Virginia
was established as an economic venture that got off to a very
shaky start. In 1584 Queen Elizabeth I of England gave Sir Walter
Ralegh (commonly misspelled Raleigh) permission to establish colonies
in the New World. Gallantly, Ralegh named the area for the Virgin
Queen, but undersupplied his colonies, which disappeared between
one supply ship's arrival and the next.
The second
attempt began twenty years later. English entrepreneurs were looking
for a financial opportunity that would return their investment
on the fabulous scale of the six-year-old British East India Company.
The endless lands of the new world appeared to contain such a
golden promise.
In 1606 King
James I chartered the Virginia Company of London (often called
the London Company). In April 1607 the Susan Constant, the Godspeed,
and the Discovery, commanded by Capt. Christopher Newport, made
landfall at Point Comfort. Sealed orders appointing seven men
to the Council were opened, and the Council elected Edward Maria
Wingfield president. Under his direction, gentlemen,
craftsmen, and laborers founded the first permanent English settlement
on James Isle. Long on expectations but short on experience, they
were struck with disaster.
The struggle
and hardships that decimated and discouraged the colonists are
well known. So few of those who arrived on the first three ships
survived that not many Americans living today can trace their
ancestry to an original Jamestown settler. The Colony was nearly
abandoned in 1610 and might not have survived but for one manJohn
Rolfe.
In 1612, John
Rolfe began experiments in growing and processing tobacco. His
export of tobacco to a London merchant in 1614 began a trade that
made Virginia viable economically. Then he married Pocahontas,
daughter of the great werowance, or sub-chief, Powhatan, which
helped assure a few years of peaceful coexistence with the native
tribes of Virginia.
The London
Company was reorganized under the Great Charter of 1618, and by
the end of 1619, several events occurred that had far-reaching
impact. Free settlers were granted land, establishing property
ownership. The House of Burgesses, America's first representative
assembly, was organized, setting an example for representative
democracy. A program encouraging emigration of Maides to
make Wives began in England, ensuring that the population
of Virginia would be self-sustaining. Unexpectedly, a Dutch trader
from the West Indies arrived in August 1619 with a cargo of black
colonists who were sold into indentured servitude (slavery did
not yet exist in Virginia). This event helped foreshadow slavery
and the Civil War.
On Friday,
22 March 1622, disaster struck. The natives, led by Powhatan's
successor, Opechancanough, attacked the English settlements, massacred
a quarter of the population, and nearly succeeded in driving the
English out. However, disaster then struck the natives, for the
English established policies that eventually led to the near-total
extermination of the Indian people and forceful removal of the
survivors to reservations.
In 1624 James
I revoked the charter and made Virginia a royal colony, henceforth
under the directionnot always peaceableof crown-appointed
governors. Between 1652 and 1660, while Oliver Cromwell was ruling
in England, Virginia experimented with what amounted to self government
and was not pleased to relinquish that control again to a royal
governor.
The colony
had an urgent need of merchants, skilled artisans, woodsmen, and
a large labor force to cultivate the tobacco crops. Luring laborers
to insect-ridden and swampy regions was a challenge. The English
law of primogeniture preserved the estates of the landed gentry
by transmitting the titles and property intact from eldest son
to eldest son. Many younger sons saw Virginia as a prime opportunity.
The London Company lured these people to Virginia with land.
The Company
agreed to give anyone who paid his way to Virginia fifty acres
for his owne personal adventure. Another fifty acres
was offered for each person the adventurer transported at
his owne cost. When Virginia became a royal colony, the
headright system continued. Over the next century, thousands of
settlers came because of Virginia's headright system. See Nell
Marion Nugent, Cavaliers and Pioneers, Abstracts of Virginia Land
Patents and Grants, 3 vols. (1934; reprint, Baltimore, Md.: Genealogical
Publishing Co., 1983).
As the young
colony expanded, it experienced growing pains. The difficulty
of providing a labor force led to the formal establishment of
slavery (1660), disagreements with crown-appointed governors led
to Bacon's Rebellion (1676), and a precipitous decline in tobacco
prices resulted in the Plant-Cutting Revolt (1682). The end of
the century was marked by the removal of the colony's capital
to Williamsburg in 1699.
Ironically,
the eighteenth century saw both the establishment of the infamous
Slave Code of 1705 and the headlong rush toward the American Revolution;
each embodied different views of human rights. Even as the slaves'
plight grew worse, George Mason penned the Virginia Declaration
of Rights. Adopted by the revolutionary convention on 12 June
1776, the Declaration was a model for the United States Bill of
Rights.
It is perhaps
appropriate that the first President of the United States was
a native son of the first permanent English colony in North America.
George Washington epitomized the upper-class Virginians of his
time: a tobacco farmer, an ardent lover of freedom, and a slaveholder
The eighteenth
century also saw explosive expansion. The Shenandoah Valley and
the lands west of the Appalachian Mountains were opened, and settlers
poured down the Great Wagon Road from Pennsylvania. In the second
half of the century, the Cumberland Gap was discovered and settlers
began filling what would become Kentucky and West Virginia. Both
were initially part of Virginia; Kentucky became a separate state
in 1792, and West Virginia in 1863.
Many of Virginia's records have been lost to fire, war, and time.
Jamestown, the original capital, was destroyed three times, and
some counties lost records during the Revolutionary War. However,
the greatest destruction of Virginia's records occurred during
the Civil War. Many courthouses were destroyed, but the most significant
loss of records resulted from the burning of Richmond in 1865.
Even with the loss of records, research in most Virginia counties
remains richly rewarding
|