Document Number: |
AJ-073 |
Author: |
Percy, George, 1580-1632 |
Title: |
Observations by Master George Percy, 1607 |
Source: |
Tyler, Lyon Gardiner (editor). Narratives of Early Virginia, 1606-1625. (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1907). Pages 3-23. |
Pages/Illustrations: |
23 / 0 |
Citable URL: |
www.americanjourneys.org/aj-073/ |
Author Note
George Percy was born September 4, 1580, a younger son of the
Earl of Northumberland. He was a soldier in the Netherlands
until he joined Captain John Smith and the first expedition to
Virginia, England’s new colony. Percy served as president of the
Jamestown Colony council from September 1609 to May 1610 and
again, after Lord de La Ware’s departure to England, from March
1611 to April 1612. He left Jamestown and returned to England in
April 1612. He did not return to Virginia, but served again as a
soldier for the English army. He died in 1632.
Jamestown Settlement, 1607-1625
In 1606, the London Company received a royal charter from
King James I to organize an expedition and establish colonies in
North America. The Plymouth Company would establish the
short-lived colony in Maine (see AJ-042). The Virginia Company
set up England’s first permanent colony in Jamestown, Virginia.
Their primary goal was profit; investors hoped settlers would
find valuable natural resources, such as lumber, herbs, pitch,
and even gold, to send back to England. However, the English
government also wanted to resist the Spanish colonization of
North America (see AJ-077 for a Spaniard’s account of the
Jamestown colony). One hundred and four men and boys came ashore
in May 1607-no women arrived until the following year. Over the
next three years almost eight hundred settlers would arrive to
colonize the Virginia coasts-six hundred of them arriving in
1609. Unfortunately, Jamestown was not an ideal spot for a
colony. The low marshy land was not healthy, and clean water
could be difficult to find. Attacks by the Powhatan Indians
began shortly after the English colonists built their first fort
at the Jamestown site. Fighting between the English and Indians
continued, despite the settlers’ reliance on the Indians for
corn during the difficult winters. In addition, many of the
settlers were hardly qualified to farm and survive in this
difficult setting. During the first years, mortality was very
high through disease, starvation, and accident.
Captain John Smith was elected president in September 1608
(see AJ-074 and AJ-075). By enforcing strict discipline and
requiring all settlers to farm, he increased the food supply.
However, a serious injury in 1609 forced his return to England.
George Percy was president of the Virginia’s council during the
winter of 1609 and 1610, called the “starving time” when only
sixty settlers survived. In June 1610, they decided to abandon
the town, but the arrival of the new governor, Lord de La Ware
(see AJ-076) and his supply ships brought the colonists back to
the fort. In 1612, the settlers began to grow tobacco on their
plantations-over time, this successful crop transformed the
colony into a successful venture. John Rolfe, who married
Pocahontas (see AJ-079), is credited with first planting a
marketable tobacco in Virginia. In 1619, the same year Africans
were brought into the colony as slaves, the first representative
assembly in North America was set up-the Virginia Assembly (see
AJ-080). In 1624, the Virginia Company dissolved and Virginia
became a royal colony under the governance of the English Crown.
Document Note
In this document, Percy describes the first expedition in
great detail including their first contact with natives. He also
writes of the physical attributes of the native people,
landscape, vegetation, animals and fish of the islands and
mainland of Virginia. Percy observes the traditions of the
Native Americans he encountered and detailed their body paint,
hunting and gardening practices, manner of food preparation and
women’s manner of dress. Percy discussed the difficulty the
colonists had with Native Americans following their settlement
and the support that Powhatan’s Algonquian tribe gave to the
colonists in the first years of the settlement.
While we do not have the original of this document, Samuel
Purchas published a part of Percy’s recollections in 1625 in
Hakluytus Posthumus, or Purchas His Pilgrimes, contayning a
History of the World, in Sea Voyages, and Lande Travells by
Englishmen and others, Vol. IV. The document shown
here is from Tyler, Lyon Gardiner (editor), Narratives of
Early Virginia, 1606-1625. (New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1907).
Other Internet and Reference Sources
The Jamestown Rediscovery archeology project website at
http://www.apva.org/history/timeline.html contains
historical summaries, a timeline, biographies, and description
of the archeological findings made at Jamestown.
At the Virtual Jamestown website, you can find a portrait of
George Percy, at
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/vcdh/jamestown/pic24a.html as
well as other first-hand accounts of the Jamestown settlement
(see
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/vcdh/jamestown/fhaccounts_date.html.
The Public Broadcasting Station website on the history of
Africans in America presents a narrative of the early years of
Virginia’s history and explores the settlers’ difficult
relationship with the Native Americans and the introduction of
black slavery at
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/title.html. |
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