Preview

Explain The Difficulties Of Jamestown Settlement

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
198 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Explain The Difficulties Of Jamestown Settlement
The Difficulties of Settlement The English originally settled in Jamestown under the assumptions set forth by the Virginia Company that the vast landscape was rich with foreseen treasure, unclaimed wealth waiting for them. Stories pertaining to the Native Americans portrayed them as gentle beings lacking an adequate religion. Also envisioned were plentiful deer and fish, and bountiful terrain teeming with wild berries. The Virginia Company enticed Englishmen into believing these fabricated promises of fertile land, peaceful natives, and abundant resources awaiting them in Virginia, therefore inducing disastrous outcomes in the first decade of settlement. When George Percy originally landed in Jamestown as a Gentleman on one of the first ships

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Jamestown Summary

    • 204 Words
    • 1 Page

    All Europe wanted was gold and England wanted in on gold finding so they made the Virginia Company and had 144 men and boys on the 3 ships that were going to Jamestown. There were no women on the ships because the men did not plan on staying long they were only interested in fame and fortune. Many of the men thought that John Smith lacked the necessary skills to lead the colony making them a little on the edge. Dangerous storms and lack of supplies threatened the ships. The ships spotted land on April 26, 1607.…

    • 204 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Dutch company profited from fur trade, but not many people came so they let a variety of people in the colony. More Dutch, Germans, French, Scandinavians, and other Europeans settled the area. They also included Africans, free and enslaved. They were friendlier with the Natives, unlike the English. They traded them furs and the Dutch were smart enough not to anger the powerful Iroquois, however the Dutch did have fights with smaller tribes over land and trade rivalries.…

    • 2399 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1607 Jamestown Va founded Virginia company founded by Captain John Smith. 1620 Mayflower Compact Plymouth founded 1619 House of Burgesses founded 1628 John Winthrop 1622 John Rolfe 1630 MA Bay Colony founded by John Winthrop 1632 Pequot war starts 1634 Maryland Colony founded 1636 Thomas Hooker and Roger Williams expelled 1637 Anne Hutchinson expelled 1638 Pequot war ended 1651 Navigation Act 1649 Maryland Toleraction Act 1639 Fundamental Orders of CT 1675 King Philips War 1660 Stuart Restoration 1662 Halfway Covenant 1676 William Berkeley and Nathaniel Bacon, Bacon’s Rebellion 1680 Pueblo Revolt 1681 William Penn – Pennsylvania 1690 Two Treatises on Government 1686- 1689 Dominion of New England 1692- 1697…

    • 797 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1606, settlers of the Virginia Company of England embarked on an expedition to the New World, their goal being to found a settlement in the Virginia Colony. After a lengthy journey, the settlers came upon the mouth of the Chesapeake River, making landfall at Cape Henry. Their site would come to be known as Jamestown, widely regarded as the first permanent English settlement in America. However, the momentous task of establishing a society in a new and foreign land did not go without its fair share of tribulations. These settlers faced uncompromising challenges on the road to establishing stability and success, but their efforts produced both economic and social improvements that would eventually culminate to form one of England's most valued North American colonies.…

    • 629 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In 1607, over a hundred Englishmen traveled into Chesapeake Bay to create the first English colony in the New World. They landed on James Island and built a fort on what would later be called Jamestown. However, by the time the January supply ship arrived, only forty of the passengers were left alive. Even as more people traveled over to Jamestown, out of the five hundred people who arrived there, eighty percent of them have died. The colonists of early Jamestown died as a result of the poor environment, lack of resources, and disease.…

    • 94 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    1. Jamestown was the first colony that gets found. It was there where the first permanent settlement occurs. Jamestown was a poor location for colonization. The men dug wells to obtain water, but the water they found could not drink because it was contaminated. In addition, the ground was wet and had too many mosquitos. The mosquitoes were carriers of diseases and made the settlers sick. After a year, about half of the settlers had died of disease and starvation. The Native American Indians kept the English alive providing them with food. The English were so busy trying to discover gold that they didn't bother trying to grow food. That was when Captain John Smith became leader of the Jamestown colony. He saved the colony by creating a rule, which maintained that anyone who did not work would have no right to eat. This made the colonist planted food, and they were forced to build shelters and fences to protect against any attack. These American Indians or “Amerinds”, showed them great diversity of character and attainments due to the differences in climate, soil, food, building material, and the activities necessary to preserve life. They taught the settlers how to plant and grow corn, beans, squash, etc. and also helped them to establish good relations with neighboring Indian tribes. On the other hand what the English settlers offered to Native Americans Indians was different. In exchange for food, they offered them weapons, horses, cattle, sheep, vegetables and fruits, hatchets, swords, metal pots, skillets and knives, which would give them the technological advantage over their enemies. They brought not only tools for the conquest of the wilderness, but also the forms of government, the religion, the books, and the languages of the Old World. But besides the different technologies and different lifestyles that they offered to them, the English brought with them…

