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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624, by
+Wesley Frank Craven
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624
+
+Author: Wesley Frank Craven
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2009 [EBook #28555]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VIRGINIA COMPANY OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Diane Monico, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF
+LONDON, 1606-1624
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT©, 1957 BY
+VIRGINIA 350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
+CORPORATION, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA
+
+Second Printing, 1959
+
+Third Printing, 1964
+
+
+[Transcriber's Note: Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
+that the U. S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+
+
+Jamestown 350th Anniversary
+Historical Booklet Number 5
+
+
+
+
+THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF LONDON, 1606-1624
+
+
+This is the story of the Virginia Company and only indirectly of the
+Virginia colony. Those who seek an account of the early years at
+Jamestown should turn to another number in this same series. Here the
+focus belongs to the adventurers in England whose hopes gave shape to
+the settlement at Jamestown, and whose determination brought the colony
+through the many disappointments of its first years. In terms of time,
+the story is short, for it begins with the granting of the first
+Virginia charter in 1606 and ends with the dissolution of the company
+in 1624. It thus covers a period of only eighteen years, but during
+these years England's interest in North America was so largely
+expressed through the agency of the Virginia Company that its story
+constitutes one of the more significant chapters in the history both of
+the United States and of the British Empire.
+
+In the beginning there were two companies of the Virginia adventurers,
+the one having its headquarters in London and the other in the western
+outport of Plymouth. Englishmen at that time used the name Virginia to
+designate the full sweep of the North American coast that lay above
+Spanish Florida. In the original Virginia charter the adventurers were
+granted rights of exploration, trade, and settlement on the "Coast of
+Virginia or America" within limits that reached from 34° of latitude in
+the south to 45° in the north, which is to say from the mouth of the
+Cape Fear River in lower North Carolina to a point midway through the
+modern state of Maine. The Plymouth grantees had a primary interest in
+the northern area that Captain John Smith would later name New England,
+and there they established a colony at Sagadahoc in August 1607, only a
+few weeks after the settlement of Jamestown. But the colony barely
+survived the winter, and was abandoned in the spring of 1608.
+Thereafter, the Plymouth adventurers gave up. In contrast, the London
+adventurers persisted, and their persistence served to tie the name of
+Virginia increasingly to them and to their more southerly settlement.
+As a result, the London adventurers became in common usage the Virginia
+adventurers, their company the Virginia Company, and their colony
+Virginia.
+
+The Virginia colony was especially fortunate in having the backing of
+London. Indeed, it may not be too much to suggest that the chief
+difference between the stories of Roanoke Island and of Jamestown was
+the difference that London made. Consistently, the leadership of
+Elizabethan adventures to North America, including those of Gilbert and
+Raleigh, had come from the western counties and outports of England,
+and with equal consistency hopeful projects had foundered on the
+inadequacy of their financial support while London favored other
+ventures--to Muscovy, to the Levant, and more recently to the East
+Indies. It was not merely that London had the necessary capital and
+credit for a sustained effort; it also had experience in the management
+of large and distant ventures, such as those of the East India Company
+over which Sir Thomas Smith presided, as he would preside through many
+years over the Virginia Company. London had too the advantage of its
+proximity to the seat of government in nearby Westminster, where King
+James had his residence, where the highest courts of the realm sat
+periodically, and where England's parliament customarily met. Already,
+in 1606, it was possible to trace in the immediate environs of the
+ancient City of London, itself still medieval in appearance and in the
+organization of much of its life, the broad outlines of the great
+metropolis that has been increasingly the focal point of England's
+development as a modern state.
+
+In thus emphasizing the importance of London to the early history of
+Virginia, one runs the risk of misrepresenting the true character of
+the Virginia adventure. Contrary to the impression that will be gained
+from many of our modern textbooks, the Virginia Company represented
+much more than the commercial interests of the port of London. Its
+membership included many gentlemen and noblemen of consequence in the
+kingdom. Some of them, no doubt, became subscribers to a Virginia
+joint-stock for the same reason that often led members of the landed
+classes in England into commercial ventures. But others, quite
+evidently, subscribed because of a sense of public responsibility, or
+simply because skilfully managed propaganda had put pressure on them to
+accept a responsibility of social or political position. For the
+Virginia adventure was a public undertaking, its aim to advance the
+fortunes of England no less than the fortunes of the adventurers
+themselves.
+
+It would be helpful if we knew more about the original Virginia
+adventurers than we do. The records are so incomplete as to make
+impossible anything approaching a full list of the first subscribers.
+However, enough is known to suggest the broad range of experience and
+interest belonging to those who now joined in a common effort to build
+an empire for England in America. The original charter of 1606 lists
+only eight of the adventurers by name, they being the ones in whose
+names the petition for the charter had been made. This list omits Sir
+John Popham, Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench, who may well have
+been the prime mover in the enterprise, and Sir Thomas Smith, who was
+an active leader from an early date. Four of the eight men listed are
+identified as belonging to the London group. Sir Thomas Gates was a
+soldier and veteran of campaigns in the Netherlands who would later
+serve as the colony's governor. Sir George Somers had led many attacks
+against Spanish possessions in Queen Elizabeth's day, was a member of
+parliament, and would meet his death four years later in Bermuda while
+on a mission of rescue for Virginia. Edward Maria Wingfield was another
+soldier who had fought in the Netherlands. He belonged to a family
+which had acquired extensive estates in Ireland, and he too would go to
+Virginia, where he served as first president of the colony's council.
+The most interesting of the four was Richard Hakluyt, a clergyman whose
+chief mission in life had been the encouragement of overseas adventures
+by his fellow countrymen. To them he had literally given a national
+tradition of adventure by compiling and editing one of the more
+influential books in England's history--_The Principall Navigations,
+Voyages, and Discoveries of the English Nation_, whose reading, in
+Michael Drayton's words, inflamed "Men to seeke fame." Hakluyt had been
+advisor to both Gilbert and Raleigh in their ventures, and since then
+he had consistently promoted the idea that England might best find in
+North America the opportunities that were needed for her prosperity and
+her security.
+
+A significant indication of the extent to which the public interest was
+considered to be involved in the Virginia project is found in the
+provision that was first made for the government of the two colonies.
+The powers of government, which is to say the ultimate right to decide
+and to direct, were vested in a royal council, commonly known as the
+Virginia Council and having its seat in London. Its membership was
+probably drawn exclusively from the two groups of Virginia adventurers,
+but the members were appointed by the king and were sworn to his
+special service. Among the first members were Sir Thomas Smith, chief
+of the London merchants; Sir William Wade, lieutenant of the London
+Tower; Sir Walter Cope, member of parliament for Westminster and
+adventurer in a variety of overseas enterprises; Sir Henry Montague,
+recorder of the City of London; Solicitor General John Doderidge,
+subsequently justice of the Kings Bench; Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who
+later would lead a reviving interest in the settlement of New England
+and still later would become an enemy of the Puritans who so largely
+accomplished that task; Sir Francis Popham, son and heir to the Lord
+Chief Justice; and John Eldred of London, Thomas James of Bristol, and
+James Bagge of Plymouth, each of these three being described as a
+merchant. This assignment of the powers of government proved to be
+awkward, and it denied the adventurers direct control over the more
+important questions affecting their adventures, as in the choice of a
+plan of government for the colony or in the appointment of its key
+officers. Consequently, the adventurers secured a change in the second
+Virginia charter, granted in 1609. It was then specified that members
+of the council thereafter should be "nominated, chosen, continued,
+displaced, changed, altered and supplied, as death, or other several
+occasions shall require, out of the Company of the said Adventurers, by
+the voice of the greater part of the said Company and Adventurers, in
+their Assembly for that purpose." In language less repetitious than
+that used by the company's lawyer, this meant that the council now
+became an agent primarily of the adventurers. Even so, the king
+retained a veto over any choice they might make, for members of the
+council were still required to take a special oath administered by one
+of the high officers of state, and refusal to give the oath could mean
+disqualification for the office. The company's later history would
+show, whatever its legal advisor may have assumed in 1609, that this
+requirement was no mere formality.
+
+It is not easy for the modern American to read with full assurance the
+scanty record of Virginia's first years. How, for example, should he
+interpret the suggestion at the beginning of the first charter that the
+adventurers sought chiefly to propagate the "Christian Religion to such
+people, as yet live in darkness and miserable ignorance of the true
+knowledge and worship of God?" It is simple enough to point out that
+the first adventurers in Jamestown showed very little of the
+missionary's spirit, that they included only one minister, and that he
+had enough to do in ministering to the English settlers. It is also
+easy to draw an obvious contrast between the dedicated missionaries who
+so frequently formed the vanguard of Spanish and French settlement in
+America and the adventurous and often unruly men who first settled
+Virginia. In the absence of immediate and continuing missionary
+endeavors, one is naturally inclined to dismiss professions of a
+purpose to convert the Indian as nothing more than a necessary gesture
+toward convention in an age that was still much closer to the medieval
+period than to our own. And yet, on second thought, one begins to
+wonder just how sophisticated such a conclusion may be. He remembers
+how deep was the rift between Protestantism and Catholicism at that
+time, how fundamental to the patriotism of an Englishman was his long
+defense of a Protestant church settlement against the threat of
+Catholic Spain, and how largely the issues of religious life still
+claimed the first thoughts of men. He then may feel inclined to observe
+that the English adventurers, after all, did undertake to establish a
+mission in Virginia at a relatively early date. True, ten years elapsed
+before the effort to provide a school and college for the Indians had
+its beginning, but these were years of a continuing struggle for the
+very life of the colony itself. In the circumstances, perhaps ten years
+should be viewed as a short time.
+
+Be that as it may, there are other questions that have been even more
+bothersome, if only because they have seemed more pertinent to the
+modern interest in Virginia's history. The American has been accustomed
+to view the Virginia colony as the first permanent settlement in his
+country, as the point at which his own history has its beginning, but
+he finds in the Jamestown colony a pattern of activity somewhat
+different from that he associates with the later development of the
+country. What kind of a colony was it? Was it really a colony? Just
+what were the adventurers trying to accomplish in Virginia? Were they
+actually interested in colonization, in the proper sense of the term,
+or were their objectives commercial? These and other such questions
+have claimed much of the attention of those who have sought to
+interpret for their fellow countrymen the early history of Virginia.
+The difficulty arises partly from the American's insistence that the
+later history of his country be taken as the standard for judging
+every action of the first adventurers, and partly from a failure to
+appreciate the extent to which the earlier ventures in Virginia were
+necessarily exploratory in character.
+
+If one of us could ask the adventurers in 1606 what it was they hoped
+to accomplish in America, he probably would be told that it depended
+very much on what they might find there. Although Richard Hakluyt had
+been most industrious in collecting available information from the
+earlier explorations of North America, including those by Spanish and
+French explorers, the specific information at hand was quite definitely
+limited. By the close of the sixteenth century European explorers had
+charted the broad outlines of the North American coast, and here and
+there they had filled in much of the detail, as had the French in
+Canada, the Spaniard and the Frenchman on the coast of Florida, and the
+Englishman along the coastal regions to be later known as Carolina and
+New England. But the information at the command of the adventurers in
+one country was not always available to those of another; indeed,
+within any one country there were shipmasters who carried in their
+heads working charts of coastal waters wholly unknown to the
+geographers and cartographers who sought to serve the larger interests
+of the nation. Thus the London adventurers in 1606, though having at
+hand a substantial body of useful information regarding the coasts, the
+winds, and the currents running northward from the West Indies past St.
+Augustine to Cape Hatteras, and comparable information regarding the
+more northern waters explored by Frobisher, Davis, Gilbert, and others,
+had only a sketchy knowledge of the intervening coastline that would
+soon be explored by Captain Samuel Argall on commission from the
+Virginia Company and by Henry Hudson, an Englishman temporarily in the
+service of Dutch merchants. Even Chesapeake Bay, to which the London
+adventurers dispatched their first expedition, was known to them
+chiefly by the reports of Indians interrogated by Raleigh's agents as
+they worked out from Roanoke Island. The first colonists in Virginia
+gave to London detailed information regarding the lower Chesapeake and
+the James River, but not until 1608 did Captain John Smith find the
+time to explore the upper reaches of the bay and to identify the great
+rivers emptying into it there. It hardly seems necessary to argue the
+utility of such explorations, to which eloquent testimony exists in the
+new bounds immediately fixed for the colony in the second charter. But
+many have been the attempts to pass judgment on the success or failure
+of the first settlers at Jamestown that have been written as though
+their primary assignment had not been to explore.
+
+Exploration and fortification--these two terms are consistently linked
+in the papers on which the early English adventurers jotted notes for
+their guidance or for the instruction of their agents in America. The
+very first objective of the explorers was to locate a suitable site for
+fortification, in order that further explorations might be conducted
+from a secure base. The fortifications to be raised had to meet
+exacting standards, such as would be approved by the military engineers
+with whom the adventurers consulted along with the geographers, the
+cartographers, and the shipmasters who also possessed useful
+information. For these fortifications were intended to provide security
+not so much against the native Indian as against the ships and soldiers
+of Spain. Over the years there had been some debate as to how the fort
+might be best located, with the result that in 1607 it was decided to
+locate it some distance up a river that would afford navigation for an
+ocean-going vessel but would force the enemy to fight his way inland
+against the disadvantage of the warning that could be given by an outer
+guard at the mouth of the river. Such were the considerations that
+shaped the choice of Jamestown as the site of the first permanent
+English settlement in North America. To stand in the middle of the
+Jamestown peninsula for contemplation of its many disadvantages for the
+purposes of agricultural settlement, and even for the health of its
+people, is to lose sight of the main point. One should walk over
+against the river, and consider there the field of fire that was open
+for well placed guns.
+
+And just what was the Jamestown fort supposed to guard? Was it the few
+acres of the modern county of James City, or the right of Englishmen to
+possess the Virginia peninsula, where so much of importance to our
+national history has found its place? Not at all. It was the right of
+Englishmen to be in North America, to fish the waters that lay off its
+coast, to trade with its inhabitants, and to exploit such other
+opportunities as an unexplored and undeveloped continent might offer.
+How far these opportunities might lead no one could tell in
+advance--perhaps even to China.
+
+A trade with China had been a major objective of English adventure
+since the middle of the sixteenth century, when the Muscovy Company had
+had its origins in an attempt to find a northeast passage around the
+Scandinavian peninsula leading to Cathay--Marco Polo's fabulous kingdom
+of northern China. The explorers found instead a profitable trade with
+the territories of Ivan the Terrible, but the Muscovy merchants
+continued to support a variety of ventures seeking the establishment of
+an Oriental trade. Their agents looked into the possibilities of an
+overland trade through Russia to Cathay, and experimented none too
+profitably with a trans-Russia trade with Persia. They gave their
+support to renewed attempts to find a northeast passage and claimed a
+right of license for the numerous efforts that were made in Elizabeth's
+reign to find a northwest passage around or through North America.
+Failing in these efforts, the English merchants finally had challenged
+Portugal's monopoly of trade with the East Indies by way of the Cape of
+Good Hope. The East India Company, chartered by Elizabeth in 1600, had
+gotten off to a good start, and was destined to become one of the great
+empire builders of Britain's history. In 1606, however, the East India
+merchants had had just enough experience with the new trade to begin to
+appreciate some of its difficulties, as in the need to employ larger
+and more expensive ships than were standard in England's maritime trade
+and the great distance to China by way of the Cape of Good Hope.
+Perhaps, after all, some route through America might have the advantage
+over the Cape route. In the opinion of the late Sir William Foster,
+through many years historiographer of the India Office, this was a
+chief reason for the interest Sir Thomas Smith took in Virginia.
+
+Let it be noted that Sir Thomas' interest in Virginia outlasted the
+hope that a successful search for a passage to China might be based on
+Jamestown. Nevertheless, the point may help to explain the marked
+emphasis on this hope that one finds at the beginning of the project.
+Instructions to the first expedition directed the choice of a seat on
+some navigable river, and added, "if you happen to discover divers
+portable rivers, and mongst them any one that hath two main branches,
+if the difference be not great make choice of that which bendeth most
+toward the North-West, for that way you shall soonest find the other
+sea." The other sea, of course, was the Pacific, or as Englishmen were
+likely to say, the South Seas, whose waters also washed the shores of
+China. Vain as was this hope of trade with the Orient through America,
+it was destined for survival, in one form or another, through many
+years. As late as the middle of the nineteenth century, it would be a
+principal argument for the construction of a trans-continental railway.
+
+In 1606 the supposition was that the river system of North America
+might be like that of Russia, where easy portages joining rivers
+flowing in different directions made it possible to travel, most of the
+way by boat, from the north to the south of the country and return.
+"You must observe," advised the adventurers, "whether the river on
+which you plant doth spring out of mountains or out of lakes; if it be
+out of any lake, the passage to the other sea will be the more easy,
+and [it] is like enough that out of the same lake you shall find some
+spring which runs the contrary way toward the East India Sea; for the
+great and famous rivers of Volga, Tanis and Dwina have three heads
+near joynd, and yet the one falleth into the Caspian Sea, the other
+into the Euxine Sea, and the third into the Polonian Sea." For this
+information, the Virginia adventurers were indebted to the Muscovy
+Company, with which Captain Christopher Newport, who commanded the
+ships dispatched to Virginia, had formerly served. It was a good enough
+working theory, based partly on knowledge of the geography of Russia
+and partly on interrogation of the Indians in Carolina by Raleigh's
+men. And the rivers of that part of North America which lies east of
+the Mississippi form just such a system as the Virginia adventurers
+envisaged, except for the fact that the Ohio and other westward flowing
+streams do not empty into the Pacific.
+
+The modern American has usually looked upon such a venture as this as
+something distinctly apart from an agricultural type of endeavor, but
+there is good reason for believing that the London adventurers took a
+different view. They understood the dependence of agriculture upon an
+opportunity to market its products, and they considered the success of
+their commercial ventures to be the surest and the quickest way of
+providing easy access to a market. If a new and practicable route to
+China could be found in America, any colony located close at hand to
+the portage along which the goods of the Orient were moved for
+transshipment to England would find a ready market for food and other
+provisions by supplying the ships engaged in a highly profitable trade.
+More than that, the plenty and the regularity of this shipping would
+provide easy freightage for the encouragement of a variety of
+agricultural and horticultural experiments looking to the production of
+such commodities as sugar, ginger, wine, or vegetable dyes and oils.
+The adventurers well understood the advantage to be gained by
+duplicating the success previously won by the Portuguese and Spaniards
+with such experiments in the Azores, in Madeira, in the Canaries, and
+more recently in the West Indies.
+
+To put the point briefly, Virginia was founded upon many different
+hopes for profitable undertakings--some of them commercial, some
+agricultural, and some industrial. The records show an early interest
+in several extractive industries, including mining, not just for gold
+but for copper and iron as well. First instructions for trade with the
+native Indians reveal an immediate concern for the establishment of
+good relations with them and for laying in a good stock of Indian corn
+as a food reserve, but they show too a concern for the policies that
+would shape the development of a wider trade. Provision in the charter,
+and in the instructions of the royal council, for the creation of
+individual estates according to the laws and customs of England, not to
+mention the guarantee of full legal rights for the inhabitants of the
+colony and for their children, leave no more room for speculation as to
+the intended permanence of the settlement than there is doubt as to the
+expected diversity of its economic activity. But for the time being,
+first things must take first place. Until it had been demonstrated that
+Virginia could provide profitable freightage for the ships of England,
+her future rested upon an insecure foundation. Hence, the initial
+emphasis on the type of activity which promised the more immediate or
+the greater return.
+
+Newport's fleet of the _Susan Constant_, the _Godspeed_, and the
+_Discovery_ sailed for Virginia in December 1606. While the adventurers
+waited for his return and report on the first discoveries, the Spanish
+ambassador excitedly reported to Spain that the English intended to
+send two vessels to Virginia each month until "they have 2,000 men in
+that country." Actually the plan seems to have been quite different.
+Lord Chancellor Egerton is reported to have declared in 1609: "We ...
+thought at first we would send people there little by little." Whatever
+the plan, this was the practice. Newport's total complement in the
+first fleet was 160 men of whom 104 remained in the colony. He was back
+at Plymouth by late July 1607, and from Plymouth he came on to London
+in August. For cargo he carried clapboard, and his sailors had picked
+up so much sassafras root that the leaders of the colony feared that
+the market for this established staple of the American trade might be
+ruined. He brought with him also ore which he hoped an assay would
+prove to be gold, and he declared the country to be rich in copper.
+With some exaggeration, he announced explorations "into the country
+near two hundred miles" and the discovery of "a river navigable for
+great shippes one hundred and fifty miles." The adventurers responded
+by sending him out again, in October 1607, with 120 prospective
+settlers and what would be greeted in Jamestown as the first supply.
+
+All told, Captain Newport would make five round trips between England
+and Virginia before ending a career that included service of the
+Muscovy Company by dying on the island of Java as an agent of the East
+India Company. He has found no important place in the American
+tradition, partly because Captain John Smith, the Virginia colony's
+first historian, took care to see that Captain Newport did not have a
+hero's role. But those of us who would understand the context in which
+our history first developed will do well to consider the career of
+Christopher Newport.
+
+In carrying out the second supply, which reached Jamestown in September
+1608, Newport had aboard 70 new colonists, including two women and
+eight Polish and German experts in the manufacture of glass, tar,
+pitch, and soap ashes. He had a broad commission for completing the
+exploration of the James River above the falls that much later would
+fix the site of Richmond, and for determining the fate of Raleigh's
+lost colony. He found no answer to that riddle, which remains to our
+own day an intriguing mystery; indeed, he seems not to have found the
+time for any real investigation of the problem. As a result, he brought
+back only rumors of four survivors living on the Chowan River. The
+instruction gains its chief interest from the suggestion it conveys of
+a renewed interest on the part of the adventurers in the area
+previously explored by Raleigh's men. Perhaps the adventurers
+anticipated the further disappointments resulting from the additional
+exploration of the James, and so thought again of the Roanoke River,
+which Captain Ralph Lane had partly explored in 1585 and 1586 with the
+hope that it might lead to China. Perhaps they had an eye mainly for
+the publicity that could be had for any news of Raleigh's colonists.
+Whatever the fact, a renewed interest in the Carolina region would find
+very concrete expression in a new charter the adventurers secured
+shortly after Newport's return to England in January 1609.
+
+The actual bounds of the Jamestown colony under the first Virginia
+charter ran 100 miles along the coast and 100 miles inland from the
+coast. This, at any rate, was the area to which title was promised by
+the charter. The second charter gave title to an area reaching 200
+miles both northward and southward along the coast from Point Comfort,
+at the mouth of the James, and "up into the Land throughout from Sea to
+Sea, West and Northwest." In these greatly enlarged bounds one
+immediately detects three major interests: (1) a desire to control the
+entire extent of any passage that might be found to the South Seas, (2)
+the hope that something might be accomplished in Carolina, and (3) the
+need for a title to the whole of the Chesapeake, whose exploration had
+been completed by Captain John Smith in the preceding summer. In this
+exploration Captain Smith had pointed the way for the colony's later
+expansion, but at the moment the adventurers seem to have viewed the
+Chesapeake as having value chiefly for its fish and trade and for
+further exploration. Dissatisfied with Jamestown, as a place that was
+both unhealthy and exposed to attack from the sea, they advised Sir
+Thomas Gates, on the eve of his departure for Virginia in the spring of
+1609 as the newly appointed lieutenant governor of the colony, to move
+his principal city above the falls on the James, where he would enjoy
+every advantage in an attack by a European foe, or better still, that
+he locate it on the Chowan River in modern North Carolina, "foure
+dayes Journey from your forte Southewards." In an earlier passage of
+his instructions, he had already been advised that he should be guided
+by the general principle of seeking the sun, "which is under God the
+first cause both of health and Riches."
+
+Those who bother to read Gates' instructions will notice the emphasis
+they place on the choice of a _principal_ seat. There were to be other
+towns, and Jamestown would be kept as the chief port of entry, though
+not as the site of the main magazine and storehouse. All told, perhaps
+three "habitations" would be enough for the settlers now to be
+transported. Their number was nothing less than 600 persons, men,
+women, and children--more than all the men who had been sent to
+Virginia in the preceding two years. If the reported statement of Lord
+Chancellor Egerton be accepted, the adventurers after two years of
+exploratory effort had come to feel that "the proper thing is to
+fortify ourselves all at once, because when they will open their eyes
+in Spain they will not be able to help it, and even tho' they may hear
+it, they are just now so poor that they will have no means to prevent
+us from carrying out our plan." It was indeed a poor year for Spain,
+which in 1609 had to agree to a truce in the long struggle with the
+Dutch that ultimately brought legal recognition of the independence of
+Holland. This was the year which also witnessed the exploration by
+Henry Hudson of the river that has ever since borne his name, a river
+on which the Dutch would soon lay the foundations of a shortlived North
+American empire. Only the year before had the French built their fort
+at Quebec. And now the English were determined to fortify Virginia "all
+at once." A once proud monopoly of the new world, and of its
+opportunities, was to be finally broken.
+
+The London to which Newport returned late in January, 1609, was already
+astir with preparations for an adventure such as England had never seen
+before. He sat in consultation with Sir Thomas Smith, as did Richard
+Hakluyt, and Thomas Hariot, who as a young man just out of Oxford had
+gone to Roanoke Island for Raleigh in 1585, and whose _True Report of
+Virginia_, published in 1588, still remained a chief dependence of the
+London adventurers. Hakluyt was preparing for publication a translation
+of the Gentleman of Elva's account of De Soto's expedition through the
+southeastern part of the later United States, an account published in
+April as _Virginia Richly Valued_. To this he added in June a
+translation from Marc Lescarbot's _Histoire de la Nouvelle-France_ for
+the purpose of demonstrating that Virginia "must be far better by
+reason it stands more southerly nearer to the sun." Broadsides
+scattered about London announced the special opportunities awaiting
+those who would join in the new venture, while clergymen in their
+pulpits lent the aid of divine sanction, as in Robert Gray's _Good
+Speed to Virginia_. The broad outlines of the new plan had been
+presented to the public in February by Alderman Robert Johnson in a
+tract entitled _Nova Britannia: Offering Most Excellent Fruites by
+Planting in Virginia_. By the end of that month the adventurers had
+also completed negotiations for the granting of the second charter, and
+had opened their books for subscription to a new joint-stock fund.
