Painting of John Smith and colonists landing in Jamestown
On 4 May [O.S. 14 May] 1607, 105 to 108 English men and boys (surviving the voyage from England) established the Jamestown Settlement for the Virginia Company of London , on a slender peninsula on the bank of the James River . It became the first long-term English settlement in North America .[ 1] [ 2]
The trips aboard the ships Susan Constant , Discovery , and the Godspeed , and the settlement itself, were sponsored by the London Company, whose "adventurers" (investors) hoped to make a profit from the resources of the New World . The settlers suffered terrible hardships in its early years, including sickness, starvation , and native attacks . By early 1610, most of the settlers had died due to starvation and disease.[ 3] With resupply and additional immigrants, it managed to endure, becoming America's first permanent English colony .[ 4]
Once the settlement location was chosen, the company members opened sealed instructions containing the list of the previously chosen councillors of the Virginia Governor's Council . The first council president was Edward Maria Wingfield . The other six council members were Bartholomew Gosnold , John Martin , John Ratcliffe , George Kendall , Christopher Newport (ex officio ) and John Smith .[ 5]
Original settlers (May 1607)[ edit ]
Council members in bold .[ 6] [ 7] Titles and occupations are from era accounts, but use modern British spellings.
On December 30, 1606, between 105 and 108 settlers with 39 mariners (non-settlers) sailed aboard three ships from Blackwall, London, England.[ 8]
Original Jamestown settlers (May 1607):
Name
Occupation
Alt. names
Death date (YYYY-MM-DD)[ note 1]
Notes
Henry Adling
Gentleman
Adding, H.
Jerome Alicock
Gentleman
Alikok Ancient, Jeremy
1607–08–04
Slain by natives[ 10]
Gabriel Archer
Captain and Gentleman
Archer, Gabriell
1609 or 1610 winter
Secretary to the Council (lawyer)[ 11]
John Asbie
1607–08–06
First death of the colony (dysentery)[ 10]
Robert Beheathland
Captain and Gentleman
Behethland, R.
1627
Benjamin Best
Gentleman
Beast, B.
1607–09–05
Edward Brinto
Mason and Soldier
Brinton, E.
Edward Brookes
Gentleman
1607–04–07
Died in the West Indies (before arriving to Virginia)
John Brookes
Gentleman
Edward Browne
Gentleman
Brown, E.
1607–08–15
James Brumfield
Boy
Brunfield, J.
Andrew Buckler
Shipmaster[ 12]
Bucler, A.
1625[citation needed ]
William Bruster
Gentleman
Brewster, W.
1607–08–10
Died from native wound
John Capper
Carpenter
Not listed [as alive] after June 1607[ 13]
George Cassen
Labourer
Cawson, G.
1607–12–26
Killed by natives[ 13]
Thomas Cassen
Labourer
William Cassen
Labourer
Ustis Clovill
Gentleman
Clovill, Eustice
1607–06–07
Killed by natives[ 13]
Samuel Collier
Boy
Dutch Samuel
1622
John Smith's page
Roger Cooke
Gentleman
Thomas Couper
Barber
Cowper, T.
Richard Crofts
Gentleman
Richard Dixon
Gentleman
John Dods
Labourer and Soldier
"1624 VA muster with wife Jane, 40 at muster, he was 36"[ 13]
Ould Edward
Labourer
Thomas Emry
Carpenter
1607–12–26
Killed by natives[ 13]
Robert Fenton
Gentleman
George Floure
Gentleman
Flowre, G.
1607–08–09
Robert Ford
Gentleman
Richard Frith
Gentleman
Stephen Galithrope
Gentleman
Calthrop,[ 14] Halthrop
1607–08–10
Possible mutineer[ 13]
William Garrett
Bricklayer
George Golding
Labourer
Goulding, G.
Thomas Gore
Gentleman
Gower, T.
1607–08–16
Anthony Gosnold
Gentleman
1609–01–07
Possibly two cousins with identical names. Drowned Jan 1609 in James River. Grandson of Robert Gosnold of Earl Soham, Suffolk.[ 13]
Bartholomew Gosnold
Councillor and Captain
1607–08–22
Captain of the Godspeed
Edward Harrington
Gentleman
1607–08–24
John Herd
Bricklayer
not listed [as alive] after June 1607[ 13]
Nicholas Houlgrave
Gentleman
Robert Hunt
Preacher
before 1609
Thomas Jacob
Sergeant (soldier)[ 10]
Jacon, T.
1607–09–04[ 10]
William Johnson
Labourer
George Kendall
Councillor and Captain
1607–12–01
Execution by firing squad for "mutiny"[ 15]
Ellis Kingston
Gentleman
E. Kiniston or Kinnistone
1607–09–18
"Starved to death with cold"[ 16]
John Laydon
Carpenter and Labourer
Leyden
arrived on the Susan Constant[ 17]
William Laxon
Carpenter
Laxton, W.
William Love
Tailor and Soldier
Loue, W.
John Martin
Councillor and Captain
Martine, J[ 18]
1632-06-??
Lower Brandon Plantation owner
John Martin, Jr.
Gentleman
1607–09–18
Son of Councillor
George Martin
Gentleman
James Midwinter
Gentleman
Francis Midwinter
1607–08–14
Died suddenly[ 10]
Edward Morish
Corporal and Gentleman
Morris, E.
