AllRefer.com Reference and Encyclopedia Resource 

AllRefer Channels :: Health | Yellow Pages | | Reference | Weather

November 26, 2009  
 Earth & Environment
 Literature & Arts
 Philosophy & Religion
 Medicine
 People
 Places
 Science & Technology
 Plants & Animals
 Social Science & Law
 Sports & Everyday Life
 History
 Country Studies
A B C D E F G H I J

K L M N O P Q R S

T U V W X Y Z

 United States
 Mexico
 Canada
 Other countries
A B C D E F G H I J

K L M N O P Q R S

T U V W X Y Z

 Countries
 Flags
 Maps

You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > U.S. Political Geography > Virginia, state, United States
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > V

Virginia, state, United States, U.S. Political Geography

Related Category: U.S. Political Geography

Early Settlements of the Virginia Company

Virginia (named for Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen) at first included in its lands the whole vast area of North America not held by the Spanish or French. The colony on Roanoke Island, organized by Sir Walter Raleigh, failed, but the English soon made another attempt slightly farther north. In 1606 James I granted a charter to the London Company (better known later as the Virginia Company), a group of merchants lured by the thought of easy profits in mining and trade. The company sent three ships and 144 men under captains Christopher Newport, Bartholomew Gosnold, and John Ratcliffe to establish a base, and the tiny force entered Chesapeake Bay in Apr., 1607. On a peninsula in the James River they founded (May 13, 1607) the first permanent English settlement in America, which they called Jamestown. It soon became clear that the company's original plans were unrealistic, and the Jamestown settlers began a long and unexpected struggle to live off the land.

By 1608, despite the firm and resourceful leadership of John Smith, hunger and disease had reduced their numbers to 38. The company responded by sending supplies and men as well as new leadership in the person of Sir Thomas Gates, who was to take charge as deputy governor under the authority of a new charter (1609). Gates arrived in 1610 to find that only a handful of settlers had survived the terrible winter (the "starving time") of 1609–10. He decided to take them back to England, but as they were about to abandon the colony in June, 1610, his superior, Governor Thomas West, Baron De la Warr, ordered them to reoccupy Jamestown. Although sickness and starvation continued to take a heavy toll, the settlement at last began to make headway under the harsh regimes of Sir Thomas Dale, De la Warr's successor in 1611, and later under that of Sir Samuel Argall.

Tobacco, first cultivated by John Rolfe in 1612, gave the company new hope of a profitable return on its investment. To encourage settlement and improve agricultural productivity it granted colonists (still technically employees and shareholders) the right to own private gardens, then, at the urging of Sir Edwin Sandys, promised to give 100 acres (40 hectares) of its land to purchasers of stock and 50 acres (20 hectares) to settlers who brought over other settlers at his own expense (the "head-right" system). The company also set up smaller joint-stock companies to settle vast tracts known as "colonies" or "hundreds." In 1619, at the instruction of the company, Governor George Yeardley provided additional incentives to settlers by forming a house of burgesses : the first representative assembly in the New World : and in 1620 by beginning to send women to the colony.

Although these various expedients did succeed in attracting new settlers and strengthening the colony, the company itself failed to prosper. Rolfe's marriage (1614) to Pocahontas, daughter of chief Powhatan, secured good relations with the Native Americans for a time, but in 1622 Powhatan's son Opechancanough led the Powhatan Confederacy in a surprise attack on the colony, killing 350 settlers (about one third of the total community). English retaliation effectively ended Native American resistance, except for a final uprising of the Confederacy in 1644. However, the 1622 attack had delivered a fatal blow to the company, and in 1624, beset by internal dissension, it surrendered its charter to the crown.

Next



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

Alexandria, cities, United States
American Revolution
Antietam campaign
Appomattox
Sir Samuel Argall
Arlington, county, United States
Nathaniel Bacon
Bacon's Rebellion
Sir William Berkeley
John Brown, American abolitionist
Bull Run
Ambrose Everett Burnside
Harry Flood Byrd
William Byrd, 1674–1744, American colonial writer, planter, and government official
Chancellorsville, battle of
Chesapeake, city, United States
George Rogers Clark
Sir Thomas Dale
De la Warr, Thomas West, 12th Baron
Dunmore, John Murray, 4th earl of
Jubal Anderson Early
Richard Stoddert Ewell
David Glasgow Farragut
Fredericksburg, battle of
French and Indian Wars
Sir Thomas Gates
Gettysburg campaign
Bartholomew Gosnold
Ulysses Simpson Grant
Alexander Hamilton
Hampton Roads
Hampton, city, United States
Harpers Ferry
William Henry Harrison
Patrick Henry
Ambrose Powell Hill
Joseph Hooker
Stonewall Jackson
Jamestown, cities, United States
Thomas Jefferson
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions
Richard Henry Lee
Robert Edward Lee
London Company
James Longstreet
James Madison
William Mahone
John Marshall
George Mason
George Brinton McClellan
George Gordon Meade
Monitor and Merrimack
James Monroe
National Parks and Monuments (table)
Navigation Acts
Christopher Newport
Newport News
Norfolk, cities, United States
Ohio Company
Edmund Pendleton
Peninsular campaign
Petersburg
Francis Harrison Pierpont
Pocahontas
Powhatan
Powhatan Confederacy
Portsmouth, cities, United States
Sir Walter Raleigh
Richmond, cities, United States
Reconstruction
Edmund Randolph
Peyton Randolph
Roanoke, city, United States
Roanoke Island
John Rolfe
Edmund Ruffin
Sir Edwin Sandys
Winfield Scott
Seven Days battles
Shenandoah National Park
Philip Henry Sheridan
John Smith, English colonist in America
Alexander Spotswood
James Ewell Brown Stuart
Zachary Taylor
George Henry Thomas
tidewater
Nat Turner
John Tyler
United States
Virginia Beach
L. Douglas Wilder
Wilderness campaign
Woodrow Wilson
Williamsburg
George Washington
Sir George Yeardley
Yorktown campaign

Related Categories:

Places > United States and Canada
[an error occurred while processing this directive]


SITE MAPS


Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities.

About Us | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy | Links Directory
Link to AllRefer.com | Add AllRefer.com Search to your site
| Healthopedia.com  
Copyright © 2009 Par Web Solutions All Rights reserved.
Site best viewed in 800 x 600 resolution.