritarian system of government
- June 7: Thomas Gates and leaders decide to abandon Jamestown. Colonists plan to head north to Newfoundland fishing settlements for food and evacuation.
- June 8: Jamestown refugees meet the supply ships of Thomas West, Lord De La Warr at Mulberry Island. Thomas West convinces the colonists to return to Jamestown with fresh supplies and healthy men.
- July 9: St. John's Episcopal Church (Hampton, Virginia) is founded on Cape Henry.
- August 9, 1610 De la Warr sends Percy with 70 colonists to attack the Paspahegh and Chickahominy villages, burning buildings, destroying crops, and killing up to 75 natives. This ignites the first of the Anglo-Powhatan Wars.
- June 19 1610: George Somers and Samuel Argall sail for Bermuda to gather wild hogs for Jamestown.[10]
- July 20, 1610: Christopher Newport and Thomas Gates leave Virginia (on the Blessinge and Hercules[19]) for England, where he will use his story of the Sea Venture wreck to advocate for the colony and to spur further investment. Aboard with him are two Virginia Indians recently taken prisoner: weroance Sasenticum and his son Kainta.
- 9 November 1610 George Somers dies at Bermuda from exhaustion
- 1610: Captained by Nathaniel West, the Mary Ann carries widow Mistress Francis West to Virginia[20]
- 1610: The Mary and Thomas (also known as Mary and James) carries William Tucker to Virginia [21]
1611
See also: Timeline of Richmond, Virginia.
- 1611: Henricus is founded on Farrar's Island
- January 4, 1611: Henry Spelman is returned to Samuel Argall, in trade for copper ore to Jopassus (brother to paramount chief)[22]
- winter 1611: Colonists suffer from scurvy, including "Kemps" a native living with the English.[22] Dr. Lawrence Bohun experiments in treating the disease with local vegetables, such as Ipomoea purga and sassafras.
- 1611: Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr contracts an illness. He boards a ship bound for Nevis, West Indies, (captained by Samuel Argall), but is blown off course and forced to sail to England.[23]
- March 1611: Thomas West returns to England, appointing George Percy to lead the colony in his absence
- August 1611: Thomas Gates returns to Virginia at the head of an expedition that includes three ships, 280 men, 20 women, 200 heads of cattle, 200 swine, and various other supplies and equipment
- 1611: Puritan Reverend Alexander Whitaker arrives in Jamestown.
- 1611: John Rolfe cultivates Nicotiana tabacum as a viable cash crop for smoking tobacco (marketed as "Orinoco tobacco")
1612
- 1612: The town of "New London" (later named St. George's) is founded, becoming the oldest continuously inhabited British town in the New World
1613
1614
1615
1616
- Spring 1616: John Rolfe, "Rebecca Rolfe" (Pocahontas), son Thomas Rolfe, a company of about 12 Powhatans, Stephen Hopkins, Thomas Dale, and others leave for England aboard the Treasurer.[11] [24]
- April 1616: George Yeardley is appointed deputy-governor while Thomas Dale returns to England.[25] Yeardley relaxes laws and punishments set by Dale's Code, and the colony prospers.
1617
- In March 1617, John Rolfe and "Rebecca" (Pocahontas) board a ship to return to Virginia, but they had sail only as far as Gravesend on the River Thames when Pocahontas becomes gravely ill
- March 1617: Rebecca/Pocahontas dies from unknown causes (perhaps a respiratory disease), aged 20 or 21 years.