1607–08–14
Died suddenly[ 10]
Thomas Mounslie [ 19]
Labourer
1607–08–17
Died suddenly[ 10]
Thomas Mouton
Gentleman
1607–09–19
Richard Mutton
Boy
Nathaniel Peacock
Boy
Pecock, N.
John Penington [citation needed ]
Gentleman
Robert Pennington
1608-08-18[ 10]
Robert Penington [citation needed ]
Gentleman
George Percy
Gentleman, Shipmaster
Percie
1632
Eventual Governor of Virginia Colony. Son of Henry Percy, 8th Earl of Northumberland .
Drue Pickhouse
Gentleman
Dru Piggas or Peggase
1607–08–19
Edward Pising
Carpenter
Posing, E.
Nathaniel Powell
Captain[ 20] and Gentleman
Nathaniell
1622–03–22
John Ratcliffe
Councillor and Captain
Sicklemore, J.
1609-11-??
Captain of the Discovery , eventual Governor
James Read
Blacksmith and Soldier
1622–03–13
John Robinson
Gentleman
Jehu
1607–12–26
Killed by natives[ 20]
William Rods
Labourer
Roods, W.
1607–08–27
not listed [as alive] after June 1607
Thomas Sands
Gentleman
Sandys, T.
Brother of Edwin Sandys (1561–1629)
George Saunders
Grandson of [[Laurence Saunders (1510-1555[ 21] )]]
Edward Short
Labourer
1607-08-??
John Short
Gentleman
Richard Simons
Gentleman
Simmons, R.
1607–09–18
Nicholas Scot
Drummer
Skot, N.
Robert Small
Carpenter
John Smith
Councillor and Captain
Smyth, J.
1631-06-??
William Smethes
Gentleman
Francis Snarsbrough
Gentleman
John Stevenson
Gentleman
Thomas Studley
Gentleman, Cape Merchant (treasurer)[ 10]
Stoodie, T.
1607–08–28
William Tanker
Gentleman
Tankard, W.
Henry Tavin
Labourer
Tanin, H.
Kellam Throgmorton
Gentleman
Throgmortine, Kenelme
1607–08–26
Anas Todkill
Carpenter and Soldier
Servant to John Martin
William Unger
Labourer
George Walker
Gentleman
1607-08-24[ 10]
Thomas Walker [citation needed ]
John Waller
Gentleman
Waler
1607–08–24
Thomas Webbe
Gentleman
William White
Labourer
William Wilkinson
Surgeon
Edward Maria Wingfield
Councillor and Captain
Edward Marie Winfield
1631
Captain of Susan Constant
Thomas Wotton
Surgeon
Richard [citation needed ]
Commoner
Known mariners and others with the colonists (but did not remain at Jamestown):
Bragg, Thomas - Teenaged Deckhand of Christopher Newport
Bragg, George - Teenaged Deckhand of Christopher Newport
Browne, Oliver - Mariner
Clarke, Charles - Mariner
Collson (or Cotson), John - Mariner
Crookdeck, John - Mariner
Deale, Jeremy - Mariner
Fitch (Finch), Mathew - Mariner
Genoway, Richard - Mariner
Godword, Thomas - Mariner
Jackson, Robert - Mariner
Markham, Robert - Mariner
Morton, Matthew - Sailor
Nelson, Francys (Francis) - Captain
Poole, Jonas - Mariner
Skynner, Thomas - Mariner
Tyndall (Tindall), Robert - Mariner, Surveyor[ 22] [ 23] [ 24]
Turnbrydge (or Turbridge), Thomas - Mariner
Newport, Christopher - Captain, Councillor ex officio (d. 1617)
White, Benjamyn - Mariner
Danynell
Stephen
Settlers from First Supply (January and April 1608)[ edit ]
Aboard the John and Francis (captained by Christopher Newport) and the Phœnix [sic ] (captained by Francis Nelson),[ 25] The John and Francis arrives in January, while the Phenix is considered lost (but arrives months later).[ 26] 120 settlers left England in October 1607. Only 100 made it to Virginia to settle. When they arrived at Jamestown, there were only 38 to 40 men that had survived the summer and autumn.[ 27] [ 28] [ 20]
Jefrey Abots, Gentleman
Robert Alberton, Perfumer
Robert Barnes, Gentleman
William Bayley, Gentleman
William Beckwith, Tailor
Richard Belfield, Refiner
William Bentley, Labourer
John Bouth, Labourer
Richard Brislow, Labourer
William Burket, Labourer
James Burne
William Cantril, Gentleman
William Causey, Gentleman
Thomas Coo, Gentleman
Robert Cotton, Tobacco-pipe-maker
Robert Cutler, Gentleman
William Dawson, Refiner
Richard Dole, Blacksmith
Thomas Feld (Field),[ 29] Apothecary
Richard Fetherstone
George Forest, Gentleman
Post Gittnat, Surgeon
Raymond Goodyson, Labourer
Richard Gradon, Labourer
William Gryvill, Gentleman
Edward Gurganay, Gentleman
John Harford, Apothecary
John Harper, Gentleman
George Hill, Gentleman
Thomas Hope, Tailor
William Johnson, Refiner
Peter Keffer, Gunner
Richard Killingbeck, Gentleman
Timothy Leeds, Gentleman
John Lewes, Couper
William May, Labourer
Michaell
Richard Miler, Labourer