+
+The device of the joint-stock fund had been increasingly relied upon by
+English adventurers as they sought the means for financing more distant
+and more expensive ventures. It had the advantage of pooling the
+resources of more than one individual, and of distributing the risk,
+and the Virginia adventure had depended upon joint-stock methods of
+finance from the beginning. It is impossible to speak with exactness
+regarding the financial arrangements of the first years. A provision in
+the first instructions directing the settlers to live, work, and trade
+together in a common stock through a period of five years suggests the
+possibility of a five-year terminable stock, i.e., a fund that would be
+invested and reinvested through a term of five years before it was
+divided, together with the earnings thereon. But other evidence
+indicates that there may have been a separate stock for each of
+Newport's voyages, as was the case with each of the early voyages of
+the East India Company to the Orient. The so-called joint-stock company
+of that day rarely had a permanent joint-stock of the sort identified
+with the modern corporation. Instead, it functioned as a governing body
+representing all of the merchants engaged in a particular trade, who
+traded individually or through a variety of joint-stocks invested under
+the general regulation of the company. And such was the character of
+the Virginia Company.
+
+Whatever may have been the specific terms offered earlier investors,
+those offered in 1609 are clear enough. It was proposed that men
+subscribe at the rate of £12 10s. per share to a common stock that
+would be invested and reinvested over the term of the next seven years.
+Although special good fortune might justify a dividend of some part of
+the earnings at an earlier date, there would be no final dividend,
+which at that time meant a division of capital as well as the earnings
+thereof, until 1616. The dividend promised then would include a grant
+of land in Virginia as well as a return of the capital with profit. How
+much land depended, like the profit, on the degree of success that had
+attended the venture meantime.
+
+One of the inducements for subscription was a promise that all
+adventurers would have a voice in determining the policies of the
+company. Again, it is impossible to say just what had been the
+organization through which the adventurers had previously functioned.
+They probably followed custom by meeting in assemblies or courts (both
+terms were common) when some joint decision was needed, and no doubt
+they relied on the designation of such committees and officers as were
+necessary for the execution of decisions reached in their assembly. It
+may be that the adventurers sitting on the Virginia Council functioned
+also in the character of an executive committee for their fellows. In
+view of the well known tendency for institutions to evolve out of
+earlier practices, with such adjustments as experience may dictate,
+there is reason for believing that important features of the
+organization outlined in the second charter were older than the charter
+itself. But the charter of 1609 offers the first unmistakable evidence
+as to the organization upon which the adventurers depended.
+
+They were there incorporated by the name of "The Treasurer and Company
+of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London, for the first Colony
+in Virginia." Sir Thomas Smith was designated treasurer with power to
+warn and summon the members of the council and of the company "to their
+courts and meetings." The adventurers, "or the major part of them which
+shall be present and assembled for that purpose" were empowered to make
+grants of land according to "the proportion of the adventurer, as to
+the special service, hazard, exploit, or merit of any person so to be
+recompenced, advanced, or rewarded." They were to meet also as occasion
+required for the election of members of the council, which was charged
+with the management of the enterprise on the ground that it was not
+convenient "that all the adventurers shall be so often drawn to meet
+and assemble." The members of the council were listed by name, more
+than fifty of them, beginning with Henry, Earl of Southampton, and
+including the Lord Mayor of London, the Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells,
+Thomas, Lord De la Warr, Sir William Wade, Sir Oliver Cromwell, Sir
+Francis Bacon, Sir Maurice Berkeley, Sir Thomas Gates, Sir Walter Cope,
+Sir Edwin Sandys, Sir Thomas Roe, Sir Dudley Digges, John Eldred, and
+John Wolstenholme. These and their colleagues of the council, which
+included of course Sir Thomas Smith, were the great men of the company,
+not necessarily the heaviest investors but those whose experience, or
+social and political position, argued that they should be on the
+managing board. In short, the subscribers had a basic right to choose
+the directors of the business and to determine the division of its
+rewards, but the great men would run it.
+
+For the assurance of the adventurers, each of them was listed by name
+in the charter--all told, some 650 of them. In addition to the
+individuals there named, the charter listed some fifty London companies
+which had subscribed in their corporate capacity in response to the
+appeals of London's clergymen and the Lord Mayor. To list all these
+companies would be tedious, but some of them should be named, if only
+for the picture they give of London itself. Here were "the Company of
+Mercers, the Company of Grocers, the Company of Drapers, the Company of
+Fishmongers, the Company of Goldsmiths, the Company of Skinners, the
+Company of Merchant-Taylors, the Company of Haberdashers, the Company
+of Salters, the Company of Ironmongers, the Company of Vintners, the
+Company of Clothworkers, the Company of Dyers, the Company of Brewers,
+the Company of Leathersellers, the Company of Pewterers, the Company of
+Cutlers," and others, including the companies to which belonged the
+city's cordwainers, barber-surgeons, masons, plumbers, innholders,
+cooks, coopers, bricklayers, fletchers, blacksmiths, joiners, weavers,
+plasterers, stationers, upholsterers, musicians, turners, and glaziers.
+This was a national effort, but in a special way it was London's effort
+to serve the nation in response to a call from its leaders.
+
+There is reason to believe that the terms of the charter had been
+agreed upon by the end of February, but the document remained unsealed
+until May, when all who had subscribed could be listed. By that date,
+too, some 600 subjects of the king had agreed to make the adventure in
+person to Virginia. Some of them were smart enough to discount the
+propaganda that had persuaded them, and so they settled for the wages
+offered by the company. But others agreed to go on adventure, i.e. to
+accept the adventurers' offer that their personal adventure to
+Virginia would be counted as one share, at the minimum, in the common
+joint-stock. This was to say that they would be entitled to whatever
+rewards in 1616 might belong to any subscriber in England for £12 10s.;
+and if the personal adventure of the settler in Virginia was considered
+to be worth more, as in the case of a surgeon or one of the high
+officers of the colony, then might the rights of an adventurer in
+Virginia run as high as any belonging to the great adventurers in
+England. The colonists who came to America in 1609 were thus encouraged
+to view themselves as being in no way inferior to those who sent them.
+
+Sir George Somers had been selected as admiral of the great fleet which
+dropped down the Thames from London on May 15 and sailed from Plymouth
+on the second of June with a full complement of nine vessels. Somers
+rode aboard the _Sea Adventure_, whose master was Newport and whose
+passengers included Sir Thomas Gates and William Strachey, the newly
+appointed secretary of the colony. Ahead of them had gone Captain
+Samuel Argall, to find a new route to Virginia running north of the
+Spanish West Indies, and to make a test of the Chesapeake fisheries.
+Somers guided his ships along a route that had long been familiar to
+him, the route discovered by Columbus for Spain and the route that
+Newport and other English adventurers had consistently followed to the
+more southern parts of Virginia, but he tried to stay above the
+channels regularly followed by the ships of Spain. Such, at any rate,
+were his instructions, and for seven weeks out of Plymouth all went
+well. But then a storm struck, no doubt an early hurricane of the sort
+so familiar to residents of the east coast today, a storm which
+separated the _Sea Adventure_ from the other vessels and carried it to
+destruction off the coast of Bermuda. Providence brought crew and
+passengers, all 150 of them, safely ashore to begin an idyll that would
+be celebrated in Shakespeare's _Tempest_ and would be turned to
+advantage by the adventurers in their later propaganda. In Bermuda they
+found food in plenty--fish, fowl, and hogs that ran wild--and a most
+healthful climate. But for almost a year Virginia would struggle
+without the leadership of Somers, Newport, or Gates, and without the
+sure authority of instructions and commissions they had carried aboard
+the _Sea Adventure_.
+
+After ten months the shipwrecked colonists had fashioned from the
+cedars of Bermuda, which reminded them of the cedars of Lebanon, two
+small vessels named the _Patience_ and the _Deliverance_. The ships
+were stoutly enough built to carry the full company to Virginia in May
+1610, but at Jamestown they found only want and confusion. The other
+vessels in Somers' fleet had straggled into the bay the preceding
+summer with their storm-tossed passengers, but the following winter had
+been a nightmare. This was the winter that was destined long to be
+remembered as the starving time, the time when one man was reported
+even to have eaten his wife. Only a handful of the settlers, new and
+old, had survived, and Somers and Gates saw no choice but to abandon
+the colony. It was saved by the providential arrival early in June of
+Lord De la Warr, who brought with him 150 new colonists and a
+commission as the colony's governor. Somers went back to Bermuda in the
+hope of laying in a stock of pork for Virginia, but there he died and
+his seamen ran for England.
+
+The disturbing news of these tragic events reached London piecemeal.
+First came the news in the fall of 1609 that the _Sea Adventure_, with
+Somers, Gates, Newport, and Strachey, had been lost. This was a severe
+blow to the leaders of the company, who had planned to send De la Warr
+out with perhaps as many colonists as Somers had carried. Already the
+enthusiasm engendered by the promotional campaign of the preceding
+spring had begun to decline, as some men took second thought.
+Subscriptions at that time had been enlisted on an understanding that
+they might be paid in installments, and the adventurers now often found
+it difficult to collect what had been promised. During the winter they
+published an extraordinarily frank promotional piece, _A True and
+Sincere Declaration of the Purpose and Ends of the Plantation Begun in
+Virginia_. In this pamphlet, they did the best they could to stir again
+the high hopes of the preceding spring, but they had to admit what all
+London knew, that the news was not encouraging. And so they appealed to
+the honor of the subscribers, that they remember those in Virginia who
+had staked their lives on the promises made by other men. It must be
+said that the adventurers did very well indeed, in the circumstances,
+to get De la Warr away in the spring with three vessels and 150
+recruits for the colony.
+
+Had he been able to send back a favorable report on the situation in
+Virginia, the adventurers probably would have found their position not
+too difficult. Instead, Sir Thomas Gates returned to London in
+September 1610 with a report that caused the adventurers to consider
+seriously whether the whole project should not be abandoned. Gates
+himself was subsequently credited with having clinched the decision in
+favor of continuance by arguing that sugar, wine, silk, iron, sturgeon,
+furs, timber, rice, aniseed, and other valuable commodities could be
+produced in Virginia, given the necessary time and support. The
+adventurers saw also the promotional possibilities of Somers' shipwreck
+at Bermuda, or rather, the remarkable experience which had followed it.
+Was this not an encouraging sign of God's providential care? Of His
+willingness to support the English in Virginia? This was a question
+London was invited to contemplate again and again during the months
+that followed.
+
+No doubt, the courage of a few key leaders, among whom Sir Thomas Smith
+was now quite definitely the chief, had a large part in the decision to
+continue. Certainly, it took courage to launch the new campaign for
+funds to which the adventurers committed themselves in the fall of
+1610. The estimated need ran to £30,000. All former subscribers were
+urged to subscribe another £37 10s. on agreement that the subscription
+would be paid in at the rate of £12 10s. per year over the next three
+years. Others were invited to subscribe on the same terms. The Lord
+Mayor appealed once more to the London companies, and plans were made
+for inviting the other towns of England to contribute. In November the
+Company published _A True Declaration of the Estate of the Colonie in
+Virginia_ for the purpose of refuting "scandalous reports" tending to
+discourage subscriptions. Richard Rich presented, probably at the
+suggestion of the adventurers, his _Newes from Virginia, the Lost
+Flocke Triumphant_, a poem celebrating the shipwreck of the _Sea
+Adventure_ and the providential survival of its passengers. And to this
+Silvanus Jourdan added his _Discovery of the Barmudas_, a pamphlet
+recounting the experience of Somers and his colleagues in the islands.
+It was written, declared the author, "for the love of my country; and
+... the good of the plantation in Virginia."
+
+It is not so remarkable that the adventurers failed to achieve their
+goal of £30,000 as that they actually secured the subscription of
+approximately £18,000 by the spring of 1611. The records of the company
+are so incomplete for any time prior to 1619, when the only surviving
+court minutes have their beginning, that it is impossible to give the
+comparative figures one would like to have. But there is evidence
+suggesting that the fund raised in 1609 may not have been larger than
+£10,000. If this be true, the success of this second campaign for funds
+becomes all the more remarkable. One can hardly explain it in terms of
+the ordinary calculations of a business community. Perhaps the
+adventurers believed their own propaganda, were themselves responsive
+to the kind of patriotic appeal that was made in the spring of 1610,
+when they were trying to get Lord De la Warr's expedition ready. "The
+eyes of all Europe," said the adventurers, "are looking upon our
+endeavours to spread the Gospell among the heathen people of Virginia,
+to plant an English nation there, and to settle a trade in those parts,
+which may be peculiar to our nation, to the end we may thereby be
+secured from being eaten out of all profits of trade by our more
+industrious neighbors."
+
+With the new funds, the adventurers equipped two expeditions which
+sailed for Virginia in the spring of 1611. The first to leave carried
+300 men, in three ships, under the command of Sir Thomas Dale, another
+veteran of the Netherlands fighting who had been commissioned as
+marshal of the colony. It was impossible not to be impressed by the
+evidence that a lack of discipline had contributed to the colony's
+woes, and Dale, who sailed in March, undoubtedly was intended to draw
+upon his experience as a soldier for the better discipline of the
+colonists. Sir Thomas Gates, who followed Dale out in May, had a
+broader task. He would continue to serve as the lieutenant governor
+under Lord De la Warr, and, like Dale, he carried 300 passengers. But
+his six ships also carried much more. One of the basic problems of
+original colonization, though it has often been lost sight of, was to
+stock the colony with cattle, hogs, poultry, etc. Later colonists, in
+Maryland or Carolina, would buy these essentials in Virginia, but the
+Virginia colonists had no established neighbor of their own nation on
+which to rely, and during the starving time they had literally eaten
+themselves out of stock. Nothing could better illustrate the fact that
+the Virginia adventurers in 1611 had to begin all over again than the
+100 cattle, the 200 swine, and the poultry in unspecified numbers Gates
+had aboard his ships as they set their course westward. And if any one
+wishes to estimate the value of a cow that had been transported across
+the Atlantic, let him notice the penalty imposed by Dale's laws, so
+called, for killing one.
+
+As Gates dropped down the Thames in May, the adventurers must have
+relaxed with the satisfaction that comes from real achievement. Twice
+now, within the span of two years, they had raised a great fund with
+which they sent each time nine vessels and 600 colonists to Virginia.
+Indeed, they had done even more. Counting Argall's ship, which sailed
+ahead of Somers in the spring of 1609, and the three vessels going over
+with De la Warr in 1610, the company had dispatched to Virginia no less
+than 22 vessels and close to 1,400 colonists in a two year period. But
+Gates had hardly cleared the coasts of England before Lord De la Warr,
+of all persons, turned up in London, to the great consternation of his
+fellow adventurers.
+
+A general assembly of the adventurers on June 25 listened to his
+explanation, which was promptly published by order of the council.
+The story briefly was this. Ever since he had reached Virginia
+the preceding June he had suffered a succession of violent
+sicknesses--fevers, the flux, gout, and finally scurvy, "till I was
+upon the point to leave the world." In preference to this he left
+Virginia in a vessel commanded by Argall, and in the hope that he might
+recover his health with the aid of hot baths in the West Indies.
+Contrary winds had forced him to alter his course to the Azores, where
+oranges and lemons had cured him of the scurvy. He then resolved to
+return to his post, but was persuaded to seek first a full recovery of
+health "in the naturall ayre of my countrey." He deplored the ill
+effects on the Virginia project of his return home, but argued that it
+would have been far worse for Virginia had he remained there only to
+die.
+
+A nice advertisement this for the healthfulness of Virginia's climate.
+One might wonder at the council's decision to publish the report were
+it not for the obvious fact that the alternative would have been worse
+still. Some explanation had to be given the public, for the adventurers
+had counted heavily on the presence of Lord De la Warr in Virginia to
+offset the discouragement of earlier reports from Jamestown, as their
+promotional literature amply demonstrates. He was a nobleman, the head
+of a great family, and a member of His Majesty's Council for Virginia.
+"Now know yee," reads the commission he had received in February 1610,
+"that we his Majesties said Councell upon good advise and deliberation
+and upon notice had of the wisedome, valour, circumspection, and of the
+virtue and especiall sufficiencie of the Right Honourable Sir Thomas
+West, Knight Lord la Warr to be in principall place of authoritie and
+government in the said collonie, and finding in him the said Lord la
+Warr propensness and willingness to further and advance the good of
+the said plantation, by virtue of the said authoritie unto us given by
+the said letters pattents have nominated, made, ordained and apointed
+... the said Sir Thomas West, Knight Lord la Warr to be principall
+Governor, Commander and Captain Generall both by land and sea over the
+said colonie and all other collonies planted or to be planted in
+Virginia or within the limits specified in his Majesties said letters
+pattents and over all persons, Admiralls Vice-Admirals and other
+officers and commanders whether by sea or land of what qualitie soever
+for and during the term of his natural life, and do hereby ordaine and
+declare that he the said Lord la Warr during his life shall be stiled
+and called by the name and title of Lord Governor and Captain General
+of Virginia." And now, after little more than a year and before the
+subscribers to the new joint-stock fund had paid in their second
+installment, the Lord Governor and Captain General of Virginia was back
+in London to make a public confession that in Virginia he had nearly
+died of the ague, flux, and scurvy. From time to time thereafter the
+company publicly suggested that the Lord Governor might soon return to
+his post, but he did not undertake to do so until 1618 and then he died
+on the way.
+
+Once more the leaders of the company showed determination. Delinquent
+subscribers were carried to court in a series of chancery actions
+extending into 1614. How much was collected in this way cannot be said,
+but the complaints entered in chancery have provided most helpful clues
+to an understanding of the company's financial history. It seems
+unlikely that anything collected as a result of these actions served to
+do more than reduce an indebtedness incurred by the company in 1611 on
+the promise of its subscribers. One thing is certain: there was no
+chance of floating another subscription. By 1612 the adventurers were
+complaining that only the name of God was more frequently profaned in
+the streets and market places of London than was the name of Virginia.
+After that year the Virginia lottery, its winning tickets entitling the
+holder to an exchange for shares in the Virginia joint-stock, became
+the company's chief dependence. Now and again there would also be found
+some person who wanted to go to Virginia at his own cost, and was
+willing to pay the cost in return for shares of stock guaranteeing an
+ultimate title to land in the colony. These transactions, at a time
+when Virginia's name had lost its magic, were perhaps too few to
+suggest to any one of the adventurers that here was the future, not
+only of the company, but of English colonization in North America.
+Although the Virginia Company continued to be active for thirteen years
+after 1611, the last of its great joint-stock funds was the one to
+which men made their subscriptions just before Lord De la Warr came
+home.
+
+To this statement perhaps a qualification should be added. Virginia at
+first had been to Englishmen America itself, and so it had remained in
+a very real sense, despite an obvious tendency since 1609 for the
+adventurers to pin their hopes increasingly on what might be found
+within the reach of Jamestown. The continuance of the Virginia
+adventure became thus not simply a matter of keeping the Jamestown
+colony alive. What mattered was that somewhere in North America the
+great task to which the company had committed itself should go forward.
+And where better, after 1611, could this be tried than in the Bermudas?
+Divine providence had pointed the way, so clearly that it might even be
+possible to raise the needed funds in London. Moreover, Sir George
+Somers, by being shipwrecked there and subsequently by dying there, had
+provided a name for the islands that was both English and suggestive of
+a climate so healthful that even Lord De la Warr might prosper there.
+Accordingly, the leading members of the Virginia Company in 1612
+undertook the colonization of the Somers Islands, a designation often
+written as the Summer Islands, and for that purpose they subscribed to
+a new joint-stock fund. The Bermuda joint-stock, however, seems to
+have been a much more modest fund than that subscribed either in 1609
+or 1611.
+
+There was nothing unusual in thus creating within the framework of the
+Virginia Company a special stock for investment under the direction of
+its own officers and committees in the colonization of Bermuda. In the
+great companies of London it was customary that each stock should be
+separately administered. The only technical difficulty lay in the fact
+that Bermuda was located outside the geographical limits granted the
+Virginia adventurers. Under the second of their charters, rights at sea
+(on both seas) had extended out from the coasts for only 100 miles,
+which for the purposes of 1612 was not far enough. The adventurers,
+therefore, sought and secured a third charter granting them rights
+along the coast of Virginia, within the limits of 41° and 30° of
+northerly latitude, to a distance of 300 leagues, in order to include
+"divers Islands lying desolate and uninhabited, some of which are
+already made known and discovered by the industry, travel, and expences
+of the said Company, ... all and every of which it may import the said
+Colony [of Virginia] both in safety and policy of trade to populate and
+plant."
+
+This extension of bounds undoubtedly represents the chief reason for
+seeking the third Virginia charter, but the leaders of the company,
+while they had the opportunity, also included other significant
+provisions. Especially significant was a decision to enlarge the
+authority belonging to the general assembly of the adventurers. To its
+former prerogatives, which had been chiefly to elect members of the
+council and to determine the apportionment of lands, the third charter
+added three fundamental rights: to elect all officers of either company
+or colony, to admit new members to the fellowship of the company, and
+to draft laws and ordinances for the welfare of the plantation.
+Heretofore, the council had been the true governing body, though
+subject to a right of election and displacement by the adventurers in
+general assembly. Now the general court of the adventurers was to
+govern, with the council as its executive agency. Since voting in the
+Virginia courts, as in those of other companies at the time, was by
+head rather than by share, this provision of the charter can be
+interpreted only as an attempt by the great men of the company to
+encourage a renewed interest on the part of the general body of
+adventurers by enlarging their influence on the conduct of the
+company's affairs. It was the third charter which also authorized the
+establishment of the Virginia lottery--the first of many attempts in
+American history to exploit the gambler's instinct for the support of a
+worthy cause. In the charter the king also gave assurance that his
+courts would view favorably the company's suits against delinquent
+subscribers.
+
+[Illustration: Merchants of Virginia.
+
+The Company of Merchants, called _Merchants of Virginia_, _Bermudas_,
+or _Summer-Ilands_, for (as I heare) all these additions are given
+them. I know not the time of their incorporating neither by whom their
+Armes, Supporters, and Crest were granted, and therefore am compelled
+to leaue them abruptly.
+
+From John Stow, _Survey of London_, 1632
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Virginia Seal
+
+Courtesy Mrs. L. T. Jester and Mrs. P. W. Hiden]
+
+[Illustration: A Declaration for the certaine time of dravving the
+great standing Lottery
+
+Heading for the Broadside issued by _The Virginia Company_, London,
+1615
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library. From photograph in Virginia Historical
+Society.]
+
+[Illustration: Royal Exchange, London. As it was in the time of the
+Virginia Company.
+
+Photo by New York Public Library]
+
+[Illustration: Captain John Smith
+
+From _The London Company of Virginia_ (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: THOMAS WEST, _Third Lord de la Warr_
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: SIR THOMAS SMITH (or SMYTHE)
+
+"The Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Smith, of London, Knight, one of his
+Maiesties Councell for Virginia, and Treasurer for the Colonie, and
+Gouernour of the Companies of the Moscovia and East India Merchants"
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of The Skinners' Company, London.
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Henry Wriothesley
+
+(Third Earl of Southampton)
+
+From the painting by Michiel Jansz van Miereveldt
+
+From _The London Company of Virginia_ (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: SIR EDWIN SANDYS
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of Sir Edmund Arthur Lechmere, Bart, Bramham Gardens, London, England
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Sir Thomas Dale
+
+Portrait by an unknown artist of the Anglo-Flemish School painted in
+oils early in the 17th Century. The original portrait is preserved in
+the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: HENRY STUART
+
+_Prince of Wales_
+
+From Alexander Brown, _The Genesis of the United States_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+The new charter having received the final seal in March 1612, a new
+colony was established in Bermuda in the following July. Its early
+history has a double significance for the later history of Virginia. In
+the first place, the Bermuda colony emphasizes the growing interest of
+the adventurers in what might be produced in America as against what
+might be found by way of America. The occupation of the Bermuda Islands
+might almost be described as a retreat from the earlier search for a
+passage to China. The move could be viewed also as a reassertion of an
+old interest in plundering the Spaniard, for the Bermudas lay athwart
+the homeward route of Spain's treasure fleets. But in any case the
+primary interest was in America and its own peculiar opportunities, and
+the attention given by the early settlers in Bermuda to experiments
+with tobacco, sugar, wine, ginger, and other such commodities suggests
+that their purpose was not so much to plunder the Spaniard as rather to
+emulate his success as a planter in the West Indies. Secondly, the
+adventurers showed a marked inclination to encourage each adventurer to
+meet his own costs. Provision was made for an early survey and division
+of the land, with the result that men put their money chiefly into the
+development of their own estates. A final survey was not completed
+until 1617, but at that date some of the Bermuda adventurers at least
+had known who their tenants were and approximately where their land
+would lie for three full years. Whether for these or for other reasons,
+Bermuda grew while Virginia languished. By 1616 over 600 colonists had
+reached the Somers Islands, where most of them survived. In contrast,
+Virginia had that year 350 people.
+
+The Bermuda subscribers had been separately incorporated as the Somers
+Island Company with its own royal charter in 1615. Indeed, ever since
+1612, when the Bermuda adventurers helped to relieve the financial
+embarrassment of the Virginia Company by paying £2,000 for its newly
+acquired title to Bermuda, the Somers Island adventurers seem to have
+functioned increasingly as a separate corporation. But the membership
+of the two companies was much the same. It had been the more active and
+interested of the Virginia adventurers who subscribed to the Bermuda
+joint-stock in 1612, and for twelve years thereafter the active
+membership of the Virginia Company came so close to duplicating the
+membership of the Bermuda Company that the two bodies often met
+virtually as one. Until 1619 Sir Thomas Smith served as governor of
+both companies.
+
+The growing interest of the London adventurers after 1612 in the
+colonization of Bermuda did not mean that Virginia was wholly
+neglected. Funds secured from the lottery and from suits against
+delinquent subscribers were enough to keep the project alive. In 1612
+the adventurers even sent out a stock of silkworms for a test of silk
+production. Needless to say, returning ships brought back no silk; nor
+did they bring sugar or wine. Lumber, including the valuable black
+walnut, seems to have provided the chief cargo for return voyages. A
+shipment of tobacco, Virginia's first, in 1614 gave some ground for
+arguing that the agricultural experimentation to which the colonists
+had been committed for several years now would pay off eventually. So
+argued Sir Thomas Gates on his return home this same year after three
+years of service in the colony, but the fact that he had come back
+from Virginia apparently made more of an impression than did his
+argument. Others also came home, their contracted term of service
+ended, and rarely did they bring any news from Virginia which added
+good to its name. Instead, they talked of the severe discipline under
+which they had been forced to live, and made sport of the too hopeful
+propaganda which had first persuaded them to become adventurers in
+Virginia. The discipline, chiefly associated with Dale's office as
+marshal, made his loyal decision to remain in the colony for another
+two years as lieutenant governor a further contribution to the ill
+repute of Virginia's name.
+
+Dale finally came home in 1616, the year in which the dividend on the
+1609 joint-stock fell due. The contrast between the high hopes of 1609
+and the reality of 1616 was all too painfully apparent. Six hundred
+men, women, and children had sailed for Virginia in the first of these
+years under a plan to live and work together for a seven year period.
+They would share, each according to his particular skill or aptitude,
+in the common task of planting a colony, and they would live out of a
+common store. By 1616, towns were to have been built, churches and
+houses raised, and an increasing acreage brought under cultivation. A
+variety of profitable crops would have been tested, and markets
+established for them. The original stock of cattle would have increased
+through care until there were enough for all. At the same time, the
+trade with the Indians would have been put on a profitable basis, as
+would have mining operations and perhaps even a trade to Cathay. Such
+was the general prospect to which so many adventurers had responded in
+1609. To the modern student all this seems so unrealistic as to be
+almost unbelievable, but unless one grasps the reality of the original
+dream he cannot hope to comprehend the extent of a later
+disillusionment.
+
+There were no funds to be divided in 1616, but the company did declare
+a dividend of land--not the 500 acres per share that Alderman Johnson
+had suggested as a possibility in 1609 but the more modest total of 50
+acres. This 50 acres, however, was designated as a first dividend.
+Others would follow, for an ultimate total of perhaps 200 acres per
+share, as the area in the colony's "actual possession" was enlarged.
+Plans were announced for dispatching a new governor to Virginia with
+instructions for completing the necessary surveys, and the adventurers
+were urged to seize the opportunity to gain a desirable priority in the
+location of their shares by contributing £12 10s. toward meeting the
+necessary costs. In return for this contribution, the adventurer would
+be entitled to an additional 50 acres. The land now to be divided was
+that lying along the James River, and only those adventurers who
+submitted to the additional levy would be entitled to share in the
+division, except apparently for adventurers then living in the colony.
+These were the old planters, as they came to be called, whose rights
+paralleled those of the old adventurers in England. It is evident that
+the adventurers were in no position to claim a monopoly as the just
+reward of their past sacrifices, for they also offered an immediate
+dividend, on terms no different from those governing the rights of the
+old adventurers, to any new adventurer who wished to join by paying £12
+10s. per share. Such was the estate to which the Virginia Company had
+been reduced after ten years of effort.
+
+To employ a term that was destined to become common at a later period
+of American history, the Virginia Company had become nothing more than
+a land company. Its one asset was the land that had been bought with
+the sacrifices of the first ten years, and after 1616 all of its plans
+depended upon the hope that it might use its power to give title to
+that land as an inducement for investment in the colony. In its
+advertisement in 1616 adventurers, both old and new, were invited to
+take up shares for occupancy by themselves or for development by
+tenants sent for the purpose. Perhaps because the first response to
+this appeal was disappointing, the company provided an additional
+inducement in 1617 by promising 50 acres per head for every person
+sent to the colony, the payment being due to the one who bore the cost.
+This was the Virginia headright, as it came to be called, which was
+destined to remain the chief feature of the colony's land policy
+through many years after the demise of the company itself. Intended at
+first to encourage the adventurers in England to send the labor that
+was necessary for the development of the land, it served thereafter as
+a land subsidy of the immigration on which the colony lived and grew.
+
+By 1618 the fortunes of Virginia were taking a turn for the better. The
+adventurers, or some of them at least, found encouragement in continued
+shipments of tobacco. These shipments were small and the quality of the
+tobacco could not be compared with the Spanish leaf of West Indian
+production which was finding a growing market in London despite King
+James's known disapproval of the habit on which the market grew. But
+the quality of Virginia tobacco, for which Sir Thomas Smith seems to
+have found a first market in the East Indies, no doubt could be
+improved as the planters learned the art of its cultivation and the
+adventurers found for them a better weed. No doubt, too, this success
+with tobacco, whatever the imperfections of the current product, could
+be viewed as a harbinger of other successful attempts to produce
+commodities the Spaniard had for so long and so profitably grown in his
+West Indian plantations.
+
+Further encouragement came from the willingness of the handful of
+planters already in Virginia to remain there, and from the decision of
+Ralph Hamor and Samuel Argall, both of whom had formerly served the
+company in the colony, to return there. Especially significant were the
+arrangements under which Hamor and Argall planned their return early in
+1617. One of the problems that had undoubtedly discouraged the
+adventurers from taking up the company's offer of a land grant in 1616
+was the question of the supervision that could be provided for such
+tenants as they might elect to put on the land. In Bermuda, the
+adventurers had found an answer, or rather thought they had, by
+dividing the land into tribes, later designated as parishes, over which
+a bailif would exercise an office that was partly civil and partly
+traditional on the landed estates of England. In Virginia, Hamor and
+Argall pointed the way to a solution by entering into an association
+with several of the adventurers in England for the development of a
+jointly held plantation. Thus, in January 1617, the company awarded 16
+bills of adventure to Hamor and six associates for the 16 men they
+proposed to transport to Virginia at their own charge. The following
+month saw a similar transaction with Captain Argall and his associates,
+five adventurers who had joined with this seasoned veteran to send out
+a total of 24 men. Argall went also as lieutenant governor in
+succession to George Yeardley, who had been left as deputy by Dale on
+his return to England in 1616, but the cost of getting the new governor
+out to his post seems to have been met entirely by his own associates.
+The arrangement has an obvious pertinence to an understanding of
+Argall's unhappy experience as governor, for he was later charged with
+neglect of the public interest through too great concern for his own
+personal interests. But here the emphasis belongs to the equally
+obvious fact that some of the adventurers were responding to an
+opportunity to send out tenants who would work under the management and
+direction of an experienced colonist.
+
+In 1618 George Yeardley was back in London consulting with other
+adventurers, including some of the leading members of the company, who
+were interested in forming associations for the development of
+"particular plantations." Late in the year he sailed for the colony as
+the newly designated governor of Virginia. With him he carried
+instructions which record for us further developments in the company's
+land policy. All adventurers, including delinquents who would pay up
+their subscription, were now promised 100 acres of land on the first
+dividend for each share of stock, and another 100 acres as a second
+dividend after the first had been occupied. Such of the ancient
+planters as had paid their own way to Virginia, which was to say those
+who had settled at their own cost before Dale's departure in 1616, were
+also to receive grants in like amount. The adventurers were encouraged
+to pool their rights for a common grant of land by the promise that
+their estate could be developed under their own management and would be
+treated as a separate administrative unit for civil and military
+purposes. What the company had in mind were the larger associations
+already formed or on the point of being formed, such as that for the
+settlement of Southampton Hundred, which eventually embraced a nominal
+area of perhaps as much as 100,000 acres and in which the associated
+adventurers invested a total of some £6,000. Another example is the
+association of Sir William Throckmorton, Sir George Yeardley, Richard
+Berkeley, George Thorpe, and John Smyth of North Nibley which early in
+1619 received a first joint grant of 4,500 acres and which founded
+above Jamestown the plantation known as Berkeley Hundred. These new
+associations were very much the same as the association of the Virginia
+adventurers which in 1612 had undertaken the colonization of Bermuda.
+For the development of their common grant they pooled the necessary
+capital in their own joint-stock fund and directed its investment
+through their own courts, assemblies, or committees as they saw fit.
+For every tenant sent to the plantation, the associated adventurers
+were entitled to an additional headright of 50 acres. They were awarded
+also an additional 1,500 acres for the support of public charges in the
+hundred, such as those incurred for the maintenance of a church and
+minister.
+
+How many of the colonists who migrated to Virginia between 1618 and
+1624 went by agreement with such associations as these is difficult to
+say, but there can be no doubt that they were a very large part of the
+total. The Virginia Company, which had served theretofore as the
+immediate colonizing agent, was becoming more and more a supervisory
+body for the encouragement of individual and associated adventurers in
+their own colonizing efforts. For itself, the company looked forward to
+a continuing revenue from quitrents to be paid, at the rate of two
+shillings per hundred acres after a term of seven years from the
+original grant, by all save the ancient adventurers and the planters
+who had migrated before 1616 at their own costs. To this revenue from
+quitrents could be added the benefit to be expected from the company's
+control of the colony's trade.
+
+As in 1609, there seems to be no doubt that all plans looked ultimately
+to the establishment of individual land titles. Where the record has
+survived, the associated adventurers clearly intended that their common
+grant would in time be divided. In the case of Berkeley Hundred, the
+evidence suggests too that the associates used the promise of a share
+in this division for the recruitment of their first tenants. Yeardley's
+instructions reaffirmed the company's promise of a headright in terms
+inviting the migration of individual settlers at their own cost.
+
+To understand the plans of 1618, the modern American needs to dismiss
+any idea that the isolated farm house of later America represented the
+ideal toward which men looked at this time. He should think rather of
+the English village community, or of the New England town, where men
+lived together with the advantages of a close social relationship and
+where the land they cultivated lay close at hand to the village and its
+church. If the associated adventurers continued to depend for a time on
+variations of the original joint-stock plan, it was not merely because
+they wanted to share the risk of a still uncertain venture or because
+they were seeking some useful device for meeting the problems of
+management. It was also because the plantation they hoped to establish
+was to have at its heart a town, and it was thought that the town could
+best be built through some common effort.
+
+What has been said above is not intended to suggest that the company's
+role after 1618 was to be purely supervisory. Although it had an
+accumulated debt of some £9,000, or possibly because of this debt, the
+company agreed for the encouragement of individual adventurers to
+assume heavy responsibilities of leadership. It directed Yeardley to
+lay out four towns, or boroughs, along the James in which grants to
+individuals or the lesser associations would fall--Kecoughtan at the
+mouth of the James, Henrico at the head of its navigation, and in
+between Charles City and James City. From the Bermuda adventurers the
+company borrowed the idea of establishing a public estate intended to
+meet as nearly as possible all costs of government. In each borough
+3,000 acres were to be set aside as the company's land for cultivation
+by its own tenants, who would work at half shares. Out of the company's
+moiety would come the support of all superior officers, excepting the
+governor, for whom an additional 3,000 acres would be set aside in
+James City. The company thus committed itself to a not inconsiderable
+program of colonization on its own responsibility.
+
+One wonders what it was that inspired this renewed, and most ambitious,
+venture in Virginia--a venture that would carry to Virginia over the
+next five years something like 4,500 colonists. Several possibilities
+can be suggested. First of all, it should be noted that the interest of
+the London adventurers in the colonization of America had never
+faltered, despite repeated disappointment, since they had originally
+laid their hands to the task in 1606. This, at any rate, is true of the
+adventurers who led, and more especially of Sir Thomas Smith. After it
+had become no longer possible to push the adventure in Virginia, they
+had turned to Bermuda, where an initial success seems to have
+encouraged another try in Virginia. The plans adopted for Bermuda and
+later for Virginia indicate that the adventurers shrewdly capitalized
+on the desire of Englishmen in many different walks of life for title
+to the undeveloped lands of America. A newly stirring missionary
+impulse had its part to play, if only by giving to the name of Virginia
+more helpful associations. Argall had captured Pocahontas, the favored
+daughter of Powhatan, and with her as hostage the colonists had forced
+a peace with a heretofore implacable foe. More than that John Rolfe had
+married the Princess Pocahontas, as the English liked to call her, and
+Sir Thomas Dale as his last major service to the colony had brought her
+to England in 1616. In London, at court, and elsewhere, she and her
+entourage of Indian maidens had been a most effective advertisement of
+Virginia. Even after her own death in 1617, her maiden consorts had
+stayed on for many months before being finally returned to Virginia by
+way of Bermuda. Since 1613 the Virginia Company had leaned heavily on
+the missionary appeal in its efforts to encourage continued support of
+the colony, and it may well have been the company itself which prompted
+the bishops of the Church of England in the year of Pocahontas' death
+to sponsor a collection of funds for an Indian mission in Virginia. In
+any case, the approximately £1,500 raised for the purpose were turned
+over to the company, which in 1618 ordered Yeardley to set aside 10,000
+acres at Henrico for the support of an Indian college.
+
+The adventurers in 1618 also decreed certain legal and political
+reforms that were helpful in giving Virginia a better name than it had
+enjoyed for several years past. Disgruntled colonists returning from
+Jamestown had brought exaggerated stories of Dale's discipline, with
+the result that Virginia had gained the reputation almost of a penal
+colony. The company's renewed guarantee that the settlers would enjoy
+the full common law rights of Englishmen at home was coupled with
+provision for a general assembly of the colonists, a body which first
+met at Jamestown in 1619. In short, the company had the benefit in
+1618, as so frequently in the past, of leadership of the highest
+quality.
+
+Sir Thomas Smith was still the governor of the company in 1618, and
+without question his leadership must be considered to be a major factor
+shaping the new life then being infused into the colony. But a
+factional strife that would soon help to destroy the company already
+had made its appearance. The sources of this factionalism were varied,
+and some of them had little to do with the affairs of Virginia. Thus,
+at this time Sir Thomas found a determined enemy in the Rich family,
+headed by the wealthy Earl of Warwick and represented most ably by Sir
+Nathaniel Rich, who for many years was an active leader in the House of
+Commons. Warwick had a way of investing in voyages which bordered
+closely on piracy, and as a result of one such investment had become
+involved in a long and bitter conflict with Smith as the governor of
+the East India Company. Unquestionably of more fundamental importance
+was a growing opposition to Smith that was based upon discontent with
+the former management of the Virginia project. It seems almost as
+though the Virginia adventurers, before they could place full
+confidence in the new program for the colony's development, had to find
+some more satisfying explanation for the company's previous failures by
+charging gross mismanagement of its affairs. Such, at any rate, was the
+conviction to which many adventurers came, chiefly it would seem the
+lesser adventurers who were easily prejudiced against the great
+merchants of London, of whom Sir Thomas was the chief. In a company
+where the ultimate power to decide had been vested since 1612 in a
+general assembly of the adventurers voting by head rather than by
+share, the discontent of the lesser adventurers could become under the
+guidance of an effective leader a very potent force.
+
+The leader was found in Sir Edwin Sandys, one of the ablest
+parliamentarians of seventeenth century England. Sandys himself was not
+one of the lesser adventurers. He had been a member of the Virginia
+Council since 1607, and in 1611 he had responded to the company's
+appeal for a subscription of £37 10s. by subscribing double that
+amount, thereby matching the subscription of Sir Thomas Smith. With the
+aid of other prominent adventurers, including the Earl of Southampton,
+and by making common cause for the moment with the Rich faction, Sir
+Edwin won election to the governorship of the company in the spring of
+1619. In the absence of anything approaching a full record, it is
+impossible to say what justification there may have been for the
+charges of mismanagement that were brought against Smith's
+administration. It would not be surprising if over the long and
+frequently discouraging years of his leadership, and especially in the
+period since 1612, some irregularities, some carelessness had crept
+into the conduct of the company's business. A very noticeable result of
+Sandys' election was an effort to systematize the company's procedures
+by adoption of new standing orders and regulations, and to bring order
+out of an alleged confusion of the company's records, especially those
+pertaining to the rights of the adventurers to land in Virginia. But it
+is possible to speak with full assurance on only one point: no other of
+the adventurers had shown more courage or more devotion to the colony,
+no other of them deserves to be better remembered than Sir Thomas
+Smith.
+
+There can be no question, however, that the reviving interest in
+Virginia received an additional stimulant from the fact that the
+business now had a new management. At the close of 1618, and largely as
+the result of emigration during that year, the population of the colony
+stood at approximately 1,000 persons. During the year after Sandys'
+election, a total of 1,261 emigrants left England for Virginia, over
+800 of them at the company's charge. This substantial evidence of the
+company's determination to assume the lead encouraged additional
+associations of adventurers to take up patents for their own
+plantations, with the result that by the summer of 1622 the council
+could announce that over 3,500 people had migrated to Virginia since
+the spring of 1619. This was a remarkable record, testifying to the
+very great gifts Sir Edwin possessed as a leader and the confidence men
+placed in his leadership.
+
+The minutes of the company's courts have survived for the period after
+the election of Sandys, and so it is possible to get a clearer picture
+of the company's organization and procedures than can be had for any
+earlier date. Further help comes from the "Orders and Constitutions"
+drawn up after Sandys' election and published in 1620 as part of a
+pamphlet skilfully written to convey the impression that Virginia's
+affairs were then being managed much better than in the past. The
+company depended basically upon decisions reached in four great quarter
+courts, which were general assemblies of all the adventurers who wished
+to attend and which were scheduled for regular meeting on next to the
+last Wednesday of each of the quarterly terms in which the king's
+courts sat at Westminster. Only a quarter court could elect officers,
+either of the colony or of the company, enact laws and ordinances, or
+determine policies governing the distribution of lands in the colony
+and the conduct of its trade. On the Monday preceding each meeting of
+the quarter court, a preparatory court would settle the agenda for the
+following Wednesday, in order that the members might have warning of
+the business to be taken up at that time. Each fortnight, except in the
+"long vacations" between court terms, an ordinary court would meet,
+again on Wednesday, with a quorum that required the presence of at
+least five members of the council, the treasurer or his deputy, and
+"fifteene of the generality." The hour of meeting for all courts was 2
+P.M., and at no court could a question be put after 6 P.M. A decision
+reached by any lesser court, including the extraordinary court that
+might be called in case of special emergency, could be overridden by a
+quarter court. This was the governing body of the company, a popular
+assembly in which Sir Edwin often demonstrated his special talent as a
+parliamentary tactician. Attendance varied according to the importance
+of the business at hand, but as many as 150 might attend.
+
+The quarter court meeting in Easter term was a court of elections,
+where the members cast their votes for all principal officers by secret
+ballot. Except for members of the council, all offices of the company
+were held by annual election. The chief office was that of the
+treasurer, as the governor of the company was still officially
+designated. As frequently as not, in common usage he was known as the
+governor, but the charters had fixed the title of his office and in so
+doing had pointed up a primary responsibility of the office. The
+governor of the Virginia Company was in fact its treasurer. After 1619
+no man could hold the position for longer than three years, and no man
+was eligible for election to it if already he was serving as the
+governor of another company, except that he might also serve as the
+governor of the Somers Island Company. The election court might vote a
+reward for services rendered, but the treasurer, like other principal
+officers, served without fixed compensation.
+
+His chief assistant, and the second officer in rank, was the deputy. As
+the title suggests, he might be deputized to perform virtually any
+function of the governor, including that of presiding at courts in the
+governor's absence. But he also had important functions of his own. He
+is perhaps best described as the chief administrative officer of the
+company. He was specifically charged with superintendence over all
+lesser officers, and he had a primary responsibility for contracts and
+other business arrangements relating to the dispatch of shipping,
+provisions, and passengers to Virginia and to the receipt, storage, and
+marketing of cargoes returned from the colony. At all times, he acted,
+or was supposed to act, in accordance with instructions from the court,
+council, or treasurer, but all such instructions were necessarily
+general in character. Many were the opportunities to use his own
+judgment, or to confer a favor, as he handled business transactions
+involving hundreds or even thousands of pounds. For his assistance and
+perhaps to keep a watch on him, he had a committee of sixteen men
+chosen by the court under a provision requiring that a fourth of the
+number should be changed each year "to the end [that] many be trained
+up in the businesse." The committee may have been new, but the deputy's
+office was old. It had been occupied for many years before the spring
+election of 1619 by Alderman Johnson. Some of the more serious charges
+brought against Smith's administration related to the management of
+the magazine, as the stock of supplies periodically forwarded to the
+colony was generally described. Johnson had managed the successive
+magazines, each separately financed by its own joint-stock, until in
+1619 he was replaced by John Ferrar.
+
+The council, still described as His Majesty's Council for Virginia, had
+become a large and unwieldy body, with many of its members inactive.
+Its influence on the conduct of Virginia's affairs was now decidedly
+less important than in the earlier years. According to the Orders and
+Constitutions, no one "under the degree of a Lord or principall
+magistrate" was thereafter to be elected to the council except "such as
+by diligent attendance at the courts and service of Virginia for one
+year at least before, have approved their sufficiency and worth to the
+Companie." As this statement strongly suggests, a place on the council
+was for many members an honorary post through which one might lend the
+prestige of a great name to a worthy undertaking without assuming much
+real responsibility. Nevertheless, the legal powers of the council
+under the Virginia charters made its services indispensable, and made
+it desirable that at least a few of its members should be intimately
+acquainted with the business. The treasurer was supposed to consult
+with the council on important occasions, and especially on matters
+pertaining to the government of the colony. All formal instructions to
+officers in the colony had to be sent in the name of the council and
+over its seal. In any case of removal from office, in London or at
+Jamestown, the cause had to be considered in council before it could be
+taken before the adventurers. But any seven members made a quorum
+giving full power to actions taken in council, and the treasurer, who
+was always a member of the council, had the custody of its seal.
+
+Two of the seven auditors now required for annual review of
+disbursements and receipts had to be members of the council. The
+auditors' office had grown out of the disputes over the accounts of Sir
+Thomas Smith, and in addition to the annual auditing of the
+treasurer's report, which had to be submitted to the Easter court, they
+were charged with responsibility for a close review of all earlier
+records of the company. The primary purpose was to establish a full and
+exact list of all subscriptions, with notation especially of
+delinquencies. Salaried officers of the company were a secretary, a
+bookkeeper, a husband (or as we would say, an accountant), and a bedel
+or messenger. The secretary served all courts held by the adventurers,
+the council, and the auditors, or by standing and special committees,
+of which last the adventurers appointed quite a number. In addition,
+the secretary was custodian of the company's records.
+
+Although Sir Edwin Sandys continued to be the actual leader of the
+company until its dissolution in 1624, his tenure of the treasurer's
+office was limited to a single year. When the adventurers assembled for
+the annual elections in the spring of 1620, they were much disturbed to
+receive instruction from the king that Sir Edwin was not to be
+re-elected. Instead, the king suggested the choice of some merchant of
+means and wide experience--perhaps Sir Thomas Smith, Sir Thomas Roe,
+Alderman Robert Johnson, or Mr. Maurice Abbott.
+
+Whether Sandys could have been elected in the absence of this
+interference by the king, which the adventurers protested as an
+unwarranted invasion of their liberty, is itself an interesting and
+debatable question. By his many criticisms of the previous conduct of
+the company's affairs, Sandys had won the undying enmity of Sir Thomas
+Smith and his important friends. More than that, he had quarreled with
+his ally of the preceding year, the Earl of Warwick, who had
+connections hardly less impressive than those enjoyed by Sir Thomas.
+The quarrel with Warwick was over a question of piracy, as Sir Edwin
+chose to regard it. One of Warwick's ships, the _Treasurer_, had sailed
+from England in April 1618 with a license to capture pirates, which was
+one way of getting a ship cleared from English ports for depredations
+against the Spaniard at a time when the king had set his face against
+all such activity. The _Treasurer_ had called at Jamestown, where
+Governor Argall, who had rendered important services to the colony but
+who had special reason to understand that his position in Virginia
+depended upon the good will of important members of the company, helped
+to outfit the vessel for a raid on the West Indies. Recent studies, and
+especially those of David Quinn, a British scholar, argue strongly that
+the earlier ventures of Gilbert and Raleigh had been inspired very
+largely by the desire to establish some base on the North American
+coast that would be useful in attacks upon Spanish possessions and the
+trade routes which joined them to Spain. But it is evident enough that
+by this time the leaders of the Virginia Company were chiefly fearful
+that Spain might attack their colony before it was securely fortified,
+and before it had fulfilled the promise of rewards far greater than
+anything freebooting ventures could offer. As a result, Governor
+Yeardley, on instruction from London, denied the courtesies of
+Jamestown to the _Treasurer_ on its return in 1619, and won for Sandys
+thereby the bitter resentment of the Rich family.
+
+The king's interference in the election of 1620 has naturally become a
+celebrated incident in the history of Virginia. Sir Edwin was a leader
+in parliament, which before the century was out would establish its
+supremacy in the government of England, and the Virginia Company in
+1620 had only recently established the first representative assembly in
+North America. To historians who have sought the larger meaning of the
+American experiment, it has often seemed that the king must have been
+guided by a fear of representative government--in other words, that his
+motives were largely political. No doubt, he was more easily persuaded
+to enter an objection to Sandys' re-election because of Sir Edwin's
+opposition to royal policies in the house of commons, but there is no
+contemporary evidence to suggest that the king had even noticed the
+Assembly which met at Jamestown in 1619. Moreover, that Assembly had
+been authorized before Sandys' election, at a time when Sir Thomas
+Smith was still in the chair, and anyone who thinks the motion had been
+carried over Smith's opposition should take note that the same kind of
+representative assembly was established in 1620 for Bermuda, over whose
+fortunes Sir Thomas would continue to preside until 1621. Not until the
+middle of the seventeenth century, at the time of Cromwell, does it
+appear that anyone even suggested that the primary reason for the
+king's interference was fear of a significant development in the
+history of representative government.
+
+What actually happened in 1620 would seem to be clear enough. Sir
+Thomas Smith had connections that reached all the way into the king's
+bedchamber, and there he effectively argued that Sandys did not know
+his business. It was an argument that found not a little justification
+in the fact that the company had to admit by a broadside published in
+the very month of the election court that hundreds of the colonists
+sent to Virginia in the preceding year had died within a short time of
+their arrival there, and it may be that Sir Thomas apprehended the even
+greater disasters soon to overtake the colony. A more likely
+supposition, however, is that he seized upon this news from the colony
+as an opportunity to vent his resentment against Sandys, a resentment
+that must have become more bitter with each of Sir Edwin's promotional
+releases advertising the great improvements now to be found in the
+management of Virginia's affairs. The legal basis on which the king
+acted was probably debatable. No doubt, he depended upon the provision
+in the charter requiring that all members of the council, of which the
+treasurer was the head, be sworn to the king's service. But membership
+on the council was for life, and Sir Edwin had taken his oath as a
+member of the council as early as 1607. Perhaps the king took advantage
+of the company's regulations requiring an annual election and that the
+treasurer be sworn following his election. Whether this was a new
+requirement cannot be said. It can only be suggested that the king
+intended to say that if Sir Edwin were re-elected he would not give him
+a necessary oath of office. It may be, too, that he stood quite simply
+on the prerogative of his office to insist that his subjects in
+Virginia were entitled to royal protection. In any case, the
+adventurers chose not to defy the king's wish.
+
+Having protested his interference as unwarranted, the quarter court in
+May 1620 adjourned without electing a treasurer. Instead, the
+adventurers appointed a special committee to call on the king for the
+purpose of acquainting him with the true facts regarding "the managing
+of their business this last year" and to ask for a free election.
+Sandys himself appealed to the royal favorite, the young Duke of
+Buckingham, but with no effect on the king's decision. When the
+adventurers reassembled late in June, they elected the Earl of
+Southampton as treasurer. Thus, in a sense both parties to the dispute
+emerged victorious. Sandys was no longer treasurer, but the adventurers
+had refused to elect a merchant and Southampton would preside
+thereafter in behalf of Sandys. There can be no doubt that Sandys
+continued to be the leader of the company. Moreover, in 1621 he
+extended his power by gaining control of the Somers Island Company
+through the election of Southampton to its governorship.
+
+A question that naturally arises is that of how, or why, Sir Edwin was
+able to survive this challenge to his leadership. The news from
+Virginia was by no means encouraging. Given the long record of
+disappointment there, and the many men who previously had died there,
+the fact that several hundred of the most recent settlers had succumbed
+might have been expected to unsettle any administration. Perhaps it was
+the king's interference, serving as it did to rally the adventurers in
+defence of the company's liberty. Perhaps Sir Thomas was guilty of too
+naked a display of his power, with the result that the lesser
+adventurers, who already had been taught to view the great merchants of
+the company with suspicion, rallied to the support of Sandys. Perhaps
+it was because the Earl of Warwick and Sir Thomas had not learned yet
+the need for effective teamwork; both men disliked Sandys, but they had
+their own quarrels and they would not form a real coalition against him
+for another two years. All these possibilities must be given
+consideration, but there would seem to be still another reason,
+possibly the most important of all.
+
+Sir Edwin Sandys was a man of remarkable gifts, and nowhere are these
+gifts better demonstrated than in his ability to stimulate the highest
+hopes for Virginia. Before him only Richard Hakluyt, a patriot now dead
+four years, had managed better to depict the promise America held for
+Englishmen. Sandys wrote no major work on the subject, and even the
+company's promotional pamphlets, which he undoubtedly shaped in some
+large part, lacked the fire that Hakluyt, or even Alderman Johnson,
+could impart to that branch of literature. It must be said also that
+Sandys added no new idea to those which for a generation past had
+guided Englishmen in their American ventures. His program included not
+a single objective that the Virginia Company had not theretofore tried
+to realize; the chief contrast with former programs was the absence of
+any emphasis on the prospect that a route to the South Seas might be
+found, an objective the adventurers had dropped for all practical
+purposes a good many years before Sandys became their treasurer. But
+Sandys had confidence, a systematic and orderly mind, and a persuasive
+way of talking in the quarter court or in conference with the
+individual adventurer who contemplated some new risk of capital. As a
+result, he managed to convey the impression that plans had now been so
+well thought through that Hakluyt's objectives in America had at last
+become attainable.
+
+Leaving aside the search for a passage to China, which may never have
+been so important to Hakluyt as it was to the people whose interest in
+America he sought to enlist, Sandys undertook to carry through, all at
+once, the program Hakluyt had outlined for Queen Elizabeth as early as
+1584 in his famous "_Discourse on Western Planting_." It was a program
+that looked to the development in America of products that would free
+England of dependence upon trades with other parts of the world which
+were in any way disadvantageous to England, and that would guarantee to
+any Englishmen who developed such products a sure profit on their
+investment. It was a program that had taken its shape first from the
+prospect, in Raleigh's day, of an early war with Spain, and perhaps it
+should be noted that when Sandys came to office in 1619 the Thirty
+Years War had only recently had its beginning with the king's own
+son-in-law a central figure. The war has gone down in our history books
+as the last of the great religious wars, and many were the Englishmen
+who thought that England should be, or would be soon involved.
+
+In Virginia, Sandys promised to produce iron. It is strange that the
+attempt to develop an iron industry in Virginia, on which the company
+spent all told something like £5,000, should have made less impression
+on modern historians than has an early and brief search for gold that
+was incidental to other explorations. The iron industry in England was
+suffering from the depletion of the island's wood supply, which was
+still depended upon for smelting, and Virginia promised an unlimited
+supply. Other industries that he hoped to develop in the colony are
+suggested by a list of tradesmen the company invited to adventure to
+Virginia in 1620: among them, sawyers, joiners, shipwrights,
+millwrights, coopers, weavers, tanners, potters, fishermen,
+fishhookmakers, netmakers, leather dressers, limeburners, and dressers
+of hemp and flax. Even more important because so much depended upon
+persuading the individual adventurers to invest their own money in the
+development of their land, were plans for the production of sugar,
+wine, indigo, silk, cotton, olive oil, rice, etc. In the development of
+these products Sandys intended the public lands--those cultivated under
+the direct supervision of the company and by its own tenants--to serve
+more or less in the capacity of experimental farms. For their planting
+he sought seeds and plants from various parts of the world. On the
+college land he had some 10,000 grapevines set out, and sent for their
+care foreign experts imported from the continent. To make sure that
+private estates would not be devoted wholly to tobacco, as yet the
+colony's only proven staple, he wrote into land patents a stipulation
+that other staples would be given a trial.
+
+To find the money for investment in the public lands was no easy task.
+No common joint-stock fund could be raised in 1619, if only because the
+company's plans depended chiefly upon the hope of inducing the
+adventurers to invest in their own lands. It cannot be said how
+successful were the renewed attempts to collect from delinquent
+subscribers, but perhaps some help came from that source. Sandys
+depended also, as had Smith before him, on the Virginia lottery,
+perhaps more than upon any other source, for the lottery was terminated
+early in 1621 by order of the privy council on grounds that included
+the complaint of parliament that the lottery had become a public
+nuisance. A very substantial help to Sir Edwin was the bishops' fund
+for an Indian college and additional funds raised for the support of an
+Indian school in the colony. The total ran to better than £2,000. It
+had been decided in 1618, well before Sandys' election, that the money
+from the bishops' fund would be invested in an estate to be known as
+the College Land, and the precedent thus set was followed in disposing
+of funds subsequently made available to the company for an Indian
+school. In practical terms, these decisions meant that all mission
+funds were used to send out tenants on the promise that a half-share of
+the wine and other such commodities as they might produce would in time
+provide a permanent endowment for the school and the college. The
+decision reflects both the extraordinary poverty of the company and the
+extraordinary confidence with which its leaders approached their new
+ventures in Virginia.
+
+By the spring of 1621, when the bulk of the college funds had been
+expended and the lottery was terminated, Sir Edwin's financial
+resources had become even more skimpy and uncertain. Some projects,
+such as that for the settlement of Italian glass-workers who were to
+manufacture pottery and beads for use in the Indian trade, could be
+financed by subscriptions to a special joint-stock, but this device
+offered no help in meeting general expenses. As a result, Sandys
+continued to take certain shortcuts, or perhaps the blame should rest
+rather on Deputy John Ferrar. In any case, the colonists complained
+that shipping came out so overloaded with passengers as to invite the
+epidemic disease with which they usually suffered on landing, and which
+made of newcomers a useless burden on the colony for some time after
+their arrival. The deathrate among the colonists continued to be high.
+The time and energy required to house them, or to feed them,
+unavoidably forced delay with projects on which Sandys had pinned his
+chief hopes. He was especially disappointed over the slow progress of
+agricultural experimentation. Accordingly, when Yeardley's three year
+term was ended in 1621 and Sir Francis Wyatt was sent as his
+replacement, Sir Edwin also sent his brother, George Sandys, as
+appointee to a new office of treasurer. He was given special charge of
+all projects looking to the development of new staple commodities and
+was intrusted with the collection of rents, of which the company
+claimed £1,000 were presently due. These rents, which were to be
+collected largely from half-share tenants who had migrated within the
+preceding three years, undoubtedly now constituted the company's main
+hope for an immediate revenue. Except in a very few instances, no
+quitrents would be payable until 1625, and so general had been the
+disappointment experienced so far with special projects that further
+time would have to be allowed before any return from them could be
+expected. In short, the company had exhausted its very limited
+resources in getting Wyatt and George Sandys out to Virginia, and had
+nothing left but hopes for the future and the anticipation of a small
+immediate revenue from the rents of its own tenants, most of which had
+already been assigned to such special charges as the support of public
+officers in the colony. In London, virtually the only asset left to the
+company was the will and determination of Sir Edwin Sandys.
+
+In these circumstances, Sandys necessarily devoted his main energies
+after 1621 to the problem of tobacco, the only marketable staple the
+colony had as yet produced. It was an old problem, but one now filled
+with new difficulties. In earlier days, when it had been hoped that
+tobacco might be one of a variety of staples produced in the colony,
+the Virginia Company, like the Bermuda Company, had lent encouragement
+to efforts looking to its production. But hardly had early experiments
+proved successful before the adventurers faced the risk that tobacco
+would take over the colony entirely. There is nothing surprising in
+this development, for a tobacco plant, unlike a grapevine or an olive
+tree, matures within a few months of its planting, and the tobacco
+habit at this time was a thing of comparably rapid growth in many parts
+of the world. To settlers who had been staked by adventurers ever
+insistent upon a prompt return of their capital, or who wondered how
+best to procure the means to make payment for the supplies brought in
+the next magazine ship, the obvious answer was to plant the land to
+tobacco. After doing this, if time and energy remained, they might try
+some of Sir Edwin Sandys' ideas--maybe set out a few grapevines or
+mulberries, as they had been instructed to do. There was good reason
+for the growing fear among the leading adventurers in London that
+tobacco might put a blight on all other projects.
+
+More than that, the increasing shipments of tobacco, especially in view
+of the still relatively poor quality of the Virginia leaf, gave the
+colony a bad name just when its good name was so important to the
+promotional efforts of the company. The tobacco habit did not yet have
+the respectable associations it would later acquire in the eighteenth
+century. Instead, it was associated with tippling or bawdy houses,
+where in truth a pipe was most easily had by the contemporary resident
+of London. Moral considerations were reinforced by an additional
+concern for the public interest. So much of the weed consumed came from
+Spain that thoughtful men were inclined to consider how much England
+paid out, to the profit of the Spaniard, for a commodity which added
+nothing to the well being of the country. Had it not been for the
+influence of Virginia and Bermuda adventurers in the House of Commons,
+Parliament in 1621 might well have prohibited all importation of
+tobacco into England. And in all England there was no more vigorous
+opponent of tobacco than the king himself. Indeed, the king had even
+written a book on the subject.
+
+The attitude of King James had a most important bearing on another
+angle of the problem. Under its charter, the company had been allowed a
+seven year exemption from import duties on cargoes brought from
+Virginia. When this exemption expired in 1619, the government
+immediately imposed a duty that was fixed early in 1620 at 1s. per
+pound of tobacco. Though this was only half the duty paid by Spanish
+tobacco, it was nonetheless a heavy burden to be imposed upon leaf that
+was declared never to have sold at more than 5s. a pound and that
+brought an average of only 2s. for the better grade in 1620.[A] The
+adventurers' attempted escape by shipping their tobacco to Holland won
+them a sharp reprimand from the privy council, and an order to bring
+all of Virginia's tobacco to England for payment of his majesty's
+customs. As negotiations with the king's ministers for some relief
+continued, it was proposed in 1622 that the Virginia and Bermuda
+adventurers might take over the tobacco monopoly, which was a grant of
+the sole right to import tobacco of any sort into the kingdom in return
+for a fixed contribution to the royal revenues. The holder of such a
+monopoly--a very common device at the time--was entitled to collect the
+customs and to hope that what he collected, plus the advantage of a
+monopolistic control of the market, might enable him to clear a profit
+on the transaction. Here, in other words, was a proposal that might
+provide the needed relief, even some income for the company's hard
+pressed treasury. The Virginia Company by 1622 was in no position to
+ignore such an opportunity and fortunately, the Sandys faction was now
+in control of the Somers Island Company. A joint committee of the two
+companies, headed by Sir Edwin himself, entered into negotiations for
+what was known as the tobacco contract.
+
+The bitterest factional strife in the history of the London adventurers
+soon followed. It is a complicated story, too complicated and too long
+to be told fully here. Briefly, both the terms agreed upon by Sandys
+and his proposals for the management of the contract, proposals which
+left Sandys and his cohorts in full control, touched too closely the
+vital interests of some of his bitterest enemies. In Bermuda, as in
+Virginia, the hope of an early profit from the production of sugar,
+silk, wine, indigo, and other such commodities had proved vain, and
+like Virginia, Bermuda lived by the tobacco it grew. The Earl of
+Warwick and members of his family had made especially heavy investments
+in their Bermuda properties, and Sir Nathaniel Rich became the floor
+leader, as it were, of an attempt to defeat the contract. Sir Thomas
+Smith and his friends joined in the effort. Especially objectionable in
+the view of the opposition were plans for placing the management of the
+contract in the hands of salaried officials, with Sir Edwin as director
+at a salary of £500. At one Virginia court, meeting early in December,
+the debate got so out of hand that it required several additional
+sessions to straighten out the minutes in order that appropriate
+penalties might be imposed upon Mr. Samuel Wrote, a member of the
+Virginia council whose unrestrained charges of graft violated the
+company's rules and offended the court's sense of its own dignity. In
+the end the opposition elected to make the final test in a Bermuda
+court, whose consent was necessary to close the contract and where
+Sandys' opponents included the more substantial investors in that
+colony. The test came in February 1623, and Sandys won. But it could be
+demonstrated that had the vote been by share rather than by head, as
+was the rule in both companies, he would have been defeated. Sandys'
+opponents in the Bermuda Company all along had complained of a plan to
+distribute the charges of the contract equally between the two
+companies, arguing that the Virginia tobacco had a greater value and
+should therefore carry a proportionately larger charge. And now they
+were in a position to argue that the Virginia Company, in whose courts
+for some time they had steadfastly refused even to vote on the salary
+question, sought to exploit the younger plantation, as was evidenced by
+the opposition of the adventurers to whom Bermuda's tobacco chiefly
+belonged. With this argument, Sandys' opponents promptly carried the
+whole question before the privy council.
+
+This was in the spring of 1623. During the course of the preceding
+debate, news had come of an Indian massacre in Virginia that had cost
+the lives of over 350 colonists. The faction-ridden and bankrupt
+company had stirred itself to send such aid as it could, but now came
+the word that this had not been enough. By the testimony of Sandys' own
+brother, though this testimony may not have been immediately available
+to his enemies, another 500 colonists had died before the year was out
+as a result of the dislocations occasioned by the massacre, and as a
+result of the failure of the company to send enough aid. The tobacco
+contract dropped into a position of secondary importance as Sandys'
+opponents, with Alderman Johnson taking the lead, petitioned the king
+for a full investigation of the situation in Virginia and of the recent
+conduct of its affairs.
+
+Whatever one may think of Sir Edwin Sandys, or of the motives which
+inspired his opponents, there can be no question as to the correctness
+of the action taken by the government. The leaders of the two factions
+were called before the privy council on April 17, where they displayed
+so "much heat and bitterness" toward one another as to make it
+difficult to get on with the business. In the end, the council won
+agreement that a special commission should be established for an
+investigation of the state of the colony's affairs, the agreement
+coming finally when the council conceded the demand of Sandys'
+supporters that the investigation should begin with the administration
+of Sir Thomas Smith. Accordingly, on May 9, a commission was issued to
+Sir William Jones, justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and six other
+gentlemen "to examine the carriage of the whole business." Meantime, a
+letter had been prepared by the privy council to acquaint the colonists
+with the fact that their affairs had been taken into "His Majesty's
+pious and princely care" and to encourage them "to go on cheerfully in
+the work they have in hand." The central issues all pertained to
+Virginia, but in the circumstances there was no choice but to include
+both companies in the province of the Jones commission.
+
+The appointment of the Jones commission ended, for all practical
+purposes, the control of the Virginia Company over the colony. The
+company lingered on as an agency chiefly through which the Sandys
+faction prepared its briefs for the attention of the commissioners, or
+through which orders from the commissioners might be implemented. All
+of the company's records were impounded by the commission, which also
+took charge of all correspondence with the colony. The records of the
+company demonstrated all too clearly the bankrupt state of its
+finances. The hearings before the commissioners demonstrated with equal
+clarity the hopeless division of the adventurers by bitter factional
+strife. Correspondence from the colony brought evidence of a desperate
+situation. Even Sandys had to admit that no more than 2,500 colonists
+were still alive in the colony, which was to confess an attrition,
+mainly by death, of something over 40 percent of the colonists residing
+in Virginia, or sent to Virginia, since he had assumed responsibility
+for the management of its affairs. Actually, the situation was much
+worse than these figures suggested, for a census taken in Virginia
+early in 1625 showed a total population of only 1,275. In the fall of
+1623 the privy council invited the company to surrender its charter on
+the promise that a new one would be issued to cover all individual
+rights and grants, but with a revision of the plan of government that
+would place the control of the colony under the more immediate
+supervision of the king. In effect, the proposal was to return to
+something close to the original plan of 1606. When the adventurers, in
+a court from which Sandys' enemies largely absented themselves,
+rejected this proposal, the government began quo warranto proceedings
+against the company in the court of Kings Bench. On May 24, 1624, that
+court gave its decision for recall of the Virginia charters. And so
+ended the Virginia Company.
+
+The Bermuda Company had been dragged into the investigation chiefly
+because of the close ties joining it to the older company. There was no
+emergency in the colony, and its debts were not beyond the capacity of
+Sir Thomas Smith and other leading adventurers to pay. As a result, the
+Somers Island Company lasted on for another sixty years.
+
+One who looks back from 1624 over the brief and frequently troubled
+history of the Virginia Company may debate, as historians have often
+done in the past, just what should be said by way of conclusion.
+Perhaps it is this: here were men who out of their disappointment
+quarreled bitterly and by their quarrels helped to destroy an agency
+through which in the past they had worked together, with a remarkable
+devotion to the public interest, for the achievement of great
+objectives. No doubt, their greatest fault had been to set their goals
+too high. Certainly, their greatest virtue was persistence in the faith
+that great things could be done for England in America, a faith
+destined in time to be justified by the course of history.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: For purposes of comparison, it may be noted that Spanish
+tobacco was declared to have been sold for as much as 20s. a pound. The
+"filthy weed" was not yet "the poor man's luxury."]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London,
+1606-1624, by Wesley Frank Craven
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624, by
+Wesley Frank Craven
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624
+
+Author: Wesley Frank Craven
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2009 [EBook #28555]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VIRGINIA COMPANY OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Diane Monico, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>
+THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF<br />
+LONDON, 1606-1624<br />
+</h1>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+
+<p class="title">
+COPYRIGHT©, 1957 BY<br />
+VIRGINIA 350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION<br />
+CORPORATION, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA<br />
+<br />
+<small>Second Printing, 1959</small>
+<br />
+<small>Third Printing, 1964</small>
+</p>
+
+<p class="center"><small>[Transcriber's Note: Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
+that the U. S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</small><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+<p class="title">
+Jamestown 350th Anniversary<br />
+Historical Booklet Number 5<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF<br />
+LONDON, 1606-1624</h2>
+
+
+<p>This is the story of the Virginia Company and only indirectly
+of the Virginia colony. Those who seek an account of the early
+years at Jamestown should turn to another number in this same
+series. Here the focus belongs to the adventurers in England
+whose hopes gave shape to the settlement at Jamestown, and
+whose determination brought the colony through the many disappointments
+of its first years. In terms of time, the story is short,
+for it begins with the granting of the first Virginia charter in
+1606 and ends with the dissolution of the company in 1624.
+It thus covers a period of only eighteen years, but during these
+years England's interest in North America was so largely expressed
+through the agency of the Virginia Company that its
+story constitutes one of the more significant chapters in the history
+both of the United States and of the British Empire.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning there were two companies of the Virginia
+adventurers, the one having its headquarters in London and the
+other in the western outport of Plymouth. Englishmen at that
+time used the name Virginia to designate the full sweep of the
+North American coast that lay above Spanish Florida. In the
+original Virginia charter the adventurers were granted rights of
+exploration, trade, and settlement on the "Coast of Virginia or
+America" within limits that reached from 34° of latitude in the
+south to 45° in the north, which is to say from the mouth of
+the Cape Fear River in lower North Carolina to a point midway
+through the modern state of Maine. The Plymouth grantees
+had a primary interest in the northern area that Captain John
+Smith would later name New England, and there they established
+a colony at Sagadahoc in August 1607, only a few weeks
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>after the settlement of Jamestown. But the colony barely survived
+the winter, and was abandoned in the spring of 1608.
+Thereafter, the Plymouth adventurers gave up. In contrast, the
+London adventurers persisted, and their persistence served to tie
+the name of Virginia increasingly to them and to their more southerly
+settlement. As a result, the London adventurers became in
+common usage the Virginia adventurers, their company the Virginia
+Company, and their colony Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>The Virginia colony was especially fortunate in having the
+backing of London. Indeed, it may not be too much to suggest
+that the chief difference between the stories of Roanoke Island
+and of Jamestown was the difference that London made. Consistently,
+the leadership of Elizabethan adventures to North America,
+including those of Gilbert and Raleigh, had come from the western
+counties and outports of England, and with equal consistency
+hopeful projects had foundered on the inadequacy of their financial
+support while London favored other ventures&mdash;to Muscovy,
+to the Levant, and more recently to the East Indies. It was not
+merely that London had the necessary capital and credit for a
+sustained effort; it also had experience in the management of
+large and distant ventures, such as those of the East India Company
+over which Sir Thomas Smith presided, as he would preside
+through many years over the Virginia Company. London
+had too the advantage of its proximity to the seat of government
+in nearby Westminster, where King James had his residence,
+where the highest courts of the realm sat periodically, and where
+England's parliament customarily met. Already, in 1606, it was
+possible to trace in the immediate environs of the ancient City
+of London, itself still medieval in appearance and in the organization
+of much of its life, the broad outlines of the great metropolis
+that has been increasingly the focal point of England's development
+as a modern state.</p>
+
+<p>In thus emphasizing the importance of London to the early
+history of Virginia, one runs the risk of misrepresenting the true
+character of the Virginia adventure. Contrary to the impression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+that will be gained from many of our modern textbooks, the Virginia
+Company represented much more than the commercial interests
+of the port of London. Its membership included many
+gentlemen and noblemen of consequence in the kingdom. Some
+of them, no doubt, became subscribers to a Virginia joint-stock
+for the same reason that often led members of the landed classes
+in England into commercial ventures. But others, quite evidently,
+subscribed because of a sense of public responsibility, or simply
+because skilfully managed propaganda had put pressure on them
+to accept a responsibility of social or political position. For the
+Virginia adventure was a public undertaking, its aim to advance
+the fortunes of England no less than the fortunes of the adventurers
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>It would be helpful if we knew more about the original Virginia
+adventurers than we do. The records are so incomplete as to make
+impossible anything approaching a full list of the first subscribers.
+However, enough is known to suggest the broad range of experience
+and interest belonging to those who now joined in a common
+effort to build an empire for England in America. The original
+charter of 1606 lists only eight of the adventurers by name,
+they being the ones in whose names the petition for the charter
+had been made. This list omits Sir John Popham, Lord Chief
+Justice of the Kings Bench, who may well have been the prime
+mover in the enterprise, and Sir Thomas Smith, who was an active
+leader from an early date. Four of the eight men listed are
+identified as belonging to the London group. Sir Thomas Gates
+was a soldier and veteran of campaigns in the Netherlands who
+would later serve as the colony's governor. Sir George Somers had
+led many attacks against Spanish possessions in Queen Elizabeth's
+day, was a member of parliament, and would meet his death four
+years later in Bermuda while on a mission of rescue for Virginia.
+Edward Maria Wingfield was another soldier who had fought
+in the Netherlands. He belonged to a family which had acquired
+extensive estates in Ireland, and he too would go to Virginia,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+where he served as first president of the colony's council. The
+most interesting of the four was Richard Hakluyt, a clergyman
+whose chief mission in life had been the encouragement of overseas
+adventures by his fellow countrymen. To them he had literally
+given a national tradition of adventure by compiling and editing
+one of the more influential books in England's history&mdash;<i>The
+Principall Navigations, Voyages, and Discoveries of the English
+Nation</i>, whose reading, in Michael Drayton's words, inflamed
+"Men to seeke fame." Hakluyt had been advisor to both Gilbert
+and Raleigh in their ventures, and since then he had consistently
+promoted the idea that England might best find in North America
+the opportunities that were needed for her prosperity and her
+security.</p>
+
+<p>A significant indication of the extent to which the public interest
+was considered to be involved in the Virginia project is
+found in the provision that was first made for the government
+of the two colonies. The powers of government, which is to say
+the ultimate right to decide and to direct, were vested in a royal
+council, commonly known as the Virginia Council and having
+its seat in London. Its membership was probably drawn exclusively
+from the two groups of Virginia adventurers, but the members
+were appointed by the king and were sworn to his special service.
+Among the first members were Sir Thomas Smith, chief of the
+London merchants; Sir William Wade, lieutenant of the London
+Tower; Sir Walter Cope, member of parliament for Westminster
+and adventurer in a variety of overseas enterprises; Sir Henry
+Montague, recorder of the City of London; Solicitor General
+John Doderidge, subsequently justice of the Kings Bench; Sir
+Ferdinando Gorges, who later would lead a reviving interest in
+the settlement of New England and still later would become an
+enemy of the Puritans who so largely accomplished that task;
+Sir Francis Popham, son and heir to the Lord Chief Justice; and
+John Eldred of London, Thomas James of Bristol, and James
+Bagge of Plymouth, each of these three being described as a merchant.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+This assignment of the powers of government proved to
+be awkward, and it denied the adventurers direct control over
+the more important questions affecting their adventures, as in
+the choice of a plan of government for the colony or in the appointment
+of its key officers. Consequently, the adventurers secured
+a change in the second Virginia charter, granted in 1609.
+It was then specified that members of the council thereafter
+should be "nominated, chosen, continued, displaced, changed,
+altered and supplied, as death, or other several occasions shall
+require, out of the Company of the said Adventurers, by the
+voice of the greater part of the said Company and Adventurers,
+in their Assembly for that purpose." In language less repetitious
+than that used by the company's lawyer, this meant that the
+council now became an agent primarily of the adventurers. Even
+so, the king retained a veto over any choice they might make, for
+members of the council were still required to take a special oath
+administered by one of the high officers of state, and refusal to
+give the oath could mean disqualification for the office. The
+company's later history would show, whatever its legal advisor
+may have assumed in 1609, that this requirement was no mere
+formality.</p>
+
+<p>It is not easy for the modern American to read with full assurance
+the scanty record of Virginia's first years. How, for example,
+should he interpret the suggestion at the beginning of the
+first charter that the adventurers sought chiefly to propagate the
+"Christian Religion to such people, as yet live in darkness and
+miserable ignorance of the true knowledge and worship of God?"
+It is simple enough to point out that the first adventurers in
+Jamestown showed very little of the missionary's spirit, that they
+included only one minister, and that he had enough to do in
+ministering to the English settlers. It is also easy to draw an obvious
+contrast between the dedicated missionaries who so frequently
+formed the vanguard of Spanish and French settlement
+in America and the adventurous and often unruly men who first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+settled Virginia. In the absence of immediate and continuing
+missionary endeavors, one is naturally inclined to dismiss professions
+of a purpose to convert the Indian as nothing more than
+a necessary gesture toward convention in an age that was still
+much closer to the medieval period than to our own. And yet,
+on second thought, one begins to wonder just how sophisticated
+such a conclusion may be. He remembers how deep was the rift
+between Protestantism and Catholicism at that time, how fundamental
+to the patriotism of an Englishman was his long defense
+of a Protestant church settlement against the threat of Catholic
+Spain, and how largely the issues of religious life still claimed
+the first thoughts of men. He then may feel inclined to observe
+that the English adventurers, after all, did undertake to establish
+a mission in Virginia at a relatively early date. True, ten years
+elapsed before the effort to provide a school and college for the
+Indians had its beginning, but these were years of a continuing
+struggle for the very life of the colony itself. In the circumstances,
+perhaps ten years should be viewed as a short time.</p>
+
+<p>Be that as it may, there are other questions that have been even
+more bothersome, if only because they have seemed more pertinent
+to the modern interest in Virginia's history. The American
+has been accustomed to view the Virginia colony as the first permanent
+settlement in his country, as the point at which his own
+history has its beginning, but he finds in the Jamestown colony
+a pattern of activity somewhat different from that he associates
+with the later development of the country. What kind of a colony
+was it? Was it really a colony? Just what were the adventurers
+trying to accomplish in Virginia? Were they actually interested
+in colonization, in the proper sense of the term, or were their objectives
+commercial? These and other such questions have claimed
+much of the attention of those who have sought to interpret for
+their fellow countrymen the early history of Virginia. The difficulty
+arises partly from the American's insistence that the later
+history of his country be taken as the standard for judging every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+action of the first adventurers, and partly from a failure to appreciate
+the extent to which the earlier ventures in Virginia were
+necessarily exploratory in character.</p>
+
+<p>If one of us could ask the adventurers in 1606 what it was they
+hoped to accomplish in America, he probably would be told that
+it depended very much on what they might find there. Although
+Richard Hakluyt had been most industrious in collecting available
+information from the earlier explorations of North America,
+including those by Spanish and French explorers, the specific
+information at hand was quite definitely limited. By the close
+of the sixteenth century European explorers had charted the
+broad outlines of the North American coast, and here and there
+they had filled in much of the detail, as had the French in Canada,
+the Spaniard and the Frenchman on the coast of Florida,
+and the Englishman along the coastal regions to be later known
+as Carolina and New England. But the information at the command
+of the adventurers in one country was not always available
+to those of another; indeed, within any one country there were
+shipmasters who carried in their heads working charts of coastal
+waters wholly unknown to the geographers and cartographers
+who sought to serve the larger interests of the nation. Thus the
+London adventurers in 1606, though having at hand a substantial
+body of useful information regarding the coasts, the winds,
+and the currents running northward from the West Indies past
+St. Augustine to Cape Hatteras, and comparable information
+regarding the more northern waters explored by Frobisher, Davis,
+Gilbert, and others, had only a sketchy knowledge of the intervening
+coastline that would soon be explored by Captain Samuel
+Argall on commission from the Virginia Company and by Henry
+Hudson, an Englishman temporarily in the service of Dutch
+merchants. Even Chesapeake Bay, to which the London adventurers
+dispatched their first expedition, was known to them chiefly
+by the reports of Indians interrogated by Raleigh's agents as
+they worked out from Roanoke Island. The first colonists in Virginia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+gave to London detailed information regarding the lower
+Chesapeake and the James River, but not until 1608 did Captain
+John Smith find the time to explore the upper reaches of the bay
+and to identify the great rivers emptying into it there. It hardly
+seems necessary to argue the utility of such explorations, to which
+eloquent testimony exists in the new bounds immediately fixed
+for the colony in the second charter. But many have been the
+attempts to pass judgment on the success or failure of the first
+settlers at Jamestown that have been written as though their
+primary assignment had not been to explore.</p>
+
+<p>Exploration and fortification&mdash;these two terms are consistently
+linked in the papers on which the early English adventurers jotted
+notes for their guidance or for the instruction of their agents in
+America. The very first objective of the explorers was to locate a
+suitable site for fortification, in order that further explorations
+might be conducted from a secure base. The fortifications to be
+raised had to meet exacting standards, such as would be approved
+by the military engineers with whom the adventurers consulted
+along with the geographers, the cartographers, and the shipmasters
+who also possessed useful information. For these fortifications
+were intended to provide security not so much against the
+native Indian as against the ships and soldiers of Spain. Over
+the years there had been some debate as to how the fort might
+be best located, with the result that in 1607 it was decided to
+locate it some distance up a river that would afford navigation
+for an ocean-going vessel but would force the enemy to fight his
+way inland against the disadvantage of the warning that could
+be given by an outer guard at the mouth of the river. Such were
+the considerations that shaped the choice of Jamestown as the
+site of the first permanent English settlement in North America.
+To stand in the middle of the Jamestown peninsula for contemplation
+of its many disadvantages for the purposes of agricultural
+settlement, and even for the health of its people, is to lose sight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+of the main point. One should walk over against the river, and
+consider there the field of fire that was open for well placed guns.</p>
+
+<p>And just what was the Jamestown fort supposed to guard?
+Was it the few acres of the modern county of James City, or the
+right of Englishmen to possess the Virginia peninsula, where so
+much of importance to our national history has found its place?
+Not at all. It was the right of Englishmen to be in North America,
+to fish the waters that lay off its coast, to trade with its inhabitants,
+and to exploit such other opportunities as an unexplored and
+undeveloped continent might offer. How far these opportunities
+might lead no one could tell in advance&mdash;perhaps even to China.</p>
+
+<p>A trade with China had been a major objective of English adventure
+since the middle of the sixteenth century, when the Muscovy
+Company had had its origins in an attempt to find a northeast
+passage around the Scandinavian peninsula leading to Cathay&mdash;Marco
+Polo's fabulous kingdom of northern China. The
+explorers found instead a profitable trade with the territories
+of Ivan the Terrible, but the Muscovy merchants continued to
+support a variety of ventures seeking the establishment of an
+Oriental trade. Their agents looked into the possibilities of an
+overland trade through Russia to Cathay, and experimented none
+too profitably with a trans-Russia trade with Persia. They gave
+their support to renewed attempts to find a northeast passage
+and claimed a right of license for the numerous efforts that were
+made in Elizabeth's reign to find a northwest passage around or
+through North America. Failing in these efforts, the English
+merchants finally had challenged Portugal's monopoly of trade
+with the East Indies by way of the Cape of Good Hope. The
+East India Company, chartered by Elizabeth in 1600, had gotten
+off to a good start, and was destined to become one of the great
+empire builders of Britain's history. In 1606, however, the East
+India merchants had had just enough experience with the new
+trade to begin to appreciate some of its difficulties, as in the need<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+to employ larger and more expensive ships than were standard
+in England's maritime trade and the great distance to China by
+way of the Cape of Good Hope. Perhaps, after all, some route
+through America might have the advantage over the Cape route.
+In the opinion of the late Sir William Foster, through many years
+historiographer of the India Office, this was a chief reason for
+the interest Sir Thomas Smith took in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>Let it be noted that Sir Thomas' interest in Virginia outlasted
+the hope that a successful search for a passage to China might
+be based on Jamestown. Nevertheless, the point may help to
+explain the marked emphasis on this hope that one finds at the
+beginning of the project. Instructions to the first expedition directed
+the choice of a seat on some navigable river, and added,
+"if you happen to discover divers portable rivers, and mongst
+them any one that hath two main branches, if the difference be
+not great make choice of that which bendeth most toward the
+North-West, for that way you shall soonest find the other sea."
+The other sea, of course, was the Pacific, or as Englishmen were
+likely to say, the South Seas, whose waters also washed the shores
+of China. Vain as was this hope of trade with the Orient through
+America, it was destined for survival, in one form or another,
+through many years. As late as the middle of the nineteenth
+century, it would be a principal argument for the construction of
+a trans-continental railway.</p>
+
+<p>In 1606 the supposition was that the river system of North
+America might be like that of Russia, where easy portages joining
+rivers flowing in different directions made it possible to travel,
+most of the way by boat, from the north to the south of the country
+and return. "You must observe," advised the adventurers,
+"whether the river on which you plant doth spring out of mountains
+or out of lakes; if it be out of any lake, the passage to the
+other sea will be the more easy, and [it] is like enough that out
+of the same lake you shall find some spring which runs the contrary
+way toward the East India Sea; for the great and famous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+rivers of Volga, Tanis and Dwina have three heads near joynd,
+and yet the one falleth into the Caspian Sea, the other into the
+Euxine Sea, and the third into the Polonian Sea." For this information,
+the Virginia adventurers were indebted to the Muscovy
+Company, with which Captain Christopher Newport, who
+commanded the ships dispatched to Virginia, had formerly served.
+It was a good enough working theory, based partly on knowledge
+of the geography of Russia and partly on interrogation of the
+Indians in Carolina by Raleigh's men. And the rivers of that part
+of North America which lies east of the Mississippi form just
+such a system as the Virginia adventurers envisaged, except for
+the fact that the Ohio and other westward flowing streams do
+not empty into the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>The modern American has usually looked upon such a venture
+as this as something distinctly apart from an agricultural
+type of endeavor, but there is good reason for believing that the
+London adventurers took a different view. They understood the
+dependence of agriculture upon an opportunity to market its
+products, and they considered the success of their commercial
+ventures to be the surest and the quickest way of providing easy
+access to a market. If a new and practicable route to China could
+be found in America, any colony located close at hand to the
+portage along which the goods of the Orient were moved for
+transshipment to England would find a ready market for food
+and other provisions by supplying the ships engaged in a highly
+profitable trade. More than that, the plenty and the regularity
+of this shipping would provide easy freightage for the encouragement
+of a variety of agricultural and horticultural experiments
+looking to the production of such commodities as sugar, ginger,
+wine, or vegetable dyes and oils. The adventurers well understood
+the advantage to be gained by duplicating the success
+previously won by the Portuguese and Spaniards with such experiments
+in the Azores, in Madeira, in the Canaries, and more
+recently in the West Indies.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To put the point briefly, Virginia was founded upon many different
+hopes for profitable undertakings&mdash;some of them commercial,
+some agricultural, and some industrial. The records show
+an early interest in several extractive industries, including mining,
+not just for gold but for copper and iron as well. First instructions
+for trade with the native Indians reveal an immediate concern
+for the establishment of good relations with them and for laying
+in a good stock of Indian corn as a food reserve, but they show
+too a concern for the policies that would shape the development
+of a wider trade. Provision in the charter, and in the instructions
+of the royal council, for the creation of individual estates according
+to the laws and customs of England, not to mention the
+guarantee of full legal rights for the inhabitants of the colony
+and for their children, leave no more room for speculation as to
+the intended permanence of the settlement than there is doubt
+as to the expected diversity of its economic activity. But for the
+time being, first things must take first place. Until it had been
+demonstrated that Virginia could provide profitable freightage
+for the ships of England, her future rested upon an insecure
+foundation. Hence, the initial emphasis on the type of activity
+which promised the more immediate or the greater return.</p>
+
+<p>Newport's fleet of the <i>Susan Constant</i>, the <i>Godspeed</i>, and the
+<i>Discovery</i> sailed for Virginia in December 1606. While the adventurers
+waited for his return and report on the first discoveries,
+the Spanish ambassador excitedly reported to Spain that the
+English intended to send two vessels to Virginia each month
+until "they have 2,000 men in that country." Actually the plan
+seems to have been quite different. Lord Chancellor Egerton is
+reported to have declared in 1609: "We ... thought at first
+we would send people there little by little." Whatever the plan,
+this was the practice. Newport's total complement in the first
+fleet was 160 men of whom 104 remained in the colony. He
+was back at Plymouth by late July 1607, and from Plymouth he
+came on to London in August. For cargo he carried clapboard,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+and his sailors had picked up so much sassafras root that the
+leaders of the colony feared that the market for this established
+staple of the American trade might be ruined. He brought with
+him also ore which he hoped an assay would prove to be gold,
+and he declared the country to be rich in copper. With some
+exaggeration, he announced explorations "into the country near
+two hundred miles" and the discovery of "a river navigable for
+great shippes one hundred and fifty miles." The adventurers
+responded by sending him out again, in October 1607, with 120
+prospective settlers and what would be greeted in Jamestown as
+the first supply.</p>
+
+<p>All told, Captain Newport would make five round trips between
+England and Virginia before ending a career that included
+service of the Muscovy Company by dying on the island of Java
+as an agent of the East India Company. He has found no important
+place in the American tradition, partly because Captain
+John Smith, the Virginia colony's first historian, took care to see
+that Captain Newport did not have a hero's role. But those of
+us who would understand the context in which our history first
+developed will do well to consider the career of Christopher
+Newport.</p>
+
+<p>In carrying out the second supply, which reached Jamestown
+in September 1608, Newport had aboard 70 new colonists, including
+two women and eight Polish and German experts in
+the manufacture of glass, tar, pitch, and soap ashes. He had a
+broad commission for completing the exploration of the James
+River above the falls that much later would fix the site of Richmond,
+and for determining the fate of Raleigh's lost colony. He
+found no answer to that riddle, which remains to our own day
+an intriguing mystery; indeed, he seems not to have found the
+time for any real investigation of the problem. As a result, he
+brought back only rumors of four survivors living on the Chowan
+River. The instruction gains its chief interest from the suggestion
+it conveys of a renewed interest on the part of the adventurers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+in the area previously explored by Raleigh's men. Perhaps the
+adventurers anticipated the further disappointments resulting
+from the additional exploration of the James, and so thought
+again of the Roanoke River, which Captain Ralph Lane had
+partly explored in 1585 and 1586 with the hope that it might
+lead to China. Perhaps they had an eye mainly for the publicity
+that could be had for any news of Raleigh's colonists. Whatever
+the fact, a renewed interest in the Carolina region would find
+very concrete expression in a new charter the adventurers secured
+shortly after Newport's return to England in January 1609.</p>
+
+<p>The actual bounds of the Jamestown colony under the first
+Virginia charter ran 100 miles along the coast and 100 miles
+inland from the coast. This, at any rate, was the area to which
+title was promised by the charter. The second charter gave title
+to an area reaching 200 miles both northward and southward
+along the coast from Point Comfort, at the mouth of the James,
+and "up into the Land throughout from Sea to Sea, West and
+Northwest." In these greatly enlarged bounds one immediately
+detects three major interests: (1) a desire to control the entire
+extent of any passage that might be found to the South Seas, (2)
+the hope that something might be accomplished in Carolina, and
+(3) the need for a title to the whole of the Chesapeake, whose
+exploration had been completed by Captain John Smith in the
+preceding summer. In this exploration Captain Smith had pointed
+the way for the colony's later expansion, but at the moment the
+adventurers seem to have viewed the Chesapeake as having
+value chiefly for its fish and trade and for further exploration.
+Dissatisfied with Jamestown, as a place that was both unhealthy
+and exposed to attack from the sea, they advised Sir Thomas
+Gates, on the eve of his departure for Virginia in the spring of
+1609 as the newly appointed lieutenant governor of the colony,
+to move his principal city above the falls on the James, where he
+would enjoy every advantage in an attack by a European foe, or
+better still, that he locate it on the Chowan River in modern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+North Carolina, "foure dayes Journey from your forte Southewards."
+In an earlier passage of his instructions, he had already
+been advised that he should be guided by the general principle
+of seeking the sun, "which is under God the first cause both of
+health and Riches."</p>
+
+<p>Those who bother to read Gates' instructions will notice the
+emphasis they place on the choice of a <i>principal</i> seat. There
+were to be other towns, and Jamestown would be kept as the
+chief port of entry, though not as the site of the main magazine
+and storehouse. All told, perhaps three "habitations" would be
+enough for the settlers now to be transported. Their number
+was nothing less than 600 persons, men, women, and children&mdash;more
+than all the men who had been sent to Virginia in the
+preceding two years. If the reported statement of Lord Chancellor
+Egerton be accepted, the adventurers after two years of exploratory
+effort had come to feel that "the proper thing is to fortify
+ourselves all at once, because when they will open their eyes in
+Spain they will not be able to help it, and even tho' they may
+hear it, they are just now so poor that they will have no means
+to prevent us from carrying out our plan." It was indeed a poor
+year for Spain, which in 1609 had to agree to a truce in the
+long struggle with the Dutch that ultimately brought legal recognition
+of the independence of Holland. This was the year
+which also witnessed the exploration by Henry Hudson of the
+river that has ever since borne his name, a river on which the
+Dutch would soon lay the foundations of a shortlived North
+American empire. Only the year before had the French built
+their fort at Quebec. And now the English were determined to
+fortify Virginia "all at once." A once proud monopoly of the
+new world, and of its opportunities, was to be finally broken.</p>
+
+<p>The London to which Newport returned late in January, 1609,
+was already astir with preparations for an adventure such as
+England had never seen before. He sat in consultation with Sir
+Thomas Smith, as did Richard Hakluyt, and Thomas Hariot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+who as a young man just out of Oxford had gone to Roanoke
+Island for Raleigh in 1585, and whose <i>True Report of Virginia</i>,
+published in 1588, still remained a chief dependence of the
+London adventurers. Hakluyt was preparing for publication a
+translation of the Gentleman of Elva's account of De Soto's expedition
+through the southeastern part of the later United
+States, an account published in April as <i>Virginia Richly Valued</i>.
+To this he added in June a translation from Marc Lescarbot's
+<i>Histoire de la Nouvelle-France</i> for the purpose of demonstrating
+that Virginia "must be far better by reason it stands more southerly
+nearer to the sun." Broadsides scattered about London announced
+the special opportunities awaiting those who would
+join in the new venture, while clergymen in their pulpits lent
+the aid of divine sanction, as in Robert Gray's <i>Good Speed to
+Virginia</i>. The broad outlines of the new plan had been presented
+to the public in February by Alderman Robert Johnson in a tract
+entitled <i>Nova Britannia: Offering Most Excellent Fruites by
+Planting in Virginia</i>. By the end of that month the adventurers
+had also completed negotiations for the granting of the second
+charter, and had opened their books for subscription to a new
+joint-stock fund.</p>
+
+<p>The device of the joint-stock fund had been increasingly relied
+upon by English adventurers as they sought the means for financing
+more distant and more expensive ventures. It had the advantage
+of pooling the resources of more than one individual, and
+of distributing the risk, and the Virginia adventure had depended
+upon joint-stock methods of finance from the beginning. It is
+impossible to speak with exactness regarding the financial arrangements
+of the first years. A provision in the first instructions
+directing the settlers to live, work, and trade together in a common
+stock through a period of five years suggests the possibility
+of a five-year terminable stock, i.e., a fund that would be invested
+and reinvested through a term of five years before it was divided,
+together with the earnings thereon. But other evidence indicates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+that there may have been a separate stock for each of Newport's
+voyages, as was the case with each of the early voyages of the
+East India Company to the Orient. The so-called joint-stock
+company of that day rarely had a permanent joint-stock of the
+sort identified with the modern corporation. Instead, it functioned
+as a governing body representing all of the merchants
+engaged in a particular trade, who traded individually or through
+a variety of joint-stocks invested under the general regulation of
+the company. And such was the character of the Virginia Company.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been the specific terms offered earlier
+investors, those offered in 1609 are clear enough. It was proposed
+that men subscribe at the rate of £12 10s. per share to a common
+stock that would be invested and reinvested over the term of
+the next seven years. Although special good fortune might justify
+a dividend of some part of the earnings at an earlier date, there
+would be no final dividend, which at that time meant a division
+of capital as well as the earnings thereof, until 1616. The dividend
+promised then would include a grant of land in Virginia
+as well as a return of the capital with profit. How much land
+depended, like the profit, on the degree of success that had
+attended the venture meantime.</p>
+
+<p>One of the inducements for subscription was a promise that
+all adventurers would have a voice in determining the policies of
+the company. Again, it is impossible to say just what had been
+the organization through which the adventurers had previously
+functioned. They probably followed custom by meeting in
+assemblies or courts (both terms were common) when some
+joint decision was needed, and no doubt they relied on the
+designation of such committees and officers as were necessary
+for the execution of decisions reached in their assembly. It may
+be that the adventurers sitting on the Virginia Council functioned
+also in the character of an executive committee for their fellows.
+In view of the well known tendency for institutions to evolve out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+of earlier practices, with such adjustments as experience may
+dictate, there is reason for believing that important features of
+the organization outlined in the second charter were older than
+the charter itself. But the charter of 1609 offers the first unmistakable
+evidence as to the organization upon which the adventurers
+depended.</p>
+
+<p>They were there incorporated by the name of "The Treasurer
+and Company of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London,
+for the first Colony in Virginia." Sir Thomas Smith was
+designated treasurer with power to warn and summon the
+members of the council and of the company "to their courts and
+meetings." The adventurers, "or the major part of them which
+shall be present and assembled for that purpose" were empowered
+to make grants of land according to "the proportion of
+the adventurer, as to the special service, hazard, exploit, or merit
+of any person so to be recompenced, advanced, or rewarded."
+They were to meet also as occasion required for the election of
+members of the council, which was charged with the management
+of the enterprise on the ground that it was not convenient
+"that all the adventurers shall be so often drawn to meet and
+assemble." The members of the council were listed by name,
+more than fifty of them, beginning with Henry, Earl of Southampton,
+and including the Lord Mayor of London, the Lord
+Bishop of Bath and Wells, Thomas, Lord De la Warr, Sir
+William Wade, Sir Oliver Cromwell, Sir Francis Bacon, Sir
+Maurice Berkeley, Sir Thomas Gates, Sir Walter Cope, Sir
+Edwin Sandys, Sir Thomas Roe, Sir Dudley Digges, John Eldred,
+and John Wolstenholme. These and their colleagues of the
+council, which included of course Sir Thomas Smith, were the
+great men of the company, not necessarily the heaviest investors
+but those whose experience, or social and political position,
+argued that they should be on the managing board. In short, the
+subscribers had a basic right to choose the directors of the business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+and to determine the division of its rewards, but the great men
+would run it.</p>
+
+<p>For the assurance of the adventurers, each of them was listed
+by name in the charter&mdash;all told, some 650 of them. In addition
+to the individuals there named, the charter listed some fifty
+London companies which had subscribed in their corporate capacity
+in response to the appeals of London's clergymen and the
+Lord Mayor. To list all these companies would be tedious, but
+some of them should be named, if only for the picture they give
+of London itself. Here were "the Company of Mercers, the Company
+of Grocers, the Company of Drapers, the Company of
+Fishmongers, the Company of Goldsmiths, the Company of
+Skinners, the Company of Merchant-Taylors, the Company of
+Haberdashers, the Company of Salters, the Company of Ironmongers,
+the Company of Vintners, the Company of Clothworkers,
+the Company of Dyers, the Company of Brewers, the Company
+of Leathersellers, the Company of Pewterers, the Company
+of Cutlers," and others, including the companies to which belonged
+the city's cordwainers, barber-surgeons, masons, plumbers,
+innholders, cooks, coopers, bricklayers, fletchers, blacksmiths,
+joiners, weavers, plasterers, stationers, upholsterers, musicians,
+turners, and glaziers. This was a national effort, but in a special
+way it was London's effort to serve the nation in response to a
+call from its leaders.</p>
+
+<p>There is reason to believe that the terms of the charter had
+been agreed upon by the end of February, but the document remained
+unsealed until May, when all who had subscribed could
+be listed. By that date, too, some 600 subjects of the king had
+agreed to make the adventure in person to Virginia. Some of
+them were smart enough to discount the propaganda that had
+persuaded them, and so they settled for the wages offered by
+the company. But others agreed to go on adventure, i.e. to accept
+the adventurers' offer that their personal adventure to Virginia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+would be counted as one share, at the minimum, in the
+common joint-stock. This was to say that they would be entitled
+to whatever rewards in 1616 might belong to any subscriber in
+England for £12 10s.; and if the personal adventure of the settler
+in Virginia was considered to be worth more, as in the case of a
+surgeon or one of the high officers of the colony, then might the
+rights of an adventurer in Virginia run as high as any belonging
+to the great adventurers in England. The colonists who came to
+America in 1609 were thus encouraged to view themselves as
+being in no way inferior to those who sent them.</p>
+
+<p>Sir George Somers had been selected as admiral of the great
+fleet which dropped down the Thames from London on May 15
+and sailed from Plymouth on the second of June with a full
+complement of nine vessels. Somers rode aboard the <i>Sea Adventure</i>,
+whose master was Newport and whose passengers included
+Sir Thomas Gates and William Strachey, the newly appointed
+secretary of the colony. Ahead of them had gone Captain
+Samuel Argall, to find a new route to Virginia running north
+of the Spanish West Indies, and to make a test of the Chesapeake
+fisheries. Somers guided his ships along a route that had long
+been familiar to him, the route discovered by Columbus for Spain
+and the route that Newport and other English adventurers had
+consistently followed to the more southern parts of Virginia, but
+he tried to stay above the channels regularly followed by the
+ships of Spain. Such, at any rate, were his instructions, and for
+seven weeks out of Plymouth all went well. But then a storm
+struck, no doubt an early hurricane of the sort so familiar to residents
+of the east coast today, a storm which separated the <i>Sea
+Adventure</i> from the other vessels and carried it to destruction
+off the coast of Bermuda. Providence brought crew and passengers,
+all 150 of them, safely ashore to begin an idyll that would
+be celebrated in Shakespeare's <i>Tempest</i> and would be turned to
+advantage by the adventurers in their later propaganda. In Bermuda
+they found food in plenty&mdash;fish, fowl, and hogs that ran<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+wild&mdash;and a most healthful climate. But for almost a year Virginia
+would struggle without the leadership of Somers, Newport,
+or Gates, and without the sure authority of instructions and commissions
+they had carried aboard the <i>Sea Adventure</i>.</p>
+
+<p>After ten months the shipwrecked colonists had fashioned from
+the cedars of Bermuda, which reminded them of the cedars of
+Lebanon, two small vessels named the <i>Patience</i> and the <i>Deliverance</i>.
