The Story of Jamestown (continued)

A watercolor by Robert M. Sully showing the
shoreline at Jamestown in 1854 at a point just above the Old Church
Tower. In this period erosion was slowly destroying the west end of the
site of "Old James Towne." (Original in the collection of the late Miss
Julia Sully, Richmond, Va.)
JAMESTOWN REBUILT. Lord Culpeper reached Virginia in
May 1680, with instructions to rebuild Jamestown and to develop it into
an urban center. In 1683, he was able to report that he had given all
possible encouragement to this enterprise and that, although he himself
was living at Green Spring, considerable activity had begun. He
mentioned specifically that Nathaniel Bacon (the kinsman of the rebel),
Joseph Bridget, and William Sherwood had substantial work under way. A
little later the fourth statehouse was completed, as was the church. By
1697 the town had been rebuilt and boasted of a statehouse, country
house, church, fort, powder magazine, and 20 or 30 houses. In this
period William Sherwood, for a time attorney general for the colony, was
a major landholder on the island and in the town. Others included Robert
Beverley, author of one of the early histories of Virginia; William
Edwards, clerk of the Council; Henry Hartwell; and John Page. It was in
1686 that John Clayton, minister at Jamestown, offered proposals for
draining the marshes nearby to improve the healthfulness of the spot, a
project that never materialized.
STATEHOUSE BURNED AND CAPITAL MOVED. On October 31,
1698, a fire consumed the statehouse, prison, and probably other
buildings at Jamestown, although the records and papers were saved. This
fire led to the removal of the seat of government to Middle Plantation
(Williamsburg)a spot favored by the Governor, Sir Francis
Nicholson. Thus, Jamestown was abandoned as the seat of government after
92 years. Its mission had been accomplished, and it had seen Virginia
grow from the small settlement of 1607 into a colony of great extent,
with a population of perhaps 80,000.
LATER YEARS AT JAMESTOWN. The removal of the capital
ultimately proved the death blow for Jamestown, for this eliminated the
primary reason for its existence. Decline set in immediately, but
Jamestown retained a seat in the assembly for another three-quarters of
a century. Its end as a town, legally and physically, may be given as
the period of the American Revolution. There was a military post here
early in that struggle. Later, it became a point of exchange for
American and British prisoners of war, and it featured in the maneuvers
leading to the Siege of Yorktown. It witnessed the movement of
Cornwallis' army across the James and was a landing and resting point
for American and French soldiers being sent to join Washington's allied
army.
Even before 1700, property on Jamestown Island was
being consolidated into a few hands. The consolidation continued
unabated after this date, and before the middle of the 18th century the
major part of the island was in the hands of two familiesAmbler
and Traviseach of which had its own "mansion." The Travis family
estate at Jamestown had grown slowly since before 1650, and Richard
Ambler, of Yorktown, acquired, through marriage, the extensive Jaquelin,
formerly Sherwood, holdings. After 1830, the island came under a single
ownership. Under the Amblers and Travises and later owners of the
island, even parts of the townsite itself became farm land and
functioned as an integral part of the plantation system which earlier
events at Jamestown had helped so materially to create.
The fields, and woods, and marshes lay quietly on the
James for generations, contributing in a small, but important, manner to
a growing country. Americans often remembered the early years of the
colony and the momentous events that had taken place on the island, and
joined here to commemorate the deeds of their forefathers. There was the
Bicentennial of 1807, the Virginiad of 1822, the 250th anniversary in
1857, and the Tercentennial of 1907. In the years between these events
there were thousands who came individually and in small groups, the
famous and those now unknown. It was this remembrance and loyalty to one
of its great landmarks that led to the establishment of Jamestown Island
as a national historic shrine.
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