Richard Molynex, Gentleman
Ralfe Morton, Gentleman
Rowland Nelstrop, Labourer
John Nickoles, Gentleman
William Perce, Labourer
Francis Perkins, Labourer
Michaell Phetyplace, Gentleman
Captain William Phetyplace (Phettiplace), Gentleman
Peter Pory, Gentleman
Richard Pots, Gentleman, Council Clerk, returned to England c. 1609
John Powell, Tailor
George Pretty, Gentleman
Richard Prodger, Gentleman
Jonas Profit , Fisherman and Sailor
Abraham Ransacke, Refiner
Christopher Rodes
Walter Russell, Gentleman and Doctor[ 30]
Richard Savage (Salvage), Labourer
Thomas Savage (Salvage), Boy and Labourer[ 31]
Matthew Scrivener , secretary, appointed to be of the Council (d. January 7, 1609)
Lt. Michael Sicklemore , Gentleman
William Simons, Labourer
John Speareman, Labourer
William Spence , Labourer and Treasurer
Daniell Stalling, Jeweller
John Taverner, Gentleman
Laurence Towtales, Tailor
Nicholas Ven, Labourer
William Ward, Tailor
James Watkings
Vere
Richard Worley, Gentleman
Richard Wyffin, Gentleman
Bishop Wyles, Labourer
William Yonge, Tailor
"...with diverse others"
Francisco Maguel (Miguel), an Irishman[ 15] [ 32]
Settlers from Second Supply (autumn 1608)[ edit ]
Quickly after the first supply, Captain Newport boarded 70 new colonists to the Mary and Margaret [ note 2] . First women colonists are noted with female sign (♀️).
Thomas Abbey (Abbay), Gentleman
Gabriell Bedle (Bedell),[ 33] Gentleman and Lumberjack
John Bedle (Bedell), Gentleman
Henry Bell, Tradesman
Thomas Bradley, Tradesman
♀️Anne Burras , maid to Mistress Forrest
John Burras, Tradesman
George Burton, Gentleman
Captain Raleigh Croshaw , Gentleman
John Clarke, Tradesman
Henry Collings, Gentleman
John Dauxe, Gentleman
Thomas Dowse , Labourer
William Dowman, Gentleman
David Ellis, Tradesman
Thomas Forrest , Gentleman
♀️Mistress Margaret Forrest , Gentlewoman[ 34]
Thomas Fox, Labourer
Thomas Gipson, Tradesman
Thomas Graves , Gentleman
John Gudderington, Gentleman
Hugh Gwyn (Wynne), Tradesman
Nicholas Hancock, Labourer
Thomas Holcroft[ 35] [ 36]
Hardwin, Labourer
Harmon Haryson, Gentleman
Hellyard, Boy
John Hoult, Gentleman
David ap Hugh, Tradesman
Master Hunt, Gentleman
Captain Thomas Lawson[ 35] [ 36]
Thomas Lavander (LaVinder),[ 37] Tradesman
Henry Ley, Gentleman
Michaell Lowicke, Gentleman
Captain Isaac Madison[ 38]
Thomas Mallard, Labourer
Thomas Maxes, Gentleman
Milman, Boy
Morrell, Labourer
Thomas Norton, Gentleman
Dionis Oconor, Tradesman
Thomas Phelps, Tradesman
Henry Philpot, Gentleman
Master William Powell , Tradesman
John Prat, Tradesman
Rose, Labourer
John Chief Russell, Gentleman and Lumberjack (d. c. 1625 )[ 39]
William Russell, Gentleman
William Sambage, Gentleman
Scot, Labourer
Jefry Shortridge, Tradesman
William Taler, Labourer
Master Daniel Tucker , gentleman, cape merchant (treasurer), and store clerk[ 40]
Walker, Labourer
Captain Richard (Ralph)[ 41] Waldoe, appointed to the Council (d. Jan 1609)[ 42]
Master Robert Wilde, store clerk[ 23]
Williams, Labourer
Captain Peter Wynne (Winne), appointed to the Council (d. April 1609)
Master Francis West , Gentleman
Hugh Wollystone, Gentleman
George Yarington, Gentleman
...Eight Dutch men, Poles (known as the Jamestown Polish craftsmen ), with some others
Adam, German carpenter[ 43]
Franz, German carpenter
Samuel, German carpenter
Wilhelm Volday (William Waldi), Swiss-German general prospector[ 44]
Settlers from Third Supply (August 1609)[ edit ]
With 500 to 600 persons, a fleet of nine ships set sail in May 1609 led by Thomas Gates and George Somers . The ships were named Sea Venture , Diamond , Faulcon [sic ],[ 45] Blessinge , Unitie [sic ], Lion , Swallow , Virginia , and Catch (ketch [ 46] ),.[ 47] [ 48]
In July, a tropical storm struck the flotilla. The Catch vanished with all aboard, and the Sea Venture shipwrecked on Bermuda , inadvertently colonizing the island.[ 49] The seven remaining ships arrived at Jamestown only to bring diseased and hungry passengers to the stressed colony.[ 50] [ 51]
Council members in bold .[ 6] [ 7] Those who died in Bermuda (or were lost at sea) are indicated with a Latin cross (✝️). Titles and occupations are from era accounts, but use modern British spellings.