    • 1201 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book of Taking Sides, there are two points of view from the article “Was the Settlement of Jamestown a Fiasco?” On the Yes side, Edmund S. Morgan makes the argument that the settlement of Jamestown was a fiasco more than a plan. The other side Karen Ordahl Kupperman think that the whole Jamestown settlement was an experiment of trial and error.…

    • 657 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    During the time of James I reign, English citizens were driven to Virginia because of the minimal access to land in England. After the English victory in the attack of the Spanish Armada, Spain was a less of a threat to the English citizens. These reasons resulted in the settlement and expansion of Jamestown, Virginia. A majority of the individuals that traveled to Jamestown were “gentlemen”—rich…

    • 315 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the early years, Jamestown nearly failed due to the area in which the settlers chose to place their new settlement and the Virginia Company. Colonists set foot in North America in 1607, “the colonists established Jamestown on a site they chose mainly for its easy defense” (Hewitt, & Lawson, 2017, p. 46). The Englishmen were only looking out for their best interest in choosing a place that was easy to defend. These new colonists probably did not realize their mistake at first in placing Jamestown in this certain area, “A shortage of food, caused by a severe drought…affected both Indians and the English…Moreover, the nearby water was tainted by salt form the ocean, and diseases that festered in the low-lying area killed more than half of the…

    • 409 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Jamestown vs. New England

    • 1295 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Jamestown colony was located near present day James City County, Virginia. Jamestown was the first permanent settlement by the English in what is in current day known as the United States. The location of Jamestown was selected primarily for the fact that it provided a favorable defensive location against any other foreign powers that may have tried to gain control of the colony. John Smith, Robert Hunt along with others provided inspirational leadership for the colonists but even so starvation became a very apparent problem. The hostile relations with the local Native American people and a lack of any profitable exports only made matters worse. Despite this and a horrible winter bearing down on them, the colonists persevered. At the end of the first winter only 60 of the original 214 English colonists survived. (jamestown virginia) The settlers who came over on the initial three ships were not well-equipped for the life they found in Jamestown. In addition to the “Gentry” who was not accustomed to manual or skilled labor, they consisted mainly of English farmers who were not prepared physically or emotionally for the problems that would face them. (old and sold antique digest) Yet despite this they persevered and worked as a team to establish a colony. However, when two ships, crudely constructed in Bermuda, arrived at the settlement with no supplies, when the colonists desperately needed supplies the most, the settlers packed up and abandoned…

    • 1295 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The water of the environment was one of the many problems. First, the water of the Jamestown River had waste in it (Doc A). This makes the water undrinkable, as the waste was brought upstream by ocean tides. Second, the water from Jamestown was salty as the fresh water mixed with the oceans brackish, salty, water (Doc A). This also makes the water undrinkable and the salt would also give you dehydration. Virginia was experiencing a drought during this time (Doc B). This means Jamestown had less than average rainfall, and their crops wouldn’t grow. Fresh water was scarce in Jamestown.…

    • 438 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While Jamestown is now viewed as the first successful British Colony, it came close to failing in its first years. Early colonization attempts were not always successful, and the odds were not in Jamestown’s favor. From the very beginning, it seems, Jamestown was bound to be a failure. While many challenges were presented to this colony, in the end, somehow they rose above these situations and founded what is now modern day Virginia.…

    • 365 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The initial settlers of the various thirteen colonies generally left a deep impact on the individual cultures and demographics that would later develop there. Jamestown, the first successful settlement, was initially settled entirely by men, young adventurers and “gentlemen,” with women only arriving later and in smaller numbers. When the Jamestown colonists and those who followed them began to spread out, they retained a male-dominated atmosphere even as small tobacco farms grew into enormous plantations. The benefit to such a society was the ease with which a man, even with few means, could claim land (at least until the plantations spread and land became increasingly hard to come by in the south), but the difficulty and isolation life in the south meant that men in the south typically had shorter lifespans than their northerner men. This made it so much easier for women to own property in the south as opposed to the north, especially widows.…

    • 649 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Jamestown

    • 1494 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Jamestown failed because of strained Indian relations, including conflicts over food, water, and land resources. Jamestown was settled on an island so that the colony could be fortified from Indian attacks. Also, none of the Powhatans, a strong confederacy of natives, were not settled there, so the English colonists thought it would be an ideal location. Despite their “ideal” choice, the colony still suffered Indian attacks, the first being by a group that did not trust the white settlers (Doc. E). Also, the settlers arrived right in the middle of a horrible drought. This drought was later called The Jamestown Drought, and it had severe effects on the Jamestown and the colony’s relations with the natives (Doc. B.). Most colonists did not farm and relied mostly on the Powhatans to trade food supplies. The drought lessened this vital trade. A drought brought crops that would have withered and died from the lack of rain essential to the plants. Another incident with natives included a man named Francis West. The colonists were starving because of the Jamestown Drought, and needed some source of food. Thus, West sailed to the Chesapeake Bay, and hoped to trade with the Patawomeke Indians for grain. This particular group of natives had not heard very much about the English, and were friendly. West loaded the boat with grain, but in the process he beheaded two of the Indians and cut off other extremities (Doc. D.) The ship returned to Jamestown, leaving the Patawomke stewing and furious…

    • 1494 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays