[England in America, 1580-1652 by Lyon Gardiner Tyler]@TWC D-Link book
England in America, 1580-1652

CHAPTER IV
15/18

Yet even this slender appeal to private interest was accompanied with marked improvement, and in 1614 Ralph Hamor, Jr., Dale's secretary of state, wrote, "When our people were fed out of the common store and labored jointly in the manuring of ground and planting corn, ...

the most honest of them, in a general business, would not take so much faithful and true pains in a week as now he will do in a day."[41] These were really dark days for Virginia, and Gondomar, the Spanish minister, wrote to Philip III.

that "here in London this colony Virginia is in such bad repute that not a human being can be found to go there in any way whatever."[42] Some spies of King Philip were captured in Virginia, and Dale was much concerned lest the Spaniards would attack the settlement, but the Spanish king and his council thought that it would die of its own weakness, and took no hostile measure.[43] In England the company was so discouraged that many withdrew their subscriptions, and in 1615 a lottery was tried as a last resort to raise money.[44] When Dale left Virginia (May, 1616) the people were very glad to get rid of him, and not more than three hundred and fifty-one persons--men, women, and children--survived altogether.[45] Within a very short time the cabins which he erected were ready to fall and the palisades could not keep out hogs.

A tract of land called the "company's garden" yielded the company L300 annually, but this was a meagre return for the enormous suffering and sacrifice of life.[46] Dale took Pocahontas with him to England, and Lady Delaware presented her at court, and her portrait engraved by the distinguished artist Simon de Passe was a popular curiosity.[47] While in England she met Captain John Smith, and when Smith saluted her as a princess Pocahontas insisted on calling him father and having him call her his child.[48] It was at this juncture that in the cultivation of tobacco, called "the weed" by King James, a new hope for Virginia was found.

Hamor says that John Rolfe began to plant tobacco in 1612 and his example was soon followed generally.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books