Third Supply passengers (May 1609):
Name
Occupation
Alt. names
Ships
Notes on travel
Gabriel Archer
Captain and gentleman
Archer, Gabriell
Blessinge
Secretary to the Council, previously sailed with original colonists
Robert Adams [ 52]
Captain
Blessinge
Henry Bagwell
Sea Venture → Deliverance
Traveled from Bermuda to Virginia on Deliverance , aged 35
Temperance Flowerdew
Wife of Richard Barrow
Flowerdew Barrow, T.
Faulcon [ 53]
Uncertain if husband Richard Barrow accompanied to Virginia
Nicolas Bennit
carpenter
Sea Venture
William Brian
Sea Venture
Jeffrey Briars ✝️
Sea Venture
Died in Bermuda, c. 1609-1610
Richard Buck
Reverend, Chaplain
Bucke or Bucket, R.
Sea Venture
Uncertain if traveled with wife or children
Maria Thorowgood Buck
Marye Thorowgood
Sea Venture
Died 1620
Buck daughter (I)
child, girl
Bucket
Sea Venture
Unknown name, daughter of Richard Buck
Buck daughter (II)
child, girl
Bucket
Sea Venture
Unknown name, daughter of Richard Buck
William Capps
Saltmaker
William Moss Cappes, Sr.
Sea Venture [ note 3]
Christopher Carter
Sea Venture
Plotted to assassinate Sir Thomas Gates, considered a deserter and stayed behind on Bermuda.[ 55] Settled Smith's Island .[ 56]
Josuah Chard
Chard, Joshua or Joseph[ 57]
Sea Venture
Edward Chard
Chart, E.
Sea Venture
Sailed back to Bermuda with George Somers, remained on Smith's Island [ 56]
James Davis
Captain, mariner
Davies, J.
Virginia
From Popham Colony
Robert Davis [ 58]
Shipmaster
Davies, R.
Virginia
Likely brother to James Davis
Rachell Davis
Wife of James Davis
Virginia
Edward Chart
Sea Venture
Bermudas Eason ✝️
baby boy[ 59]
Easton, Bermudas[ 60]
--
Born on Bermuda islands, died c. 1610 either on the islands or arriving at Jamestown[ 60]
Edward Eason
Easton, E.[ 60]
Sea Venture
Father to Bermudas (boy), husband to Mistress Eason
Mistress Eason
Easton[ 60]
Sea Venture
Mother to Bermudas (boy), wife to Edward Eason
Matthew Fitch ✝️
Shipmaster
Finch, M.
Catch
Died c. July 1609 (likely lost at sea)
Richard Frobisher
Shipwright
Frubbusher, Robert[ 61]
Sea Venture
Builder of the Deliverance on Bermuda[ 62]
Thomas Gates
Governor and Lt. General [ 63]
Sea Venture
Thomas Godby
Sea Venture → Deliverance
Traveled rom Bermuda to Virginia on Deliverance , aged 36
George Grave
Graye, G.
Sea Venture
Ralph Hamor
Captain
Haman, Raphe
Sea Venture [ 64]
Mistress Horton
Sea Venture
William Hitchman ✝️
Sea Venture
Died on Bermuda, c. 1609-1610
Stephen Hopkins
merchant and tanner
Sea Venture
Protested leaving Bermuda, was almost executed for mutiny.[additional citation(s) needed ] Died 1644.
Elizabeth Joons
Girl
Jones, E.
Sea Venture
Probably aged 9 or 10
Samuel Jordan
Captain, gentleman
Sea Venture [ 65] [additional citation(s) needed ]
Silvester Jourdain
Writer, gentleman
Jordan, Sylvester
Sea Venture
Writer of A Discovery of the Barmudas [sic ]
William King
Captain
Diamond
Mariner (did not remain in Virginia)
Richard Knowles
Sea Venture
Richard Lewis ✝️
Sea Venture
Died in Bermuda, c. 1609-1610
John Lytefoote
Servant
Lightfoot, J.
Sea Venture → Patience
Servant living with William Peirce in 1624[ 66]
John Martin
Councillor and Captain
Faulcon
Original Jamestown settler, traveled back and forth from England
William Martin
Sea Venture
Matchumps
Powhatan servant to Namontack
Sea Venture
John Moone
Captain
Swallow
Mariner (did not remain in Virginia)
Richard Moore
Carpenter[ 67]
Sea Venture [ 67]
Returned to Bermuda as a deputy governor in 1612[ 67]
Namontack ✝️
Powhatan translator[ 68]
Namotacke[ 69]
Sea Venture
Died 1610, slain by Matchumps in Bermuda
Francis Michell
Mitchell, F.
