The Story of Jamestown (continued)
THE FIRST SUPPLY. Upon returning to Jamestown, Smith
was caught in the meshes of a feuding council. All was forgotten early
in January, however, when Newport reached Jamestown with the first
supply for the settlers. He brought food, equipment, instructions, and
news from home. His cargo was nor sufficient, but for the moment this
was over looked. The two ships of the supply had left England together,
but the second did not reach Virginia until April.
Shortly after Newport's arrival in January, disaster
came to Jamestown. Fire swept through the fort, consuming habitations,
provisions, ammunition, and even some of the palisades. This was a
serious blow in the face of winter weather. With the help of Newport and
his sailors, the church, storehouse, palisades, and cabins were
partially rebuilt before he sailed again for England early in April.
Much more could have been done had he not consumed so many days in a
pompous visit and lengthy negotiations with the wily Powhatan. Then,
too, the ships had to be loaded for the return voyage, for the London
backers were loudly calling for profitable produce. The first of the
spring months were spent in cutting cedar logs and preparing
"clapboards" for sale in England, and a little later there seems to have
been a mild "gold rush" at Jamestown as some hopeful looking golden
colored soil was found. This all delayed early spring clearing and
planting, and boded ill for the coming summer when Ratcliffe wasted
precious days building a house suitable to his position and Smith
engaged in important, yet not particularly pressing, explorations.
The four glass furnaces located by archeological
excavation on Glass-house Point.
THE FIRST MARRIAGE AT JAMESTOWN. It was in September
1608 that Smith became president in fact and inaugurated a program of
physical improvement at Jamestown. The area about the fort was enlarged
and the standing structures repaired. At this point, in October, the
second supply arrived, including 70 settlers, who, when added to the
survivors in Virginia, raised the over-all population to about 120.
Among the new arrivals were two womenMistress Forrest and her
maid. Several months later, in the church at Jamestown, the maid, Ann
Burras, was married to one of the settlers, John Laydon, a carpenter by
trade. This marriage has been ranked as "the first recorded English
marriage on the soil of the United States." Their child, Virginia, born
the next year, was the first to be born at Jamestown. Here was the
beginning of family life in the new colony. Soon other women would
arrive to help continue, or to establish, new homes.
THE SECOND SUPPLY AND EARLY INDUSTRY. With the second
supply came workmen sent over to produce glass, pitch, soap ashes, and
other items profitable in England. These men, including some Poles and
Dutchmen, were quickly assigned to specific duties. So rapidly did they
begin that "trials" of at least one product, glass, were sent home when
Newport left Jamestown before the end of the year. As usual, in addition
to settlers and supplies, Newport brought more instructions from the
company officials. The colony was not succeeding financially, and it was
urged that the council spend more time in the preparation of marketable
products. It was urged, too, that gold be sought more actively; that
Powhatan be crowned as a recognition befitting his position; and that
more effort be expended in search of the Roanoke settlers. These things
were all desirable, but, at the moment, impracticable. No one understood
this better than did Smith, who spoke his mind freely in a letter he
wrote for dispatch to the authorities at home. Nevertheless, these
projects were emphasized, and the more pressing needs of adequate
shelter and sufficient food were neglected.
In the interval from about February to May 1609,
Smith reported considerable material progress in and about Jamestown.
Perhaps 40 acres were cleared and prepared for planting in Indian corn,
the new grain that fast became a staple commodity. A deep well was dug
in the fort. The church was re-covered and 20 cabins built. A second
trial was made at glass manufacture in the furnaces built late in 1608.
A block house was built at the isthmus which connected the
island1 to the main land for better control of the Indians,
and a new fort was erected on a little creek across the river from
Jamestown. Smith was now in command, as his fellow councilors either had
returned to England or were dead. About this time there came a new
disaster. With all attention centered on the numerous construction
projects, insufficient protection was given the meager supply of grain.
When discovered, rats had consumed almost all of the corn stores. Faced
with this situation, Smith found it necessary to scatter the settlers,
sending some to live with the Indians and some to eat at the oyster
banks where the unbalanced oyster diet is reported to have caused their
skin "to peel off from head to foot as if they had been fleade." Only "a
small guarde of gentlemen & some others [were left] about the
president at James Towne."
In midsummer of 1609, conditions at Jamestown were
not good, although it is doubtful that they were any worse than during
the two previous summers. The settlers were becoming acclimated, and
they were learning the ways of the new country. Supplies were low, yet
the number of colonists was small, and a good harvest and a good autumn
might have improved matters had not some 400 new, inexperienced settlers
sailed into the James without their leaders, without instructions, and
with damaged supplies. To add to other complications, they brought fever
and plague. In the selection of prospective settlers for the voyage the
standards had been low, and too many ne'er-do-wells, and even renegades,
had been included. This was the third supply, and it reached Jamestown
in August 1609.
1Although Jamestown Island was not a
true island until the isthmus was washed out about the period of the
Revolution, it was called an island even in the early years of the
Colony.
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