- May 25, 1617: John Rolfe returns to Virginia on the George, led by Samuel Argall. Argall is assigned to replace George Yeardley as Governor,[11] finding Jamestown in a deteriorated state[26]
- 1617 Alexander Whitaker drowns in the James River
1618
- : Powhatan (Native American leader) dies. His son Opechancanough succeeds as chief-paramount
- April: Lord De La Warr dies en route to Virginia, and is replaced by George Yeardley[11]
- October, 1618: George Yeardley and wife Temperance Flowerdew travel to England[27]
- November 18, 1618: The Virginia Company of London issues its "Instructions to George Yeardley," which includes the establishment of the ancient planter/headright system. Part of the purpose was to encourage settlers to emigrate to Virginia, which included building a college. These instructions come to be known as the Great Charter.[28]
- November 24, 1618: George Yeardley is knighted by James VI and I
1619
1620
1621
- October, 1621: the George arrives with Francis Wyatt (appointed to be Virginia Governor) and George Sandys
- November 1621: Nemattanew (known derisively as "Jack-of-a-Feather") is slain by settlers
1622
- March 1622: Ship Seaflower containing relief supplies for Virginia, is accidentally sunk in Bermuda[34]
- Dec 20: Ship Abigail arrives with hungry, diseased passengers. The colony is reduced to 500 settlers over the winter.
1623
- 1623: Captain William Norton arrives at the colony with skilled Italian glass workers[35]
- 1623: Conspiring with William Tucker, Dr John Pott feeds poisoned wine to 200 natives, killing them in retaliation to the previous year's massacre
1624
1625
1626
1629
1631
- June 21 1631: John Smith dies in London, England
1639
- 1639 The King formally approves the restoration of the General Assembly.
- November 1639: Richard Lee I arrives in Virginia
1640
1644
- April 1644: Opechancanough plans another coordinated attack, which results in the deaths of another 350 to 500 of the 8,000 settlers in outlying plantations.[5]
1646
- 1646: Opechancanough is captured, taken to Jamestown, and shot in the back by a guard--against orders--and killed[38]
1649
1676
1685
1688
1693
- 1693: College of William & Mary is established by royal charter
1697
- 1697: Population estimate for the Virginia colony is 70,000[39]
1698
- 1698: Another fire is started by a prisoner awaiting execution.[40] The conflagration destroys the prison and the statehouse. The legislature temporarily relocates to Middle Plantation and was able to meet in the new facilities of the College of William & Mary
1699
- 1699: Colony capital permanently moves to Middle Plantation, which is renamed Williamsburg
1750
- 1750: Jamestown ownership consolidates into two families via land sales: Travis and Ambler.[5]
Notes and References
- Web site: Catholic Encyclopedia: General Chronology. www.newadvent.org.
- Web site: Don Luís de Velasco / Paquiquineo (fl. 1561–1571). Brendan. Wolfe. Encyclopedia Virginia.
- Web site: Virtual Jamestown--Timeline. www.virtualjamestown.org.
- Web site: The story of Father Baptista de Segura and the Virginia martyrs. Dr Christopher. Shannon. www.catholicworldreport.com.
- Web site: Chronology of Jamestown Events - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service). Mailing Address: P. O. Box 210. Yorktown. VA 23690 Phone: 757 898-2410 Contact. Us. www.nps.gov.
- Web site: History Timeline | Historic Jamestowne.
- Blanton, Dennis B. "Drought as a Factor in the Jamestown Colony, 1607-1612." Historical Archaeology 34, no. 4 (2000): 74-81. .
- Web site: Hog Island Wildlife Management Area | TCLF. www.tclf.org.
- Web site: The History of Hog Island. dwr.virginia.gov.
- Web site: Virginia and Bermuda. www.virginiaplaces.org.
- Web site: Chronology 1606-1700. Jamestowne Society.
- Book: Rountree, Helen C.. 9780813933405. Pocahontas, Powhatan, Opechancanough: Three Indian Lives Changed by Jamestown. 2006. University of Virginia Press .
- Web site: German American Corner: First Germans at Jamestown 2. February 20, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070220204113/http://www.germanheritage.com/Publications/Jamestown/glassmakers.html . 2007-02-20 .
- Connor, Seymour V. “Sir Samuel Argall: A Biographical Sketch.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 59, no. 2, 1951, pp. 162–75. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4245766. Accessed 18 Aug. 2024.
- Horn, J. (2008). A Land As God Made It: Jamestown and the Birth of America. Ukraine: Basic Books.
- https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Tale_of_Two_Colonies/Zez2EsipTskC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=swallow&pg=PA114&printsec=frontcover Bernhard, Virginia. A Tale of Two Colonies: What Really Happened in Virginia and Bermuda?. United Kingdom, University of Missouri Press, 2011
- Book: The First Republic in America: An Account of the Origin of this Nation, Written from the Records Then (1624) Concealed by the Council, Rather Than from the Histories Then Licensed by the Crown. 97. 1898. 9780722265451. Brown. Alexander. Houghton .
- Book: The Shipwreck That Saved Jamestown: The Sea Venture Castaways and the Fate of America. Glover. Lori. 5 August 2008 . Macmillan . 9780805086546.
- Book: 134. The First Republic in America: An Account of the Origin of this Nation, Written from the Records Then (1624) Concealed by the Council, Rather Than from the Histories Then Licensed by the Crown. 1898. 9780722265451. Brown. Alexander. Houghton .
- Web site: The Mary Ann 1610. packrat-pro.com.
- Web site: Mary & James. packrat-pro.com.
- Book: 137. The First Republic in America: An Account of the Origin of this Nation, Written from the Records Then (1624) Concealed by the Council, Rather Than from the Histories Then Licensed by the Crown. 1898. 9780722265451. Brown. Alexander. Houghton .
- Web site: Thomas West twelfth baron De La Warr (1576–1618). Warren M.. Billings. Encyclopedia Virginia.
- Book: 9781425796389. Here Shall I Die Ashore: Stephen Hopkins--Bermuda Castaway, Jamestown Survior, and Mayflower Pilgrim. Johnson. Caleb. 2007. Xlibris .
- Yeardley, George. Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900. Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900.
- Connor, Seymour V. “Sir Samuel Argall: A Biographical Sketch.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 59, no. 2, 1951, pp. 162–75. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4245766. Accessed 18 Aug. 2024.
- Web site: Temperance Flowerdew Yeardley · Virginia Changemakers. edu.lva.virginia.gov.
- Web site: The Project Gutenburg ebook of The Three Charters of the Virginia Company of London, by Samuel M. Bemiss.. www.gutenberg.org.
- Web site: Polish artisans strike for the right to vote, Jamestown, Virginia, 1619 | Global Nonviolent Action Database. nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu.
- Web site: House History. history.house.virginia.gov.
- Web site: Enslaved Africans first arrived in colonial Virginia 400 years ago.. . December 21, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221100018/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/magazine/2019/07-08/virginia-first-africans-transatlantic-slave-trade/ . 2019-12-21 .
- Web site: 1619: When America Became America. Don. Harrison. June 4, 2019.
- Web site: The First Thanksgiving Took Place in Virginia, not Massachusetts - Washingtonian. November 18, 2015.
- Book: Lefroy, Sir John Henry. Memorials of the discovery and early settlement of the Bermudas or Somers Islands, 1515-1685. 1877. XXXV,119,264,287,326.
- Book: 19. 1922. 9780598424662. The Planters of Colonial Virginia. Wertenbaker. Thomas Jefferson. Princeton University Press .
- Web site: Witchcraft and gossip: Jamestown Settlement explores English women's interactions with the law in colonial era. September 10, 2019.
- Web site: "Out of the Land of Bondage": The English Revolution and the Atlantic Origins of Abolition . https://web.archive.org/web/20160901101732/http://ahr.oxfordjournals.org/content/115/4/943.full . 2016-09-01 .
- Book: Shefveland, Kristalyn Marie. Anglo-Native Virginia Trade, Conversion, and Indian Slavery in the Old Dominion, 1646-1722. 8. 9780820350257. 2016. University of Georgia Press.
- Book: 43. 1922. 9780598424662. The Planters of Colonial Virginia. Wertenbaker. Thomas Jefferson. Princeton University Press .
- Web site: A Short History of Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service). Mailing Address: P. O. Box 210. Yorktown. VA 23690 Phone: 757 898-2410 Contact. Us. www.nps.gov.