Sea Venture
Francis Nelson
Shipmaster
Francys Nelson
Faulcon
Mariner (did not remain in Virginia)
Christopher Newport
Captain and Councillor (ex officio )
Sea Venture
Mariner (did not remain in Virginia)
Henry Paine ✝️
Sea Venture
Executed (by gunshot) for refusing to report for watch patrol in Bermuda[ 55]
Francis Pearepoint
Sea Venture
Elizabeth Persons
Maidservant to Mistress Horton
Sea Venture
Would marry Thomas Powell on Bermuda, aged 30
William Peirce [ note 4]
Soldier
Pierce, W. or Pearse
Sea Venture
Joane Peirce (I)
Wife of William Peirce, mother of two Janes (II and III)[ 70]
Pierce, Jone
Blessinge
Joane Peirce (II)
girl
Jane Pierce
Blessinge [ note 5]
Jane Peirce (III)
girl
Joan
Blessinge [ 72]
Michael Philes ✝️
Captain
Pinnace (ship's boat) in tow by Sea Venture [ 73]
Died at sea during the tropical storm, c. July 1609
Robert Pitt [ 58]
Shipmaster
Arthur Pett[ 52]
Unitie
Could be purported member of the Pitt family , or a Robert Fitt who was active in 1625[ 42]
Thomas Powell
Cook
Sea Venture
George Somers' cook. Married Elizabeth Persons in Bermuda
John Graye Proctor
Gentleman, Yeoman[ 74]
Sea Venture
John Ratcliffe
Councillor
Diamond
Original settler. Died c. 1609-1610 (tortured by natives) after arriving in Virginia
Henry Ravens ✝️
Master's mate
Raven, H.
Sea Venture → pinnace (ship's boat)
Lost at sea (or killed by Native Americans) after sailing a pinnace for help after shipwreck on Bermuda, c. 1609[ 55]
Humfrey Reede
Sea Venture
Robert Rich
Soldier
Sea Venture
Author of "verse pamphlet", "Newes from Virginia: the lost flocke triumphant". Died in 1630 after returning to Bermuda.
Bermuda Rolfe ✝️
baby girl
--
John Rolfe and Sarah Hacker Rolfe's daughter. Born on Bermuda islands, died on islands c. 1610
John Rolfe
tobacco trader
Sea Venture
Sarah Hacker Rolfe ✝️
Wife of John Rolfe
Sea Venture
Either died in Bermuda or soon after reaching Virginia (c. spring 1610)
Edward Samuell ✝️
Samuel, E.
Sea Venture
Murdered by shipmate Edward Waters
Samuel Sharpe
Lieutenant (soldier)
Sea Venture
William Sharpe
Sergeant (soldier)
Sgt Sharp
Sea Venture
Henry Shelly
Mr. Shelly
Sea Venture
George Somers
Admiral of the Fleet, Councillor (ex officio )
Sea Venture → Patience
Died upon return to Bermuda, November 1610
Matthew Somers
Captain
Mathew Somers
Swallow
Nephew of George Somers. Sailed to Bermuda and then back to England at some point in 1610.
Henry Spelman of Jamestown
teenaged boy, writer
Unitie [ 75]
William Strachey
Secretary-elect , writer
Sea Venture
Author of True Reportory and other works
James Swift
Sea Venture
Robert Walsingham
Cockswain
Sea Venture → Patience
Bermuda's Walsingham Bay and region namesakes are due to Robert. Walsingham piloted (and saved) the Patience during launch from Castle Harbour reefs.[ 76]
James Want
John Want
Sea Venture
Refused to build boats to be rescued or to leave Bermuda[ 55]
Edward Waters
Lieutenant (soldier)
Robert Waters[ 60]
Sea Venture
Murdered shipmate Edward Samuell.[ 55] Taken into custody, then to a tree and left to starve, but escaped by cutting the ropes. Remained in Bermuda afterward, settled Smith's Island .[ 56]
George Webb
Captain, sergeant-major
Lion
Thomas Whittingham ✝️
Cape merchant (treasurer)[ 77]
Sea Venture → pinnace (ship's boat)
Lost at sea (or killed by Native Americans) after sailing a pinnace (with Henry Ravens) for help after marooning on Bermuda, 1609[ 77]
Thomas Wood [ 78]
Captain
Unitie
George Yeardley
Captain of the guard for Thomas Gates
Sea Venture
Settlers from Fourth Supply (June 1610)[ edit ]
Survivors from Bermuda (137-142 passengers and crew)[ 79] salvaged the Sea Venture , and built two ships: Deliverance and Patience .[ 62] The ships made it to Jamestown on May 23rd to find only 60 starving colonists , and chose to abandon the colony.