+The ships were stoutly enough built to carry the full company
+to Virginia in May 1610, but at Jamestown they found
+only want and confusion. The other vessels in Somers' fleet had
+straggled into the bay the preceding summer with their storm-tossed
+passengers, but the following winter had been a nightmare.
+This was the winter that was destined long to be remembered
+as the starving time, the time when one man was reported even
+to have eaten his wife. Only a handful of the settlers, new and
+old, had survived, and Somers and Gates saw no choice but to
+abandon the colony. It was saved by the providential arrival early
+in June of Lord De la Warr, who brought with him 150 new
+colonists and a commission as the colony's governor. Somers went
+back to Bermuda in the hope of laying in a stock of pork for
+Virginia, but there he died and his seamen ran for England.</p>
+
+<p>The disturbing news of these tragic events reached London
+piecemeal. First came the news in the fall of 1609 that the <i>Sea
+Adventure</i>, with Somers, Gates, Newport, and Strachey, had
+been lost. This was a severe blow to the leaders of the company,
+who had planned to send De la Warr out with perhaps as many
+colonists as Somers had carried. Already the enthusiasm engendered
+by the promotional campaign of the preceding spring had
+begun to decline, as some men took second thought. Subscriptions
+at that time had been enlisted on an understanding that
+they might be paid in installments, and the adventurers now often
+found it difficult to collect what had been promised. During the
+winter they published an extraordinarily frank promotional piece,
+<i>A True and Sincere Declaration of the Purpose and Ends of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+Plantation Begun in Virginia</i>. In this pamphlet, they did the best
+they could to stir again the high hopes of the preceding spring,
+but they had to admit what all London knew, that the news was
+not encouraging. And so they appealed to the honor of the subscribers,
+that they remember those in Virginia who had staked
+their lives on the promises made by other men. It must be said
+that the adventurers did very well indeed, in the circumstances,
+to get De la Warr away in the spring with three vessels and 150
+recruits for the colony.</p>
+
+<p>Had he been able to send back a favorable report on the situation
+in Virginia, the adventurers probably would have found their
+position not too difficult. Instead, Sir Thomas Gates returned
+to London in September 1610 with a report that caused the adventurers
+to consider seriously whether the whole project should
+not be abandoned. Gates himself was subsequently credited with
+having clinched the decision in favor of continuance by arguing
+that sugar, wine, silk, iron, sturgeon, furs, timber, rice, aniseed,
+and other valuable commodities could be produced in Virginia,
+given the necessary time and support. The adventurers saw also
+the promotional possibilities of Somers' shipwreck at Bermuda,
+or rather, the remarkable experience which had followed it. Was
+this not an encouraging sign of God's providential care? Of His
+willingness to support the English in Virginia? This was a question
+London was invited to contemplate again and again during
+the months that followed.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt, the courage of a few key leaders, among whom Sir
+Thomas Smith was now quite definitely the chief, had a large
+part in the decision to continue. Certainly, it took courage to
+launch the new campaign for funds to which the adventurers
+committed themselves in the fall of 1610. The estimated need
+ran to £30,000. All former subscribers were urged to subscribe
+another £37 10s. on agreement that the subscription would be
+paid in at the rate of £12 10s. per year over the next three years.
+Others were invited to subscribe on the same terms. The Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+Mayor appealed once more to the London companies, and plans
+were made for inviting the other towns of England to contribute.
+In November the Company published <i>A True Declaration of the
+Estate of the Colonie in Virginia</i> for the purpose of refuting
+"scandalous reports" tending to discourage subscriptions. Richard
+Rich presented, probably at the suggestion of the adventurers,
+his <i>Newes from Virginia, the Lost Flocke Triumphant</i>, a poem
+celebrating the shipwreck of the <i>Sea Adventure</i> and the providential
+survival of its passengers. And to this Silvanus Jourdan added
+his <i>Discovery of the Barmudas</i>, a pamphlet recounting the experience
+of Somers and his colleagues in the islands. It was written,
+declared the author, "for the love of my country; and ...
+the good of the plantation in Virginia."</p>
+
+<p>It is not so remarkable that the adventurers failed to achieve
+their goal of £30,000 as that they actually secured the subscription
+of approximately £18,000 by the spring of 1611. The records
+of the company are so incomplete for any time prior to 1619,
+when the only surviving court minutes have their beginning,
+that it is impossible to give the comparative figures one would
+like to have. But there is evidence suggesting that the fund raised
+in 1609 may not have been larger than £10,000. If this be true,
+the success of this second campaign for funds becomes all the
+more remarkable. One can hardly explain it in terms of the ordinary
+calculations of a business community. Perhaps the adventurers
+believed their own propaganda, were themselves responsive
+to the kind of patriotic appeal that was made in the spring of
+1610, when they were trying to get Lord De la Warr's expedition
+ready. "The eyes of all Europe," said the adventurers, "are looking
+upon our endeavours to spread the Gospell among the heathen
+people of Virginia, to plant an English nation there, and
+to settle a trade in those parts, which may be peculiar to our nation,
+to the end we may thereby be secured from being eaten out
+of all profits of trade by our more industrious neighbors."</p>
+
+<p>With the new funds, the adventurers equipped two expeditions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+which sailed for Virginia in the spring of 1611. The first to leave
+carried 300 men, in three ships, under the command of Sir Thomas
+Dale, another veteran of the Netherlands fighting who had
+been commissioned as marshal of the colony. It was impossible
+not to be impressed by the evidence that a lack of discipline had
+contributed to the colony's woes, and Dale, who sailed in March,
+undoubtedly was intended to draw upon his experience as a soldier
+for the better discipline of the colonists. Sir Thomas Gates,
+who followed Dale out in May, had a broader task. He would
+continue to serve as the lieutenant governor under Lord De la
+Warr, and, like Dale, he carried 300 passengers. But his six ships
+also carried much more. One of the basic problems of original
+colonization, though it has often been lost sight of, was to stock
+the colony with cattle, hogs, poultry, etc. Later colonists, in Maryland
+or Carolina, would buy these essentials in Virginia, but
+the Virginia colonists had no established neighbor of their own
+nation on which to rely, and during the starving time they had
+literally eaten themselves out of stock. Nothing could better illustrate
+the fact that the Virginia adventurers in 1611 had to begin
+all over again than the 100 cattle, the 200 swine, and the
+poultry in unspecified numbers Gates had aboard his ships as they
+set their course westward. And if any one wishes to estimate the
+value of a cow that had been transported across the Atlantic, let
+him notice the penalty imposed by Dale's laws, so called, for
+killing one.</p>
+
+<p>As Gates dropped down the Thames in May, the adventurers
+must have relaxed with the satisfaction that comes from real
+achievement. Twice now, within the span of two years, they had
+raised a great fund with which they sent each time nine vessels
+and 600 colonists to Virginia. Indeed, they had done even more.
+Counting Argall's ship, which sailed ahead of Somers in the
+spring of 1609, and the three vessels going over with De la Warr
+in 1610, the company had dispatched to Virginia no less than
+22 vessels and close to 1,400 colonists in a two year period. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+Gates had hardly cleared the coasts of England before Lord De la
+Warr, of all persons, turned up in London, to the great consternation
+of his fellow adventurers.</p>
+
+<p>A general assembly of the adventurers on June 25 listened to
+his explanation, which was promptly published by order of the
+council. The story briefly was this. Ever since he had reached
+Virginia the preceding June he had suffered a succession of violent
+sicknesses&mdash;fevers, the flux, gout, and finally scurvy, "till I
+was upon the point to leave the world." In preference to this he
+left Virginia in a vessel commanded by Argall, and in the hope
+that he might recover his health with the aid of hot baths in the
+West Indies. Contrary winds had forced him to alter his course
+to the Azores, where oranges and lemons had cured him of the
+scurvy. He then resolved to return to his post, but was persuaded
+to seek first a full recovery of health "in the naturall ayre of my
+countrey." He deplored the ill effects on the Virginia project of
+his return home, but argued that it would have been far worse
+for Virginia had he remained there only to die.</p>
+
+<p>A nice advertisement this for the healthfulness of Virginia's
+climate. One might wonder at the council's decision to publish
+the report were it not for the obvious fact that the alternative
+would have been worse still. Some explanation had to be given
+the public, for the adventurers had counted heavily on the presence
+of Lord De la Warr in Virginia to offset the discouragement
+of earlier reports from Jamestown, as their promotional literature
+amply demonstrates. He was a nobleman, the head of a great
+family, and a member of His Majesty's Council for Virginia.
+"Now know yee," reads the commission he had received in February
+1610, "that we his Majesties said Councell upon good advise
+and deliberation and upon notice had of the wisedome, valour,
+circumspection, and of the virtue and especiall sufficiencie
+of the Right Honourable Sir Thomas West, Knight Lord la Warr
+to be in principall place of authoritie and government in the said
+collonie, and finding in him the said Lord la Warr propensness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+and willingness to further and advance the good of the said
+plantation, by virtue of the said authoritie unto us given by
+the said letters pattents have nominated, made, ordained and
+apointed ... the said Sir Thomas West, Knight Lord la Warr
+to be principall Governor, Commander and Captain Generall
+both by land and sea over the said colonie and all other collonies
+planted or to be planted in Virginia or within the limits specified
+in his Majesties said letters pattents and over all persons, Admiralls
+Vice-Admirals and other officers and commanders whether
+by sea or land of what qualitie soever for and during the term
+of his natural life, and do hereby ordaine and declare that he
+the said Lord la Warr during his life shall be stiled and called
+by the name and title of Lord Governor and Captain General
+of Virginia." And now, after little more than a year and before
+the subscribers to the new joint-stock fund had paid in their second
+installment, the Lord Governor and Captain General of
+Virginia was back in London to make a public confession that
+in Virginia he had nearly died of the ague, flux, and scurvy.
+From time to time thereafter the company publicly suggested
+that the Lord Governor might soon return to his post, but he did
+not undertake to do so until 1618 and then he died on the way.</p>
+
+<p>Once more the leaders of the company showed determination.
+Delinquent subscribers were carried to court in a series of chancery
+actions extending into 1614. How much was collected in
+this way cannot be said, but the complaints entered in chancery
+have provided most helpful clues to an understanding of the
+company's financial history. It seems unlikely that anything collected
+as a result of these actions served to do more than reduce
+an indebtedness incurred by the company in 1611 on the promise
+of its subscribers. One thing is certain: there was no chance of
+floating another subscription. By 1612 the adventurers were complaining
+that only the name of God was more frequently profaned
+in the streets and market places of London than was the name of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+Virginia. After that year the Virginia lottery, its winning tickets
+entitling the holder to an exchange for shares in the Virginia
+joint-stock, became the company's chief dependence. Now and
+again there would also be found some person who wanted to go
+to Virginia at his own cost, and was willing to pay the cost in
+return for shares of stock guaranteeing an ultimate title to land
+in the colony. These transactions, at a time when Virginia's name
+had lost its magic, were perhaps too few to suggest to any one of
+the adventurers that here was the future, not only of the company,
+but of English colonization in North America. Although
+the Virginia Company continued to be active for thirteen years
+after 1611, the last of its great joint-stock funds was the one to
+which men made their subscriptions just before Lord De la Warr
+came home.</p>
+
+<p>To this statement perhaps a qualification should be added. Virginia
+at first had been to Englishmen America itself, and so it
+had remained in a very real sense, despite an obvious tendency
+since 1609 for the adventurers to pin their hopes increasingly
+on what might be found within the reach of Jamestown. The
+continuance of the Virginia adventure became thus not simply
+a matter of keeping the Jamestown colony alive. What mattered
+was that somewhere in North America the great task to which
+the company had committed itself should go forward. And where
+better, after 1611, could this be tried than in the Bermudas?
+Divine providence had pointed the way, so clearly that it might
+even be possible to raise the needed funds in London. Moreover,
+Sir George Somers, by being shipwrecked there and subsequently
+by dying there, had provided a name for the islands that was
+both English and suggestive of a climate so healthful that even
+Lord De la Warr might prosper there. Accordingly, the leading
+members of the Virginia Company in 1612 undertook the colonization
+of the Somers Islands, a designation often written as the
+Summer Islands, and for that purpose they subscribed to a new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+joint-stock fund. The Bermuda joint-stock, however, seems to
+have been a much more modest fund than that subscribed either
+in 1609 or 1611.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing unusual in thus creating within the framework
+of the Virginia Company a special stock for investment
+under the direction of its own officers and committees in the
+colonization of Bermuda. In the great companies of London it
+was customary that each stock should be separately administered.
+The only technical difficulty lay in the fact that Bermuda was
+located outside the geographical limits granted the Virginia adventurers.
+Under the second of their charters, rights at sea (on
+both seas) had extended out from the coasts for only 100 miles,
+which for the purposes of 1612 was not far enough. The adventurers,
+therefore, sought and secured a third charter granting
+them rights along the coast of Virginia, within the limits of 41°
+and 30° of northerly latitude, to a distance of 300 leagues, in
+order to include "divers Islands lying desolate and uninhabited,
+some of which are already made known and discovered by the
+industry, travel, and expences of the said Company, ... all and
+every of which it may import the said Colony [of Virginia] both
+in safety and policy of trade to populate and plant."</p>
+
+<p>This extension of bounds undoubtedly represents the chief
+reason for seeking the third Virginia charter, but the leaders of
+the company, while they had the opportunity, also included other
+significant provisions. Especially significant was a decision to enlarge
+the authority belonging to the general assembly of the adventurers.
+To its former prerogatives, which had been chiefly
+to elect members of the council and to determine the apportionment
+of lands, the third charter added three fundamental rights:
+to elect all officers of either company or colony, to admit new
+members to the fellowship of the company, and to draft laws
+and ordinances for the welfare of the plantation. Heretofore,
+the council had been the true governing body, though subject to
+a right of election and displacement by the adventurers in general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+assembly. Now the general court of the adventurers was to
+govern, with the council as its executive agency. Since voting
+in the Virginia courts, as in those of other companies at the time,
+was by head rather than by share, this provision of the charter
+can be interpreted only as an attempt by the great men of the
+company to encourage a renewed interest on the part of the general
+body of adventurers by enlarging their influence on the conduct
+of the company's affairs. It was the third charter which also
+authorized the establishment of the Virginia lottery&mdash;the first of
+many attempts in American history to exploit the gambler's instinct
+for the support of a worthy cause. In the charter the king
+also gave assurance that his courts would view favorably the company's
+suits against delinquent subscribers.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 426px;">
+<img src="images/image001.jpg" width="426" height="500" alt="Merchants of Virginia.
+
+The Company of Merchants, called Merchants of Virginia,
+Bermudas, or Summer-Ilands, for (as I heare) all these additions
+are given them. I know not the time of their incorporating
+neither by whom their Armes, Supporters, and Crest were granted,
+and therefore am compelled to leaue them abruptly.
+
+From John Stow, Survey of London, 1632
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Merchants of Virginia." />
+<span class="caption">
+The Company of Merchants, called Merchants of Virginia,
+Bermudas, or Summer-Ilands, for (as I heare) all these additions
+are given them. I know not the time of their incorporating
+neither by whom their Armes, Supporters, and Crest were granted,
+and therefore am compelled to leaue them abruptly.<br /><br />
+
+<small>From John Stow, Survey of London, 1632</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image002.png" width="600" height="379" alt="Virginia Seal
+
+Courtesy Mrs. L. T. Jester and Mrs. P. W. Hiden" title="Virginia Seal" />
+<span class="caption">Virginia Seal<br /><br />
+
+<small>Courtesy Mrs. L. T. Jester and Mrs. P. W. Hiden</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/image033.png">
+<img src="images/image003.png" width="600" height="248" alt="A Declaration for the certaine time of dravving the great standing Lottery
+
+Heading for the Broadside issued by The Virginia Company, London, 1615
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library. From photograph in Virginia Historical Society." title="Heading for the Broadside issued by The Virginia Company, London, 1615" /></a>
+<span class="caption">
+Heading for the Broadside issued by The Virginia Company, London, 1615<br />
+<small>[Click image for larger view]</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library. From photograph in Virginia Historical Society.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/image004.jpg" width="600" height="350" alt="Royal Exchange, London. As it was in the time of the Virginia Company.
+
+Photo by New York Public Library" title="Royal Exchange, London. As it was in the time of the Virginia Company." />
+<span class="caption">Royal Exchange, London. As it was in the time of the Virginia Company.<br /><br />
+
+<small>Photo by New York Public Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 440px;">
+<img src="images/image005.jpg" width="440" height="600" alt="Captain John Smith
+
+From The London Company of Virginia (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Captain John Smith" />
+<span class="caption">Captain John Smith<br /><br />
+
+<small>From The London Company of Virginia (New York and London, 1908)</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 471px;">
+<img src="images/image006.jpg" width="471" height="600" alt="Thomas West, Third Lord de la Warr
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Thomas West, Third Lord de la Warr" />
+<span class="caption">Thomas West, Third Lord de la Warr<br /><br />
+
+<small>From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 556px;">
+<img src="images/image007.jpg" width="556" height="600" alt="Sir Thomas Smith (or Smythe)
+
+&quot;The Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Smith, of London, Knight, one of his Maiesties Councell
+for Virginia, and Treasurer for the Colonie, and Gouernour of the Companies of
+the Moscovia and East India Merchants&quot;
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of The Skinners&#39; Company, London.
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Sir Thomas Smith (or Smythe)" />
+<span class="caption">Sir Thomas Smith (or Smythe)<br /><br />
+
+&quot;The Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Smith, of London, Knight, one of his Maiesties Councell
+for Virginia, and Treasurer for the Colonie, and Gouernour of the Companies of
+the Moscovia and East India Merchants&quot;<br />
+
+<small>From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of The Skinners&#39; Company, London.</small><br /><br />
+
+<small>From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 387px;">
+<img src="images/image008.jpg" width="387" height="600" alt="Henry Wriothesley
+
+(Third Earl of Southampton)
+
+From the painting by Michiel Jansz van Miereveldt
+
+From The London Company of Virginia (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Henry Wriothesley" />
+<span class="caption">Henry Wriothesley<br />
+
+(Third Earl of Southampton)<br />
+
+From the painting by Michiel Jansz van Miereveldt<br /><br />
+
+<small>From The London Company of Virginia (New York and London, 1908)</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 435px;">
+<img src="images/image009.jpg" width="435" height="550" alt="Sir Edwin Sandys
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of Sir Edmund Arthur Lechmere, Bart, Bramham Gardens,
+London, England
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Sir Edwin Sandys" />
+<span class="caption">Sir Edwin Sandys<br /><br />
+
+<small>From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of Sir Edmund Arthur Lechmere, Bart, Bramham Gardens,
+London, England</small><br /><br />
+
+<small>From Alexander W. Weddell, Virginia Historical Portraiture</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 331px;">
+<img src="images/image010.jpg" width="331" height="600" alt="Sir Thomas Dale
+
+Portrait by an unknown artist of the Anglo-Flemish
+School painted in oils early in the 17th Century. The
+original portrait is preserved in the Virginia Museum
+of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="Sir Thomas Dale" />
+<span class="caption">Sir Thomas Dale<br /><br />
+
+Portrait by an unknown artist of the Anglo-Flemish
+School painted in oils early in the 17th Century. The
+original portrait is preserved in the Virginia Museum
+of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia<br /><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 467px;">
+<img src="images/image011.jpg" width="467" height="600" alt="HENRY STUART
+
+Prince of Wales
+
+From Alexander Brown, The Genesis of the United States
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library." title="HENRY STUART" />
+<span class="caption">HENRY STUART<br />
+
+Prince of Wales<br /><br />
+
+<small>From Alexander Brown, The Genesis of the United States</small><br />
+
+<small>Photo by Virginia State Library.</small></span>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 33%;" />
+
+<p>The new charter having received the final seal in March
+1612, a new colony was established in Bermuda in the following
+July. Its early history has a double significance for the later history
+of Virginia. In the first place, the Bermuda colony emphasizes
+the growing interest of the adventurers in what might
+be produced in America as against what might be found by way
+of America. The occupation of the Bermuda Islands might almost
+be described as a retreat from the earlier search for a passage to
+China. The move could be viewed also as a reassertion of an old
+interest in plundering the Spaniard, for the Bermudas lay
+athwart the homeward route of Spain's treasure fleets. But in
+any case the primary interest was in America and its own peculiar
+opportunities, and the attention given by the early settlers
+in Bermuda to experiments with tobacco, sugar, wine, ginger,
+and other such commodities suggests that their purpose was not
+so much to plunder the Spaniard as rather to emulate his success
+as a planter in the West Indies. Secondly, the adventurers showed
+a marked inclination to encourage each adventurer to meet his
+own costs. Provision was made for an early survey and division
+of the land, with the result that men put their money chiefly
+into the development of their own estates. A final survey was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+not completed until 1617, but at that date some of the Bermuda
+adventurers at least had known who their tenants were and
+approximately where their land would lie for three full years.
+Whether for these or for other reasons, Bermuda grew while
+Virginia languished. By 1616 over 600 colonists had reached the
+Somers Islands, where most of them survived. In contrast, Virginia
+had that year 350 people.</p>
+
+<p>The Bermuda subscribers had been separately incorporated as
+the Somers Island Company with its own royal charter in 1615.
+Indeed, ever since 1612, when the Bermuda adventurers helped
+to relieve the financial embarrassment of the Virginia Company
+by paying £2,000 for its newly acquired title to Bermuda, the
+Somers Island adventurers seem to have functioned increasingly
+as a separate corporation. But the membership of the two companies
+was much the same. It had been the more active and
+interested of the Virginia adventurers who subscribed to the
+Bermuda joint-stock in 1612, and for twelve years thereafter the
+active membership of the Virginia Company came so close to
+duplicating the membership of the Bermuda Company that the
+two bodies often met virtually as one. Until 1619 Sir Thomas
+Smith served as governor of both companies.</p>
+
+<p>The growing interest of the London adventurers after 1612
+in the colonization of Bermuda did not mean that Virginia was
+wholly neglected. Funds secured from the lottery and from suits
+against delinquent subscribers were enough to keep the project
+alive. In 1612 the adventurers even sent out a stock of silkworms
+for a test of silk production. Needless to say, returning ships
+brought back no silk; nor did they bring sugar or wine. Lumber,
+including the valuable black walnut, seems to have provided the
+chief cargo for return voyages. A shipment of tobacco, Virginia's
+first, in 1614 gave some ground for arguing that the agricultural
+experimentation to which the colonists had been committed for
+several years now would pay off eventually. So argued Sir Thomas
+Gates on his return home this same year after three years of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+service in the colony, but the fact that he had come back from
+Virginia apparently made more of an impression than did his
+argument. Others also came home, their contracted term of
+service ended, and rarely did they bring any news from Virginia
+which added good to its name. Instead, they talked of the severe
+discipline under which they had been forced to live, and made
+sport of the too hopeful propaganda which had first persuaded
+them to become adventurers in Virginia. The discipline, chiefly
+associated with Dale's office as marshal, made his loyal decision
+to remain in the colony for another two years as lieutenant governor
+a further contribution to the ill repute of Virginia's name.</p>
+
+<p>Dale finally came home in 1616, the year in which the dividend
+on the 1609 joint-stock fell due. The contrast between
+the high hopes of 1609 and the reality of 1616 was all too painfully
+apparent. Six hundred men, women, and children had
+sailed for Virginia in the first of these years under a plan to live
+and work together for a seven year period. They would share,
+each according to his particular skill or aptitude, in the common
+task of planting a colony, and they would live out of a common
+store. By 1616, towns were to have been built, churches and
+houses raised, and an increasing acreage brought under cultivation.