Patience and Deliverance (castaways from Bermuda and Sea Venture )
Henry Bagwell
Mistress Maria Thorowgood Buck[additional citation(s) needed ]
Richard Buck
William Capps
Edward Eason
Mistress Eason
Richard Frobisher
Thomas Gates
Thomas Godby
Stephen Hopkins
Elizabeth Joons
Silvester Jourdain
Matchumps
Elizabeth Powell (née Persons)
Thomas Powell
Robert Rich
John Rolfe
Mistress Sarah Hacker Rolfe[additional citation(s) needed ]
George Somers
William Strachey
Robert Walsingham
George Yeardley
De La Warr's mission[ edit ]
At the same time, Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr and Samuel Argall (after hearing of John Smith's adventures), led a humanitarian mission from England with 150 men (including a doctor, some Frenchmen, a Swiss miner[ 80] ) and supplies.[ 81] Aboard the Hercules (of Rye ), Blessinge (of Plymouth, England ), and De La Warr [ note 6] ships, they intercepted the weary colonists in Chesapeake Bay departing Virginia and compelled them to return to Jamestown with the new provisions and passengers.[ 47] [ 82]
Captain Samuel Argall
Doctor Lawrence Bohun [ 23]
Master Andrew Buckler[ 83]
Sir Humphrey (Humfrey) Blunt[ 84]
Reynold Booth[ 23]
Captain Edward Brewster (Bruster)[ 85]
Joan Chandler[ 23]
Captain Ralph Hamor , secretary
William Henrick Faldoe, a Swiss mine-hunter[ 86]
William Julian[ 23]
Richard Kingsmill , on the Delaware [ 23]
Reverend William Mease (Mays)[ 23]
Master Anthony Scott, ensign[ 87]
Master Stacy[ 88]
Master Robert Tyndall (Tindall), mariner[ 89]
Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr , "Lord Governor and Captain General"
Captain William West[ 47]
Sir Ferdinando Wainmen (Wenman, Weinman), captain and gentleman, master of the ordnance [ 90]
Other settlers in 1610-11 [ edit ]
The Hercules (of Rye), which had left in July, 1610, returned to Virginia on April, 1611, with 30 immigrants (captained by Robert Adams).[ 91]
The Noah brought ancient planter Henry Coltman in August, 1610.[ 92] In c. September 1610, the Dainty arrived with "twelve men, one woman, three horses, and provisions..."[ 88] Captained by Nathaniel West, the Mary Ann brought over widow Mistress Francis West .[ 93] The Mary and Thomas [ note 7] brought over William Tucker .[ 95]
Settlers from Fifth Supply (May and August 1611)[ edit ]
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Both Thomas Dale and Thomas Gates led flotillas back to Virginia. Thomas Dale headed to the colony with 300 labourers, at the request of the London Company. The Starr , the Elizabeth , and Prosperous (with Vice Admiral Christopher Newport) also carried horses, poultry, goats, and rabbits.[ 96] [ 97] Thomas Gates had ships Sarah ,[ 98] Tryall [sic ][ note 8] , Swan [ note 9] which arrived just after the Dale flotilla. Those who died before arriving in Virginia are indicated with a Latin cross (✝️)
John Clark, pilot[ 101]
Thomas Dale , "Marshall of Virginia" , on the Starr
✝️ Mistress Thomas Gates, wife of Gates[ 102]
Daughter of Gates (I)
Daughter of Gates (II)
Cecily Jordan Farrar , girl
Robert Poole (Powell), boy, on the Starr [ 103]
Robert Poole (Powell), Sr., father, on the Starr
John Poole (Powell), brother of Robert the elder, on the Starr
Reverend Mister Poole[ 101]
William Spencer , yeoman[ 98]
Thomas Sully
Reverend Alexander Whitaker (Whiteaker), on the Starr [ 101]
Robert Wright , sawyer[ 104]
Footnotes
^ Dates are in Old Style calendar (the New Year begins on March 25).[ 9]
^ Ship name, Mary and Margaret is sometimes documented as Mary Margaret or Mary Ann Margett
^ It is unclear which ship William Capps arrived on. Capps was potentially marooned on Bermuda with the Sea Venture (most likely) or could have arrived safely to Virginia with Thomas Gates remaining flotilla.[ 54]
^ Not to be confused with an English immigrant in Plymouth, Massachusetts, with the same name and same named-wife.
^ There is conflicting data on whether Jane Pierce (daughter of William and Joan) sailed with her father aboard Sea Venture or her mother on the Blessinge .[ 70] [ 68] It is also debated if the found remains of a "Jane" are the same girl.[ 71]
^ A third ship, De La Warr (Delaware ) name is debated, and even the ship itself to exist
^ Ship Mary and Thomas is often referred to as Mary and James [ 94]
^ Ship name is an alternate spelling of "Trial", sometimes written as Triall [ 99]
^ Swan ship might have been called Swan of Barnstaple [ 100]
References
^ This article incorporates public domain material from A Short History of Jamestown . National Park Service .
^ "Timeline of exploration of N.America" . Timepage.org. Retrieved 2009-09-22 .
^ Yorktown, Mailing Address: P. O. Box 210; Us, VA 23690 Phone: 757 898-2410 Contact. "A Short History of Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)" . www.nps.gov . Retrieved 2024-09-25 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ "A Short History of Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)" . www.nps.gov . Retrieved 2016-12-06 .
^ "A Short History of Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)" . www.nps.gov . Retrieved 2016-12-06 .
^ a b "The First Residents of Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)" . www.nps.gov .
^ a b "Virtual Jamestown" . www.virtualjamestown.org .
^ "Jamestown Colony 1606" .
^ "Catholic Encyclopedia: General Chronology" .
^ a b c d e f g h i j Early, Ruth Hairston (1907). By-ways of Virginia History: A Jamestown Memorial, Embracing a Sketch of Pocahontas . Everett Waddey Company. p. 104.
^ "Concord 1602" . packrat-pro.com .
^ Peter Wilson Coldham. The Complete Book of Emigrants: 1607-1660 (1987)
^ a b c d e f g h "Jamestown Colony 1606" . www.packrat-pro.com .
^ "ABOUT FACE: RESEARCHERS RECONSTRUCT IMAGE OF A 2ND SETTLER" . November 25, 1998.
^ a b Barbour, Philip L. “Captain George Kendall: Mutineer or Intelligencer?” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 70, no. 3, 1962, pp. 297–313. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4246865 . Accessed 23 Sept. 2024.
^ Early, Ruth Hairston (1907). By-ways of Virginia History: A Jamestown Memorial, Embracing a Sketch of Pocahontas . Everett Waddey Company. p. 105.
^ "Virginia Laydon Historical Marker" . www.hmdb.org .
^ "Early Settlement of Virginia and Virginiola: As Noticed by Poets and Players in the Time of" . Johnson, Smith , & Harrison. 1878.
^ Johnston, Mary (1921). Pioneers of the Old South: A Chronicle of English Colonial Beginnings . Vol. 5. Yale University Press. p. 37.
^ a b c "Jamestown Colony 1606" .
^ https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/38686809?cfpid=19269462034
^ "Jamestown Colony 1606" . packrat-pro.com .
^ a b c d e f g h Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 132. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ https://hdl.huntington.org/digital/collection/p15150coll4/id/3895/
^ "Zuñiga Map of James Fort | Historic Jamestowne" .
^ "1600 to 1609 | Virginia Records Timeline: 1553 to 1743 | Articles and Essays | Thomas Jefferson Papers, 1606-1827 | Digital Collections | Library of Congress" . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA .
^ "First Supply" . www.packrat-pro.com .
^ "First Supply" . Archived from the original on 2009-03-23.
^ Gill, Harold B.. The Apothecary in Colonial Virginia. United States, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 1972.
^ "Meet Dr. Walter Russell | Historic Jamestowne" .
^ "Thomas Savage (Ca. 1595–before September 1633)" .
^ "Was the Colonies' First Death Penalty Handed to a Mutineer or Spy?" . HISTORY . December 12, 2023.
^ "Virginia Gleaning in England" . The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography . 24 (3): 261–270. 1916. JSTOR 4243529 .
^ Barnes, Robert William (2007). Colonial Families of Maryland: Bound and Determined to Succeed . Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 978-0-8063-5316-6 .
^ a b Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 131. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ a b "Unsolved Passages" . packrat-pro.com .
^ Lavender, Billy Boyd (2015). "Honorable Heritage: A Book of Family Folklore" . iUniverse. ISBN 9781491760574 . it is presumed that the LaVinder family changed their surname during emigration; in this case, the LaVinder spelling in France became the Lavendar spelling in Jamestown or Santa Elena...
^ Early, Ruth Hairston (1907). By-ways of Virginia History: A Jamestown Memorial, Embracing a Sketch of Pocahontas . p. 119.
^ "John Russell" . 20 September 2023.
^ Fausz, J. Frederick. “An ‘Abundance of Blood Shed on Both Sides’: England’s First Indian War, 1609-1614.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 98, no. 1, 1990, pp. 3–56. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/4249117 . Accessed 14 Oct. 2024.
^ Stanard, Mary Newton. Colonial Virginia: Its People and Customs. United Kingdom, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1917.
^ a b McCartney, Martha W.. Documentary History of Jamestown Island: Biographies of owners and residents. United States, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, 2000.
^ "German American Corner: First Germans at Jamestown 1" . February 10, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-02-10.
^ "German American Corner: First Germans at Jamestown 1" . Archived from the original on 2017-07-19.
^ McCartney, Martha W. (2007). Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary . Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 774. ISBN 9780806317748 .
^ Early, Ruth Hairston (1907). By-ways of Virginia History: A Jamestown Memorial, Embracing a Sketch of Pocahontas . Everett Waddey Company. p. 110.
^ a b c ROSE, E. M. “Lord Delaware, First Governor of Virginia, ‘the Poorest Baron of This Kingdom.’” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 128, no. 3, 2020, pp. 226–58. JSTOR, https://www.jstor.org/stable/26926494 . Accessed 19 Aug. 2024.
^ "Pilgrim Ship Lists by Date" .
^ Woodward, Hobson (2009). "A brave vessel: the true tale of the castaways who rescued Jamestown and inspired Shakespeare's The tempest" . Viking. ISBN 9780670020966 .
^ McCartney, Martha. " "The Starving Time" " . Encyclopedia Virginia .
^ "Sea Venture 1609" .
^ a b Coldham, Peter Wilson (1987). "The Complete Book of Emigrants: 1607-1660 . Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-8063-1192-0 .
^ "The Indispensable Role of Women at Jamestown - Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)" . www.nps.gov .
^ "William Capps (Fl. 1609–1630)" .
^ a b c d e "The Wreck of the Sea Venture: The Untold Story" . The Bermudian Magazine . April 25, 2024.
^ a b c "The History of Smith's Island, Bermuda's First Colony" . The Bermudian Magazine . December 27, 2023.
^ Ransome, David R. “Village Tensions in Early Virginia: Sex, Land, and Status at the Neck of Land in the 1620s.” The Historical Journal, vol. 43, no. 2, 2000, pp. 365–81. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/3021033 . Accessed 22 Aug. 2024.
^ a b Boddie, John Bennett (1966). Colonial Surry . Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 19. ISBN 9780806300269 .
^ Salmon, John. " "Newport, Christopher (1561–after August 15, 1617)" " . Encyclopedia Virginia .
^ a b c d e "Sea Venture Timeline" . LearnForYourLife .
^ Hayward, Walter Brownell (1910). Bermuda Past and Present: A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Somers Islands . Dodd, Mead. p. 16.
^ a b "Deliverance" .