+A variety of profitable crops would have been tested, and
+markets established for them. The original stock of cattle would
+have increased through care until there were enough for all. At
+the same time, the trade with the Indians would have been put
+on a profitable basis, as would have mining operations and perhaps
+even a trade to Cathay. Such was the general prospect to
+which so many adventurers had responded in 1609. To the
+modern student all this seems so unrealistic as to be almost unbelievable,
+but unless one grasps the reality of the original dream
+he cannot hope to comprehend the extent of a later disillusionment.</p>
+
+<p>There were no funds to be divided in 1616, but the company
+did declare a dividend of land&mdash;not the 500 acres per share that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+Alderman Johnson had suggested as a possibility in 1609 but
+the more modest total of 50 acres. This 50 acres, however, was
+designated as a first dividend. Others would follow, for an ultimate
+total of perhaps 200 acres per share, as the area in the
+colony's "actual possession" was enlarged. Plans were announced
+for dispatching a new governor to Virginia with instructions for
+completing the necessary surveys, and the adventurers were urged
+to seize the opportunity to gain a desirable priority in the location
+of their shares by contributing £12 10s. toward meeting the necessary
+costs. In return for this contribution, the adventurer would
+be entitled to an additional 50 acres. The land now to be divided
+was that lying along the James River, and only those adventurers
+who submitted to the additional levy would be entitled to share
+in the division, except apparently for adventurers then living in
+the colony. These were the old planters, as they came to be
+called, whose rights paralleled those of the old adventurers in
+England. It is evident that the adventurers were in no position
+to claim a monopoly as the just reward of their past sacrifices,
+for they also offered an immediate dividend, on terms no different
+from those governing the rights of the old adventurers, to any
+new adventurer who wished to join by paying £12 10s. per
+share. Such was the estate to which the Virginia Company had
+been reduced after ten years of effort.</p>
+
+<p>To employ a term that was destined to become common at a
+later period of American history, the Virginia Company had
+become nothing more than a land company. Its one asset was the
+land that had been bought with the sacrifices of the first ten
+years, and after 1616 all of its plans depended upon the hope
+that it might use its power to give title to that land as an inducement
+for investment in the colony. In its advertisement in 1616
+adventurers, both old and new, were invited to take up shares
+for occupancy by themselves or for development by tenants sent
+for the purpose. Perhaps because the first response to this appeal
+was disappointing, the company provided an additional inducement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+in 1617 by promising 50 acres per head for every person
+sent to the colony, the payment being due to the one who bore
+the cost. This was the Virginia headright, as it came to be called,
+which was destined to remain the chief feature of the colony's
+land policy through many years after the demise of the company
+itself. Intended at first to encourage the adventurers in England
+to send the labor that was necessary for the development of the
+land, it served thereafter as a land subsidy of the immigration on
+which the colony lived and grew.</p>
+
+<p>By 1618 the fortunes of Virginia were taking a turn for the
+better. The adventurers, or some of them at least, found encouragement
+in continued shipments of tobacco. These shipments were
+small and the quality of the tobacco could not be compared with
+the Spanish leaf of West Indian production which was finding
+a growing market in London despite King James's known disapproval
+of the habit on which the market grew. But the quality
+of Virginia tobacco, for which Sir Thomas Smith seems to have
+found a first market in the East Indies, no doubt could be improved
+as the planters learned the art of its cultivation and the
+adventurers found for them a better weed. No doubt, too, this
+success with tobacco, whatever the imperfections of the current
+product, could be viewed as a harbinger of other successful attempts
+to produce commodities the Spaniard had for so long and
+so profitably grown in his West Indian plantations.</p>
+
+<p>Further encouragement came from the willingness of the handful
+of planters already in Virginia to remain there, and from
+the decision of Ralph Hamor and Samuel Argall, both of whom
+had formerly served the company in the colony, to return there.
+Especially significant were the arrangements under which Hamor
+and Argall planned their return early in 1617. One of the problems
+that had undoubtedly discouraged the adventurers from
+taking up the company's offer of a land grant in 1616 was the
+question of the supervision that could be provided for such tenants
+as they might elect to put on the land. In Bermuda, the adventurers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+had found an answer, or rather thought they had, by
+dividing the land into tribes, later designated as parishes, over
+which a bailif would exercise an office that was partly civil and
+partly traditional on the landed estates of England. In Virginia,
+Hamor and Argall pointed the way to a solution by entering into
+an association with several of the adventurers in England for
+the development of a jointly held plantation. Thus, in January
+1617, the company awarded 16 bills of adventure to Hamor and
+six associates for the 16 men they proposed to transport to Virginia
+at their own charge. The following month saw a similar transaction
+with Captain Argall and his associates, five adventurers
+who had joined with this seasoned veteran to send out a total of
+24 men. Argall went also as lieutenant governor in succession
+to George Yeardley, who had been left as deputy by Dale on
+his return to England in 1616, but the cost of getting the new
+governor out to his post seems to have been met entirely by his
+own associates. The arrangement has an obvious pertinence to
+an understanding of Argall's unhappy experience as governor,
+for he was later charged with neglect of the public interest through
+too great concern for his own personal interests. But here the
+emphasis belongs to the equally obvious fact that some of the
+adventurers were responding to an opportunity to send out tenants
+who would work under the management and direction of an
+experienced colonist.</p>
+
+<p>In 1618 George Yeardley was back in London consulting with
+other adventurers, including some of the leading members of the
+company, who were interested in forming associations for the
+development of "particular plantations." Late in the year he sailed
+for the colony as the newly designated governor of Virginia.
+With him he carried instructions which record for us further
+developments in the company's land policy. All adventurers, including
+delinquents who would pay up their subscription, were
+now promised 100 acres of land on the first dividend for each
+share of stock, and another 100 acres as a second dividend after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+the first had been occupied. Such of the ancient planters as had
+paid their own way to Virginia, which was to say those who had
+settled at their own cost before Dale's departure in 1616, were
+also to receive grants in like amount. The adventurers were encouraged
+to pool their rights for a common grant of land by the
+promise that their estate could be developed under their own
+management and would be treated as a separate administrative
+unit for civil and military purposes. What the company had in
+mind were the larger associations already formed or on the point
+of being formed, such as that for the settlement of Southampton
+Hundred, which eventually embraced a nominal area of perhaps
+as much as 100,000 acres and in which the associated adventurers
+invested a total of some £6,000. Another example is the association
+of Sir William Throckmorton, Sir George Yeardley, Richard
+Berkeley, George Thorpe, and John Smyth of North Nibley
+which early in 1619 received a first joint grant of 4,500 acres
+and which founded above Jamestown the plantation known as
+Berkeley Hundred. These new associations were very much the
+same as the association of the Virginia adventurers which in 1612
+had undertaken the colonization of Bermuda. For the development
+of their common grant they pooled the necessary capital in
+their own joint-stock fund and directed its investment through
+their own courts, assemblies, or committees as they saw fit. For
+every tenant sent to the plantation, the associated adventurers
+were entitled to an additional headright of 50 acres. They were
+awarded also an additional 1,500 acres for the support of public
+charges in the hundred, such as those incurred for the maintenance
+of a church and minister.</p>
+
+<p>How many of the colonists who migrated to Virginia between
+1618 and 1624 went by agreement with such associations as
+these is difficult to say, but there can be no doubt that they were
+a very large part of the total. The Virginia Company, which
+had served theretofore as the immediate colonizing agent, was
+becoming more and more a supervisory body for the encouragement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+of individual and associated adventurers in their own
+colonizing efforts. For itself, the company looked forward to a
+continuing revenue from quitrents to be paid, at the rate of two
+shillings per hundred acres after a term of seven years from the
+original grant, by all save the ancient adventurers and the planters
+who had migrated before 1616 at their own costs. To this
+revenue from quitrents could be added the benefit to be expected
+from the company's control of the colony's trade.</p>
+
+<p>As in 1609, there seems to be no doubt that all plans looked
+ultimately to the establishment of individual land titles. Where
+the record has survived, the associated adventurers clearly intended
+that their common grant would in time be divided. In
+the case of Berkeley Hundred, the evidence suggests too that the
+associates used the promise of a share in this division for the
+recruitment of their first tenants. Yeardley's instructions reaffirmed
+the company's promise of a headright in terms inviting
+the migration of individual settlers at their own cost.</p>
+
+<p>To understand the plans of 1618, the modern American needs
+to dismiss any idea that the isolated farm house of later America
+represented the ideal toward which men looked at this time. He
+should think rather of the English village community, or of the
+New England town, where men lived together with the advantages
+of a close social relationship and where the land they cultivated
+lay close at hand to the village and its church. If the
+associated adventurers continued to depend for a time on variations
+of the original joint-stock plan, it was not merely because
+they wanted to share the risk of a still uncertain venture or because
+they were seeking some useful device for meeting the problems
+of management. It was also because the plantation they
+hoped to establish was to have at its heart a town, and it was
+thought that the town could best be built through some common
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>What has been said above is not intended to suggest that the
+company's role after 1618 was to be purely supervisory. Although<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+it had an accumulated debt of some £9,000, or possibly because
+of this debt, the company agreed for the encouragement of individual
+adventurers to assume heavy responsibilities of leadership.
+It directed Yeardley to lay out four towns, or boroughs,
+along the James in which grants to individuals or the lesser associations
+would fall&mdash;Kecoughtan at the mouth of the James,
+Henrico at the head of its navigation, and in between Charles
+City and James City. From the Bermuda adventurers the company
+borrowed the idea of establishing a public estate intended
+to meet as nearly as possible all costs of government. In each
+borough 3,000 acres were to be set aside as the company's land
+for cultivation by its own tenants, who would work at half shares.
+Out of the company's moiety would come the support of all superior
+officers, excepting the governor, for whom an additional
+3,000 acres would be set aside in James City. The company thus
+committed itself to a not inconsiderable program of colonization
+on its own responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>One wonders what it was that inspired this renewed, and most
+ambitious, venture in Virginia&mdash;a venture that would carry to
+Virginia over the next five years something like 4,500 colonists.
+Several possibilities can be suggested. First of all, it should be
+noted that the interest of the London adventurers in the colonization
+of America had never faltered, despite repeated disappointment,
+since they had originally laid their hands to the task in
+1606. This, at any rate, is true of the adventurers who led, and
+more especially of Sir Thomas Smith. After it had become no
+longer possible to push the adventure in Virginia, they had turned
+to Bermuda, where an initial success seems to have encouraged
+another try in Virginia. The plans adopted for Bermuda and
+later for Virginia indicate that the adventurers shrewdly capitalized
+on the desire of Englishmen in many different walks of life
+for title to the undeveloped lands of America. A newly stirring
+missionary impulse had its part to play, if only by giving to the
+name of Virginia more helpful associations. Argall had captured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+Pocahontas, the favored daughter of Powhatan, and with her as
+hostage the colonists had forced a peace with a heretofore implacable
+foe. More than that John Rolfe had married the Princess
+Pocahontas, as the English liked to call her, and Sir Thomas Dale
+as his last major service to the colony had brought her to England
+in 1616. In London, at court, and elsewhere, she and her entourage
+of Indian maidens had been a most effective advertisement
+of Virginia. Even after her own death in 1617, her maiden
+consorts had stayed on for many months before being finally returned
+to Virginia by way of Bermuda. Since 1613 the Virginia
+Company had leaned heavily on the missionary appeal in its
+efforts to encourage continued support of the colony, and it may
+well have been the company itself which prompted the bishops
+of the Church of England in the year of Pocahontas' death to
+sponsor a collection of funds for an Indian mission in Virginia.
+In any case, the approximately £1,500 raised for the purpose
+were turned over to the company, which in 1618 ordered
+Yeardley to set aside 10,000 acres at Henrico for the support of
+an Indian college.</p>
+
+<p>The adventurers in 1618 also decreed certain legal and political
+reforms that were helpful in giving Virginia a better name than
+it had enjoyed for several years past. Disgruntled colonists returning
+from Jamestown had brought exaggerated stories of Dale's
+discipline, with the result that Virginia had gained the reputation
+almost of a penal colony. The company's renewed guarantee
+that the settlers would enjoy the full common law rights of Englishmen
+at home was coupled with provision for a general assembly
+of the colonists, a body which first met at Jamestown in
+1619. In short, the company had the benefit in 1618, as so frequently
+in the past, of leadership of the highest quality.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Thomas Smith was still the governor of the company in
+1618, and without question his leadership must be considered
+to be a major factor shaping the new life then being infused into
+the colony. But a factional strife that would soon help to destroy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+the company already had made its appearance. The sources of
+this factionalism were varied, and some of them had little to do
+with the affairs of Virginia. Thus, at this time Sir Thomas found
+a determined enemy in the Rich family, headed by the wealthy
+Earl of Warwick and represented most ably by Sir Nathaniel
+Rich, who for many years was an active leader in the House of
+Commons. Warwick had a way of investing in voyages which
+bordered closely on piracy, and as a result of one such investment
+had become involved in a long and bitter conflict with
+Smith as the governor of the East India Company. Unquestionably
+of more fundamental importance was a growing opposition
+to Smith that was based upon discontent with the former management
+of the Virginia project. It seems almost as though the Virginia
+adventurers, before they could place full confidence in the
+new program for the colony's development, had to find some
+more satisfying explanation for the company's previous failures
+by charging gross mismanagement of its affairs. Such, at any rate,
+was the conviction to which many adventurers came, chiefly it
+would seem the lesser adventurers who were easily prejudiced
+against the great merchants of London, of whom Sir Thomas
+was the chief. In a company where the ultimate power to decide
+had been vested since 1612 in a general assembly of the adventurers
+voting by head rather than by share, the discontent of the
+lesser adventurers could become under the guidance of an effective
+leader a very potent force.</p>
+
+<p>The leader was found in Sir Edwin Sandys, one of the ablest
+parliamentarians of seventeenth century England. Sandys himself
+was not one of the lesser adventurers. He had been a member
+of the Virginia Council since 1607, and in 1611 he had
+responded to the company's appeal for a subscription of £37 10s.
+by subscribing double that amount, thereby matching the subscription
+of Sir Thomas Smith. With the aid of other prominent
+adventurers, including the Earl of Southampton, and by making
+common cause for the moment with the Rich faction, Sir Edwin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+won election to the governorship of the company in the spring
+of 1619. In the absence of anything approaching a full record,
+it is impossible to say what justification there may have been for
+the charges of mismanagement that were brought against Smith's
+administration. It would not be surprising if over the long and
+frequently discouraging years of his leadership, and especially
+in the period since 1612, some irregularities, some carelessness
+had crept into the conduct of the company's business. A very
+noticeable result of Sandys' election was an effort to systematize
+the company's procedures by adoption of new standing orders
+and regulations, and to bring order out of an alleged confusion
+of the company's records, especially those pertaining to the rights
+of the adventurers to land in Virginia. But it is possible to speak
+with full assurance on only one point: no other of the adventurers
+had shown more courage or more devotion to the colony, no other
+of them deserves to be better remembered than Sir Thomas Smith.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no question, however, that the reviving interest
+in Virginia received an additional stimulant from the fact that
+the business now had a new management. At the close of 1618,
+and largely as the result of emigration during that year, the population
+of the colony stood at approximately 1,000 persons. During
+the year after Sandys' election, a total of 1,261 emigrants left
+England for Virginia, over 800 of them at the company's charge.
+This substantial evidence of the company's determination to assume
+the lead encouraged additional associations of adventurers
+to take up patents for their own plantations, with the result that
+by the summer of 1622 the council could announce that over
+3,500 people had migrated to Virginia since the spring of 1619.
+This was a remarkable record, testifying to the very great gifts
+Sir Edwin possessed as a leader and the confidence men placed
+in his leadership.</p>
+
+<p>The minutes of the company's courts have survived for the
+period after the election of Sandys, and so it is possible to get
+a clearer picture of the company's organization and procedures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+than can be had for any earlier date. Further help comes from the
+"Orders and Constitutions" drawn up after Sandys' election and
+published in 1620 as part of a pamphlet skilfully written to convey
+the impression that Virginia's affairs were then being managed
+much better than in the past. The company depended basically
+upon decisions reached in four great quarter courts, which
+were general assemblies of all the adventurers who wished to attend
+and which were scheduled for regular meeting on next to
+the last Wednesday of each of the quarterly terms in which the
+king's courts sat at Westminster. Only a quarter court could
+elect officers, either of the colony or of the company, enact laws
+and ordinances, or determine policies governing the distribution
+of lands in the colony and the conduct of its trade. On the Monday
+preceding each meeting of the quarter court, a preparatory
+court would settle the agenda for the following Wednesday,
+in order that the members might have warning of the business
+to be taken up at that time. Each fortnight, except in the "long
+vacations" between court terms, an ordinary court would meet,
+again on Wednesday, with a quorum that required the presence
+of at least five members of the council, the treasurer or his deputy,
+and "fifteene of the generality." The hour of meeting for all
+courts was 2 P.M., and at no court could a question be put after
+6 P.M. A decision reached by any lesser court, including the extraordinary
+court that might be called in case of special emergency,
+could be overridden by a quarter court. This was the governing
+body of the company, a popular assembly in which Sir Edwin
+often demonstrated his special talent as a parliamentary tactician.
+Attendance varied according to the importance of the business at
+hand, but as many as 150 might attend.</p>
+
+<p>The quarter court meeting in Easter term was a court of elections,
+where the members cast their votes for all principal officers
+by secret ballot. Except for members of the council, all offices
+of the company were held by annual election. The chief office
+was that of the treasurer, as the governor of the company was still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+officially designated. As frequently as not, in common usage he
+was known as the governor, but the charters had fixed the title
+of his office and in so doing had pointed up a primary responsibility
+of the office. The governor of the Virginia Company was
+in fact its treasurer. After 1619 no man could hold the position
+for longer than three years, and no man was eligible for election
+to it if already he was serving as the governor of another company,
+except that he might also serve as the governor of the Somers
+Island Company. The election court might vote a reward for
+services rendered, but the treasurer, like other principal officers,
+served without fixed compensation.</p>
+
+<p>His chief assistant, and the second officer in rank, was the
+deputy. As the title suggests, he might be deputized to perform
+virtually any function of the governor, including that of presiding
+at courts in the governor's absence. But he also had important
+functions of his own. He is perhaps best described as the chief
+administrative officer of the company. He was specifically charged
+with superintendence over all lesser officers, and he had a primary
+responsibility for contracts and other business arrangements relating
+to the dispatch of shipping, provisions, and passengers
+to Virginia and to the receipt, storage, and marketing of cargoes
+returned from the colony. At all times, he acted, or was supposed
+to act, in accordance with instructions from the court, council,
+or treasurer, but all such instructions were necessarily general
+in character. Many were the opportunities to use his own judgment,
+or to confer a favor, as he handled business transactions
+involving hundreds or even thousands of pounds. For his assistance
+and perhaps to keep a watch on him, he had a committee
+of sixteen men chosen by the court under a provision requiring
+that a fourth of the number should be changed each year "to the
+end [that] many be trained up in the businesse." The committee
+may have been new, but the deputy's office was old. It had been
+occupied for many years before the spring election of 1619 by
+Alderman Johnson. Some of the more serious charges brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+against Smith's administration related to the management of
+the magazine, as the stock of supplies periodically forwarded
+to the colony was generally described. Johnson had managed the
+successive magazines, each separately financed by its own joint-stock,
+until in 1619 he was replaced by John Ferrar.</p>
+
+<p>The council, still described as His Majesty's Council for Virginia,
+had become a large and unwieldy body, with many of its
+members inactive. Its influence on the conduct of Virginia's affairs
+was now decidedly less important than in the earlier years. According
+to the Orders and Constitutions, no one "under the degree
+of a Lord or principall magistrate" was thereafter to be elected to
+the council except "such as by diligent attendance at the courts
+and service of Virginia for one year at least before, have approved
+their sufficiency and worth to the Companie." As this statement
+strongly suggests, a place on the council was for many members
+an honorary post through which one might lend the prestige of
+a great name to a worthy undertaking without assuming much
+real responsibility. Nevertheless, the legal powers of the council
+under the Virginia charters made its services indispensable, and
+made it desirable that at least a few of its members should be
+intimately acquainted with the business. The treasurer was supposed
+to consult with the council on important occasions, and
+especially on matters pertaining to the government of the colony.
+All formal instructions to officers in the colony had to be sent in
+the name of the council and over its seal. In any case of removal
+from office, in London or at Jamestown, the cause had to be considered
+in council before it could be taken before the adventurers.
+But any seven members made a quorum giving full power to
+actions taken in council, and the treasurer, who was always a
+member of the council, had the custody of its seal.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the seven auditors now required for annual review of
+disbursements and receipts had to be members of the council.
+The auditors' office had grown out of the disputes over the accounts
+of Sir Thomas Smith, and in addition to the annual auditing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+of the treasurer's report, which had to be submitted to the
+Easter court, they were charged with responsibility for a close
+review of all earlier records of the company. The primary purpose
+was to establish a full and exact list of all subscriptions, with
+notation especially of delinquencies. Salaried officers of the company
+were a secretary, a bookkeeper, a husband (or as we would
+say, an accountant), and a bedel or messenger. The secretary
+served all courts held by the adventurers, the council, and the
+auditors, or by standing and special committees, of which last
+the adventurers appointed quite a number. In addition, the secretary
+was custodian of the company's records.</p>
+
+<p>Although Sir Edwin Sandys continued to be the actual leader
+of the company until its dissolution in 1624, his tenure of the
+treasurer's office was limited to a single year. When the adventurers
+assembled for the annual elections in the spring of 1620,
+they were much disturbed to receive instruction from the king
+that Sir Edwin was not to be re-elected. Instead, the king suggested
+the choice of some merchant of means and wide experience&mdash;perhaps
+Sir Thomas Smith, Sir Thomas Roe, Alderman
+Robert Johnson, or Mr. Maurice Abbott.</p>
+
+<p>Whether Sandys could have been elected in the absence of
+this interference by the king, which the adventurers protested
+as an unwarranted invasion of their liberty, is itself an interesting
+and debatable question. By his many criticisms of the previous
+conduct of the company's affairs, Sandys had won the undying
+enmity of Sir Thomas Smith and his important friends. More
+than that, he had quarreled with his ally of the preceding year,
+the Earl of Warwick, who had connections hardly less impressive
+than those enjoyed by Sir Thomas. The quarrel with Warwick
+was over a question of piracy, as Sir Edwin chose to regard it.
+One of Warwick's ships, the <i>Treasurer</i>, had sailed from England
+in April 1618 with a license to capture pirates, which was one
+way of getting a ship cleared from English ports for depredations
+against the Spaniard at a time when the king had set his face<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+against all such activity. The <i>Treasurer</i> had called at Jamestown,
+where Governor Argall, who had rendered important services to
+the colony but who had special reason to understand that his
+position in Virginia depended upon the good will of important
+members of the company, helped to outfit the vessel for a raid
+on the West Indies. Recent studies, and especially those of
+David Quinn, a British scholar, argue strongly that the earlier
+ventures of Gilbert and Raleigh had been inspired very largely
+by the desire to establish some base on the North American
+coast that would be useful in attacks upon Spanish possessions
+and the trade routes which joined them to Spain. But it is evident
+enough that by this time the leaders of the Virginia Company
+were chiefly fearful that Spain might attack their colony before
+it was securely fortified, and before it had fulfilled the promise
+of rewards far greater than anything freebooting ventures could
+offer. As a result, Governor Yeardley, on instruction from London,
+denied the courtesies of Jamestown to the <i>Treasurer</i> on its
+return in 1619, and won for Sandys thereby the bitter resentment
+of the Rich family.</p>
+
+<p>The king's interference in the election of 1620 has naturally
+become a celebrated incident in the history of Virginia. Sir
+Edwin was a leader in parliament, which before the century
+was out would establish its supremacy in the government of
+England, and the Virginia Company in 1620 had only recently
+established the first representative assembly in North America.
+To historians who have sought the larger meaning of the American
+experiment, it has often seemed that the king must have
+been guided by a fear of representative government&mdash;in other
+words, that his motives were largely political. No doubt, he was
+more easily persuaded to enter an objection to Sandys' re-election
+because of Sir Edwin's opposition to royal policies in the house
+of commons, but there is no contemporary evidence to suggest
+that the king had even noticed the Assembly which met at
+Jamestown in 1619. Moreover, that Assembly had been authorized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+before Sandys' election, at a time when Sir Thomas Smith
+was still in the chair, and anyone who thinks the motion had
+been carried over Smith's opposition should take note that the
+same kind of representative assembly was established in 1620
+for Bermuda, over whose fortunes Sir Thomas would continue
+to preside until 1621. Not until the middle of the seventeenth
+century, at the time of Cromwell, does it appear that anyone
+even suggested that the primary reason for the king's interference
+was fear of a significant development in the history of representative
+government.</p>
+
+<p>What actually happened in 1620 would seem to be clear
+enough. Sir Thomas Smith had connections that reached all the
+way into the king's bedchamber, and there he effectively argued
+that Sandys did not know his business. It was an argument that
+found not a little justification in the fact that the company had
+to admit by a broadside published in the very month of the election
+court that hundreds of the colonists sent to Virginia in the
+preceding year had died within a short time of their arrival
+there, and it may be that Sir Thomas apprehended the even
+greater disasters soon to overtake the colony. A more likely supposition,
+however, is that he seized upon this news from the
+colony as an opportunity to vent his resentment against Sandys,
+a resentment that must have become more bitter with each of
+Sir Edwin's promotional releases advertising the great improvements
+now to be found in the management of Virginia's affairs.
+The legal basis on which the king acted was probably debatable.
+No doubt, he depended upon the provision in the charter requiring
+that all members of the council, of which the treasurer
+was the head, be sworn to the king's service. But membership
+on the council was for life, and Sir Edwin had taken his oath as
+a member of the council as early as 1607. Perhaps the king took
+advantage of the company's regulations requiring an annual
+election and that the treasurer be sworn following his election.
+Whether this was a new requirement cannot be said. It can only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+be suggested that the king intended to say that if Sir Edwin were
+re-elected he would not give him a necessary oath of office. It may
+be, too, that he stood quite simply on the prerogative of his office
+to insist that his subjects in Virginia were entitled to royal protection.
+In any case, the adventurers chose not to defy the king's
+wish.</p>
+
+<p>Having protested his interference as unwarranted, the quarter
+court in May 1620 adjourned without electing a treasurer.