^ "Corporation of St George's, Bermuda - Official Site - History" .
^ "1610 to 1619 | Virginia Records Timeline: 1553 to 1743 | Articles and Essays | Thomas Jefferson Papers, 1606-1827 | Digital Collections | Library of Congress" . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA .
^ Stanard, Mary Newton (1928). Story of Virginia's First Century . Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott. pp. 180-181 .
^ Documentary History of Jamestown Island: Land ownership . Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. 2000.
^ a b c Glover, Lorri; Blake Smith, Daniel (2008). The Shipwreck That Saved Jamestown: The Sea Venture Castaways and the Fate of America . p. 263. ISBN 9780805086546 .
^ a b "Virginia and Bermuda" .
^ Wise, Jennings Cropper (1911). Ye Kingdome of Accawmacke, or the Eastern Shore of Virginia, in the Seventeenth Century . The Bell book and stationery co. p. 28.
^ a b https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/in-jamestown-a-new-exhibition-pays-homage-to-the-women-history-overlooked/2018/12/18/bf692006-fa49-11e8-8c9a-860ce2a8148f_story.html [bare URL ]
^ "Jane (D. 1609 or 1610)" .
^ McCartney, Martha (2007). Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635 A Biographical Dictionary . Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 649. ISBN 9780806317748 .
^ May, John (2024). The Founding of English America: An Introduction to the Lost Colony and Jamestown . McFarland. p. 150. ISBN 9781476695242 .
^ "The Story of John and Alice Proctor" . 19 February 2021.
^ Woolley, Benjamin. Savage Kingdom: Virginia and The Founding of English America (Text Only). United Kingdom, HarperCollins Publishers, 2012.
^ Verrill, Addison Emery (1902). The Bermuda Islands: An Account of Their Scenery, Climate, Productions, Physiography, Natural History and Geology, with Sketches of Their Discovery and Early History, and the Changes in Their Flora and Fauna Due to Man . Creative Media Partners, LLC. p. 439. ISBN 9780341970989 .
^ a b Bushell's Handbook: All About Bermuda . Vol. 14. 1909. p. 23.
^ Stith, William. The History of the First Discovery and Settlement of Virginia. United States, Reprint Company, 1965.
^ "The Hurricane that Saved Jamestown" . 6 December 2019.
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 128. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Stevens, Anne. "De La Warr" . www.packrat-pro.com . Retrieved 2017-01-22 .
^ "A Timeline of Events and References" . Archived from the original on 2005-11-22.
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . p. 105. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 133. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 131. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 128. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 129. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ a b Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 136. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ https://www.she-philosopher.com/gallery/1608Tindall.html
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 128-132. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 138. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ McCartney, Martha W.. Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary. United States, Genealogical Publishing Company, 2007. Page 218
^ "The Mary Ann 1610" . packrat-pro.com .
^ "Mary & James" . packrat-pro.com .
^ McCartney, Martha W. (2007). Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary . Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 703. ISBN 9780806317748 .
^ "Prosperous 1610, 1619" .
^ "Sir Thomas Dale (D. 1619)" .
^ a b "Sarah 1611" .
^ "Tryall 1610 - 1620" .
^ "Swan 1610 - 1624" .
^ a b c Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 149. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Brown, Alexander (1898). 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 . Houghton. p. 156. ISBN 9780722265451 .
^ Kuppermann, Karen Ordahl (2021). Pocahontas and the English Boys: Caught Between Cultures in Early Virginia . NYU Press. p. 3. ISBN 9781479805983 .
^ McCartney, M. W. (2000). Documentary History of Jamestown Island: Land ownership . Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. p. 247.
Bernard Bailyn, The Barbarous Years: The Peopling of British North America: The Conflict of Civilizations, 1600-1675 (Vintage, 2012)
Warren M. Billings (Editor), The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century: A Documentary History of Virginia, 1606-1700 (University of North Carolina Press, 2007)
James Horn, A Land as God Made It (Perseus Books, 2005)
Margaret Huber, Powhatan Lords of Life and Death: Command and Consent in Seventeenth-Century Virginia (University of Nebraska Press, 2008)
William M. Kelso, Jamestown, The Buried Truth (University of Virginia Press, 2006)
David A. Price, Love and Hate in Jamestown (Alfred A. Knopf, 2003)
Helen C. Rountree, The Powhatan Indians of Virginia: Their Traditional Culture (University of Oklahoma Press, 2013)
Ed Southern (Editor), Jamestown Adventure, The: Accounts of the Virginia Colony, 1605-1614 (Blair, 2011)
Tony Williams, "The Jamestown Experiment: The Remarkable Story of the Enterprising Colony and the Unexpected Results that Shaped America" (Sourcebooks Inc, 2011)
Jocelyn R. Wingfield, Virginia's True Founder: Edward Maria Wingfield and His Times (Booksurge, 2007)
Benjamin Woolley, Savage Kingdom: The True Story of Jamestown, 1607, and the Settlement of America (Harper Perennial, 2008)
William M. Kelso, Nicholas M. Luccketti, Beverly A. Straube, The Jamestown Rediscovery Archaeology Project
Events Geography Associated places
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Colonists
(list )
Other notable original colonists
Notable colonists from
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First Supply
Second Supply
Third Supply
Fourth Supply
Fifth Supply
Notable colonists
1611–1624
Natives and
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