+Instead, the adventurers appointed a special committee to call
+on the king for the purpose of acquainting him with the true
+facts regarding "the managing of their business this last year"
+and to ask for a free election. Sandys himself appealed to the
+royal favorite, the young Duke of Buckingham, but with no effect
+on the king's decision. When the adventurers reassembled late
+in June, they elected the Earl of Southampton as treasurer. Thus,
+in a sense both parties to the dispute emerged victorious. Sandys
+was no longer treasurer, but the adventurers had refused to elect
+a merchant and Southampton would preside thereafter in behalf
+of Sandys. There can be no doubt that Sandys continued to be
+the leader of the company. Moreover, in 1621 he extended his
+power by gaining control of the Somers Island Company through
+the election of Southampton to its governorship.</p>
+
+<p>A question that naturally arises is that of how, or why, Sir
+Edwin was able to survive this challenge to his leadership. The
+news from Virginia was by no means encouraging. Given the
+long record of disappointment there, and the many men who
+previously had died there, the fact that several hundred of the
+most recent settlers had succumbed might have been expected
+to unsettle any administration. Perhaps it was the king's interference,
+serving as it did to rally the adventurers in defence
+of the company's liberty. Perhaps Sir Thomas was guilty of too
+naked a display of his power, with the result that the lesser adventurers,
+who already had been taught to view the great merchants
+of the company with suspicion, rallied to the support of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+Sandys. Perhaps it was because the Earl of Warwick and Sir
+Thomas had not learned yet the need for effective teamwork;
+both men disliked Sandys, but they had their own quarrels and
+they would not form a real coalition against him for another two
+years. All these possibilities must be given consideration, but
+there would seem to be still another reason, possibly the most
+important of all.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Edwin Sandys was a man of remarkable gifts, and nowhere
+are these gifts better demonstrated than in his ability to stimulate
+the highest hopes for Virginia. Before him only Richard Hakluyt,
+a patriot now dead four years, had managed better to depict the
+promise America held for Englishmen. Sandys wrote no major
+work on the subject, and even the company's promotional pamphlets,
+which he undoubtedly shaped in some large part, lacked
+the fire that Hakluyt, or even Alderman Johnson, could impart to
+that branch of literature. It must be said also that Sandys added
+no new idea to those which for a generation past had guided
+Englishmen in their American ventures. His program included
+not a single objective that the Virginia Company had not theretofore
+tried to realize; the chief contrast with former programs
+was the absence of any emphasis on the prospect that a route to
+the South Seas might be found, an objective the adventurers had
+dropped for all practical purposes a good many years before Sandys
+became their treasurer. But Sandys had confidence, a systematic
+and orderly mind, and a persuasive way of talking in the quarter
+court or in conference with the individual adventurer who contemplated
+some new risk of capital. As a result, he managed to
+convey the impression that plans had now been so well thought
+through that Hakluyt's objectives in America had at last become
+attainable.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving aside the search for a passage to China, which may
+never have been so important to Hakluyt as it was to the people
+whose interest in America he sought to enlist, Sandys undertook
+to carry through, all at once, the program Hakluyt had outlined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+for Queen Elizabeth as early as 1584 in his famous "<i>Discourse
+on Western Planting</i>." It was a program that looked to the development
+in America of products that would free England of dependence
+upon trades with other parts of the world which were in
+any way disadvantageous to England, and that would guarantee
+to any Englishmen who developed such products a sure profit on
+their investment. It was a program that had taken its shape first
+from the prospect, in Raleigh's day, of an early war with Spain,
+and perhaps it should be noted that when Sandys came to office
+in 1619 the Thirty Years War had only recently had its beginning
+with the king's own son-in-law a central figure. The war has
+gone down in our history books as the last of the great religious
+wars, and many were the Englishmen who thought that England
+should be, or would be soon involved.</p>
+
+<p>In Virginia, Sandys promised to produce iron. It is strange
+that the attempt to develop an iron industry in Virginia, on which
+the company spent all told something like £5,000, should have
+made less impression on modern historians than has an early and
+brief search for gold that was incidental to other explorations. The
+iron industry in England was suffering from the depletion of the
+island's wood supply, which was still depended upon for smelting,
+and Virginia promised an unlimited supply. Other industries
+that he hoped to develop in the colony are suggested by a list of
+tradesmen the company invited to adventure to Virginia in 1620:
+among them, sawyers, joiners, shipwrights, millwrights, coopers,
+weavers, tanners, potters, fishermen, fishhookmakers, netmakers,
+leather dressers, limeburners, and dressers of hemp and flax. Even
+more important because so much depended upon persuading the
+individual adventurers to invest their own money in the development
+of their land, were plans for the production of sugar, wine,
+indigo, silk, cotton, olive oil, rice, etc. In the development of these
+products Sandys intended the public lands&mdash;those cultivated under
+the direct supervision of the company and by its own tenants&mdash;to
+serve more or less in the capacity of experimental farms. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+their planting he sought seeds and plants from various parts of
+the world. On the college land he had some 10,000 grapevines
+set out, and sent for their care foreign experts imported from
+the continent. To make sure that private estates would not be
+devoted wholly to tobacco, as yet the colony's only proven staple,
+he wrote into land patents a stipulation that other staples would
+be given a trial.</p>
+
+<p>To find the money for investment in the public lands was no
+easy task. No common joint-stock fund could be raised in 1619,
+if only because the company's plans depended chiefly upon the
+hope of inducing the adventurers to invest in their own lands.
+It cannot be said how successful were the renewed attempts to
+collect from delinquent subscribers, but perhaps some help came
+from that source. Sandys depended also, as had Smith before
+him, on the Virginia lottery, perhaps more than upon any other
+source, for the lottery was terminated early in 1621 by order of
+the privy council on grounds that included the complaint of parliament
+that the lottery had become a public nuisance. A very
+substantial help to Sir Edwin was the bishops' fund for an Indian
+college and additional funds raised for the support of an Indian
+school in the colony. The total ran to better than £2,000. It had
+been decided in 1618, well before Sandys' election, that the money
+from the bishops' fund would be invested in an estate to be known
+as the College Land, and the precedent thus set was followed
+in disposing of funds subsequently made available to the company
+for an Indian school. In practical terms, these decisions meant
+that all mission funds were used to send out tenants on the promise
+that a half-share of the wine and other such commodities as
+they might produce would in time provide a permanent endowment
+for the school and the college. The decision reflects both
+the extraordinary poverty of the company and the extraordinary
+confidence with which its leaders approached their new ventures
+in Virginia.</p>
+
+<p>By the spring of 1621, when the bulk of the college funds had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+been expended and the lottery was terminated, Sir Edwin's financial
+resources had become even more skimpy and uncertain.
+Some projects, such as that for the settlement of Italian glass-workers
+who were to manufacture pottery and beads for use in
+the Indian trade, could be financed by subscriptions to a special
+joint-stock, but this device offered no help in meeting general
+expenses. As a result, Sandys continued to take certain shortcuts,
+or perhaps the blame should rest rather on Deputy John Ferrar.
+In any case, the colonists complained that shipping came out so
+overloaded with passengers as to invite the epidemic disease with
+which they usually suffered on landing, and which made of
+newcomers a useless burden on the colony for some time after
+their arrival. The deathrate among the colonists continued to be
+high. The time and energy required to house them, or to feed
+them, unavoidably forced delay with projects on which Sandys
+had pinned his chief hopes. He was especially disappointed over
+the slow progress of agricultural experimentation. Accordingly,
+when Yeardley's three year term was ended in 1621 and Sir
+Francis Wyatt was sent as his replacement, Sir Edwin also sent
+his brother, George Sandys, as appointee to a new office of treasurer.
+He was given special charge of all projects looking to the development
+of new staple commodities and was intrusted with the
+collection of rents, of which the company claimed £1,000 were
+presently due. These rents, which were to be collected largely from
+half-share tenants who had migrated within the preceding three
+years, undoubtedly now constituted the company's main hope for
+an immediate revenue. Except in a very few instances, no quitrents
+would be payable until 1625, and so general had been the disappointment
+experienced so far with special projects that further
+time would have to be allowed before any return from them could
+be expected. In short, the company had exhausted its very limited
+resources in getting Wyatt and George Sandys out to Virginia,
+and had nothing left but hopes for the future and the anticipation
+of a small immediate revenue from the rents of its own tenants,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+most of which had already been assigned to such special charges
+as the support of public officers in the colony. In London, virtually
+the only asset left to the company was the will and determination
+of Sir Edwin Sandys.</p>
+
+<p>In these circumstances, Sandys necessarily devoted his main
+energies after 1621 to the problem of tobacco, the only marketable
+staple the colony had as yet produced. It was an old problem, but
+one now filled with new difficulties. In earlier days, when it had
+been hoped that tobacco might be one of a variety of staples produced
+in the colony, the Virginia Company, like the Bermuda
+Company, had lent encouragement to efforts looking to its production.
+But hardly had early experiments proved successful
+before the adventurers faced the risk that tobacco would take
+over the colony entirely. There is nothing surprising in this development,
+for a tobacco plant, unlike a grapevine or an olive
+tree, matures within a few months of its planting, and the tobacco
+habit at this time was a thing of comparably rapid growth in many
+parts of the world. To settlers who had been staked by adventurers
+ever insistent upon a prompt return of their capital, or who
+wondered how best to procure the means to make payment for
+the supplies brought in the next magazine ship, the obvious answer
+was to plant the land to tobacco. After doing this, if time
+and energy remained, they might try some of Sir Edwin Sandys'
+ideas&mdash;maybe set out a few grapevines or mulberries, as they had
+been instructed to do. There was good reason for the growing fear
+among the leading adventurers in London that tobacco might put
+a blight on all other projects.</p>
+
+<p>More than that, the increasing shipments of tobacco, especially
+in view of the still relatively poor quality of the Virginia leaf,
+gave the colony a bad name just when its good name was so important
+to the promotional efforts of the company. The tobacco
+habit did not yet have the respectable associations it would later
+acquire in the eighteenth century. Instead, it was associated with
+tippling or bawdy houses, where in truth a pipe was most easily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+had by the contemporary resident of London. Moral considerations
+were reinforced by an additional concern for the public interest.
+So much of the weed consumed came from Spain that thoughtful
+men were inclined to consider how much England paid out, to
+the profit of the Spaniard, for a commodity which added nothing
+to the well being of the country. Had it not been for the influence
+of Virginia and Bermuda adventurers in the House of Commons,
+Parliament in 1621 might well have prohibited all importation
+of tobacco into England. And in all England there was no more
+vigorous opponent of tobacco than the king himself. Indeed, the
+king had even written a book on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>The attitude of King James had a most important bearing on
+another angle of the problem. Under its charter, the company
+had been allowed a seven year exemption from import duties on
+cargoes brought from Virginia. When this exemption expired in
+1619, the government immediately imposed a duty that was
+fixed early in 1620 at 1s. per pound of tobacco. Though this was
+only half the duty paid by Spanish tobacco, it was nonetheless
+a heavy burden to be imposed upon leaf that was declared never
+to have sold at more than 5s. a pound and that brought an average
+of only 2s. for the better grade in 1620.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> The adventurers'
+attempted escape by shipping their tobacco to Holland won them
+a sharp reprimand from the privy council, and an order to bring
+all of Virginia's tobacco to England for payment of his majesty's
+customs. As negotiations with the king's ministers for some relief
+continued, it was proposed in 1622 that the Virginia and Bermuda
+adventurers might take over the tobacco monopoly, which was a
+grant of the sole right to import tobacco of any sort into the
+kingdom in return for a fixed contribution to the royal revenues.
+The holder of such a monopoly&mdash;a very common device at the
+time&mdash;was entitled to collect the customs and to hope that what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+he collected, plus the advantage of a monopolistic control of the
+market, might enable him to clear a profit on the transaction.
+Here, in other words, was a proposal that might provide the
+needed relief, even some income for the company's hard pressed
+treasury. The Virginia Company by 1622 was in no position to
+ignore such an opportunity and fortunately, the Sandys faction
+was now in control of the Somers Island Company. A joint committee
+of the two companies, headed by Sir Edwin himself, entered
+into negotiations for what was known as the tobacco contract.</p>
+
+<p>The bitterest factional strife in the history of the London adventurers
+soon followed. It is a complicated story, too complicated
+and too long to be told fully here. Briefly, both the terms agreed
+upon by Sandys and his proposals for the management of the
+contract, proposals which left Sandys and his cohorts in full
+control, touched too closely the vital interests of some of his
+bitterest enemies. In Bermuda, as in Virginia, the hope of an
+early profit from the production of sugar, silk, wine, indigo, and
+other such commodities had proved vain, and like Virginia,
+Bermuda lived by the tobacco it grew. The Earl of Warwick and
+members of his family had made especially heavy investments in
+their Bermuda properties, and Sir Nathaniel Rich became the
+floor leader, as it were, of an attempt to defeat the contract. Sir
+Thomas Smith and his friends joined in the effort. Especially
+objectionable in the view of the opposition were plans for placing
+the management of the contract in the hands of salaried officials,
+with Sir Edwin as director at a salary of £500. At one Virginia
+court, meeting early in December, the debate got so out of hand
+that it required several additional sessions to straighten out the
+minutes in order that appropriate penalties might be imposed
+upon Mr. Samuel Wrote, a member of the Virginia council whose
+unrestrained charges of graft violated the company's rules and
+offended the court's sense of its own dignity. In the end the
+opposition elected to make the final test in a Bermuda court, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+consent was necessary to close the contract and where Sandys'
+opponents included the more substantial investors in that colony.
+The test came in February 1623, and Sandys won. But it could
+be demonstrated that had the vote been by share rather than by
+head, as was the rule in both companies, he would have been
+defeated. Sandys' opponents in the Bermuda Company all along
+had complained of a plan to distribute the charges of the contract
+equally between the two companies, arguing that the Virginia
+tobacco had a greater value and should therefore carry a
+proportionately larger charge. And now they were in a position
+to argue that the Virginia Company, in whose courts for some
+time they had steadfastly refused even to vote on the salary question,
+sought to exploit the younger plantation, as was evidenced
+by the opposition of the adventurers to whom Bermuda's tobacco
+chiefly belonged. With this argument, Sandys' opponents promptly
+carried the whole question before the privy council.</p>
+
+<p>This was in the spring of 1623. During the course of the preceding
+debate, news had come of an Indian massacre in Virginia
+that had cost the lives of over 350 colonists. The faction-ridden
+and bankrupt company had stirred itself to send such aid as it
+could, but now came the word that this had not been enough.
+By the testimony of Sandys' own brother, though this testimony
+may not have been immediately available to his enemies, another
+500 colonists had died before the year was out as a result of the
+dislocations occasioned by the massacre, and as a result of the
+failure of the company to send enough aid. The tobacco contract
+dropped into a position of secondary importance as Sandys' opponents,
+with Alderman Johnson taking the lead, petitioned the
+king for a full investigation of the situation in Virginia and of
+the recent conduct of its affairs.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever one may think of Sir Edwin Sandys, or of the motives
+which inspired his opponents, there can be no question as to the
+correctness of the action taken by the government. The leaders
+of the two factions were called before the privy council on April<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+17, where they displayed so "much heat and bitterness" toward
+one another as to make it difficult to get on with the business. In
+the end, the council won agreement that a special commission
+should be established for an investigation of the state of the colony's
+affairs, the agreement coming finally when the council conceded
+the demand of Sandys' supporters that the investigation
+should begin with the administration of Sir Thomas Smith. Accordingly,
+on May 9, a commission was issued to Sir William
+Jones, justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and six other gentlemen
+"to examine the carriage of the whole business." Meantime,
+a letter had been prepared by the privy council to acquaint the
+colonists with the fact that their affairs had been taken into "His
+Majesty's pious and princely care" and to encourage them "to go
+on cheerfully in the work they have in hand." The central issues
+all pertained to Virginia, but in the circumstances there was no
+choice but to include both companies in the province of the Jones
+commission.</p>
+
+<p>The appointment of the Jones commission ended, for all practical
+purposes, the control of the Virginia Company over the
+colony. The company lingered on as an agency chiefly through
+which the Sandys faction prepared its briefs for the attention of
+the commissioners, or through which orders from the commissioners
+might be implemented. All of the company's records were
+impounded by the commission, which also took charge of all correspondence
+with the colony. The records of the company demonstrated
+all too clearly the bankrupt state of its finances. The
+hearings before the commissioners demonstrated with equal clarity
+the hopeless division of the adventurers by bitter factional strife.
+Correspondence from the colony brought evidence of a desperate
+situation. Even Sandys had to admit that no more than 2,500
+colonists were still alive in the colony, which was to confess an
+attrition, mainly by death, of something over 40 percent of the
+colonists residing in Virginia, or sent to Virginia, since he had
+assumed responsibility for the management of its affairs. Actually,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+the situation was much worse than these figures suggested, for
+a census taken in Virginia early in 1625 showed a total population
+of only 1,275. In the fall of 1623 the privy council invited
+the company to surrender its charter on the promise that a new
+one would be issued to cover all individual rights and grants, but
+with a revision of the plan of government that would place the
+control of the colony under the more immediate supervision of
+the king. In effect, the proposal was to return to something close
+to the original plan of 1606. When the adventurers, in a court
+from which Sandys' enemies largely absented themselves, rejected
+this proposal, the government began quo warranto proceedings
+against the company in the court of Kings Bench. On May 24,
+1624, that court gave its decision for recall of the Virginia charters.
+And so ended the Virginia Company.</p>
+
+<p>The Bermuda Company had been dragged into the investigation
+chiefly because of the close ties joining it to the older company.
+There was no emergency in the colony, and its debts were
+not beyond the capacity of Sir Thomas Smith and other leading
+adventurers to pay. As a result, the Somers Island Company
+lasted on for another sixty years.</p>
+
+<p>One who looks back from 1624 over the brief and frequently
+troubled history of the Virginia Company may debate, as historians
+have often done in the past, just what should be said by way
+of conclusion. Perhaps it is this: here were men who out of their
+disappointment quarreled bitterly and by their quarrels helped
+to destroy an agency through which in the past they had worked
+together, with a remarkable devotion to the public interest, for
+the achievement of great objectives. No doubt, their greatest fault
+had been to set their goals too high. Certainly, their greatest
+virtue was persistence in the faith that great things could be done
+for England in America, a faith destined in time to be justified
+by the course of history.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> For purposes of comparison, it may be noted that Spanish
+tobacco was declared to have been sold for as much as 20s. a pound.
+The "filthy weed" was not yet "the poor man's luxury."</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London,
+1606-1624, by Wesley Frank Craven
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,2378 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624, by
+Wesley Frank Craven
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Virginia Company Of London, 1606-1624
+
+Author: Wesley Frank Craven
+
+Release Date: April 11, 2009 [EBook #28555]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VIRGINIA COMPANY OF LONDON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Diane Monico, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF
+LONDON, 1606-1624
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT(C), 1957 BY
+VIRGINIA 350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
+CORPORATION, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA
+
+Second Printing, 1959
+
+Third Printing, 1964
+
+
+[Transcriber's Note: Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
+that the U. S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+
+
+Jamestown 350th Anniversary
+Historical Booklet Number 5
+
+
+
+
+THE VIRGINIA COMPANY OF LONDON, 1606-1624
+
+
+This is the story of the Virginia Company and only indirectly of the
+Virginia colony. Those who seek an account of the early years at
+Jamestown should turn to another number in this same series. Here the
+focus belongs to the adventurers in England whose hopes gave shape to
+the settlement at Jamestown, and whose determination brought the colony
+through the many disappointments of its first years. In terms of time,
+the story is short, for it begins with the granting of the first
+Virginia charter in 1606 and ends with the dissolution of the company
+in 1624. It thus covers a period of only eighteen years, but during
+these years England's interest in North America was so largely
+expressed through the agency of the Virginia Company that its story
+constitutes one of the more significant chapters in the history both of
+the United States and of the British Empire.
+
+In the beginning there were two companies of the Virginia adventurers,
+the one having its headquarters in London and the other in the western
+outport of Plymouth. Englishmen at that time used the name Virginia to
+designate the full sweep of the North American coast that lay above
+Spanish Florida. In the original Virginia charter the adventurers were
+granted rights of exploration, trade, and settlement on the "Coast of
+Virginia or America" within limits that reached from 34 deg. of latitude
+in the south to 45 deg. in the north, which is to say from the mouth of
+the Cape Fear River in lower North Carolina to a point midway through the
+modern state of Maine. The Plymouth grantees had a primary interest in
+the northern area that Captain John Smith would later name New England,
+and there they established a colony at Sagadahoc in August 1607, only a
+few weeks after the settlement of Jamestown. But the colony barely
+survived the winter, and was abandoned in the spring of 1608.
+Thereafter, the Plymouth adventurers gave up. In contrast, the London
+adventurers persisted, and their persistence served to tie the name of
+Virginia increasingly to them and to their more southerly settlement.
+As a result, the London adventurers became in common usage the Virginia
+adventurers, their company the Virginia Company, and their colony
+Virginia.
+
+The Virginia colony was especially fortunate in having the backing of
+London. Indeed, it may not be too much to suggest that the chief
+difference between the stories of Roanoke Island and of Jamestown was
+the difference that London made. Consistently, the leadership of
+Elizabethan adventures to North America, including those of Gilbert and
+Raleigh, had come from the western counties and outports of England,
+and with equal consistency hopeful projects had foundered on the
+inadequacy of their financial support while London favored other
+ventures--to Muscovy, to the Levant, and more recently to the East
+Indies. It was not merely that London had the necessary capital and
+credit for a sustained effort; it also had experience in the management
+of large and distant ventures, such as those of the East India Company
+over which Sir Thomas Smith presided, as he would preside through many
+years over the Virginia Company. London had too the advantage of its
+proximity to the seat of government in nearby Westminster, where King
+James had his residence, where the highest courts of the realm sat
+periodically, and where England's parliament customarily met. Already,
+in 1606, it was possible to trace in the immediate environs of the
+ancient City of London, itself still medieval in appearance and in the
+organization of much of its life, the broad outlines of the great
+metropolis that has been increasingly the focal point of England's
+development as a modern state.
+
+In thus emphasizing the importance of London to the early history of
+Virginia, one runs the risk of misrepresenting the true character of
+the Virginia adventure. Contrary to the impression that will be gained
+from many of our modern textbooks, the Virginia Company represented
+much more than the commercial interests of the port of London. Its
+membership included many gentlemen and noblemen of consequence in the
+kingdom. Some of them, no doubt, became subscribers to a Virginia
+joint-stock for the same reason that often led members of the landed
+classes in England into commercial ventures. But others, quite
+evidently, subscribed because of a sense of public responsibility, or
+simply because skilfully managed propaganda had put pressure on them to
+accept a responsibility of social or political position. For the
+Virginia adventure was a public undertaking, its aim to advance the
+fortunes of England no less than the fortunes of the adventurers
+themselves.
+
+It would be helpful if we knew more about the original Virginia
+adventurers than we do. The records are so incomplete as to make
+impossible anything approaching a full list of the first subscribers.
+However, enough is known to suggest the broad range of experience and
+interest belonging to those who now joined in a common effort to build
+an empire for England in America. The original charter of 1606 lists
+only eight of the adventurers by name, they being the ones in whose
+names the petition for the charter had been made. This list omits Sir
+John Popham, Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench, who may well have
+been the prime mover in the enterprise, and Sir Thomas Smith, who was
+an active leader from an early date. Four of the eight men listed are
+identified as belonging to the London group. Sir Thomas Gates was a
+soldier and veteran of campaigns in the Netherlands who would later
+serve as the colony's governor. Sir George Somers had led many attacks
+against Spanish possessions in Queen Elizabeth's day, was a member of
+parliament, and would meet his death four years later in Bermuda while
+on a mission of rescue for Virginia. Edward Maria Wingfield was another
+soldier who had fought in the Netherlands. He belonged to a family
+which had acquired extensive estates in Ireland, and he too would go to
+Virginia, where he served as first president of the colony's council.
+The most interesting of the four was Richard Hakluyt, a clergyman whose
+chief mission in life had been the encouragement of overseas adventures
+by his fellow countrymen. To them he had literally given a national
+tradition of adventure by compiling and editing one of the more
+influential books in England's history--_The Principall Navigations,
+Voyages, and Discoveries of the English Nation_, whose reading, in
+Michael Drayton's words, inflamed "Men to seeke fame." Hakluyt had been
+advisor to both Gilbert and Raleigh in their ventures, and since then
+he had consistently promoted the idea that England might best find in
+North America the opportunities that were needed for her prosperity and
+her security.
+
+A significant indication of the extent to which the public interest was
+considered to be involved in the Virginia project is found in the
+provision that was first made for the government of the two colonies.
+The powers of government, which is to say the ultimate right to decide
+and to direct, were vested in a royal council, commonly known as the
+Virginia Council and having its seat in London. Its membership was
+probably drawn exclusively from the two groups of Virginia adventurers,
+but the members were appointed by the king and were sworn to his
+special service. Among the first members were Sir Thomas Smith, chief
+of the London merchants; Sir William Wade, lieutenant of the London
+Tower; Sir Walter Cope, member of parliament for Westminster and
+adventurer in a variety of overseas enterprises; Sir Henry Montague,
+recorder of the City of London; Solicitor General John Doderidge,
+subsequently justice of the Kings Bench; Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who
+later would lead a reviving interest in the settlement of New England
+and still later would become an enemy of the Puritans who so largely
+accomplished that task; Sir Francis Popham, son and heir to the Lord
+Chief Justice; and John Eldred of London, Thomas James of Bristol, and
+James Bagge of Plymouth, each of these three being described as a
+merchant. This assignment of the powers of government proved to be
+awkward, and it denied the adventurers direct control over the more
+important questions affecting their adventures, as in the choice of a
+plan of government for the colony or in the appointment of its key
+officers. Consequently, the adventurers secured a change in the second
+Virginia charter, granted in 1609. It was then specified that members
+of the council thereafter should be "nominated, chosen, continued,
+displaced, changed, altered and supplied, as death, or other several
+occasions shall require, out of the Company of the said Adventurers, by
+the voice of the greater part of the said Company and Adventurers, in
+their Assembly for that purpose." In language less repetitious than
+that used by the company's lawyer, this meant that the council now
+became an agent primarily of the adventurers. Even so, the king
+retained a veto over any choice they might make, for members of the
+council were still required to take a special oath administered by one
+of the high officers of state, and refusal to give the oath could mean
+disqualification for the office. The company's later history would
+show, whatever its legal advisor may have assumed in 1609, that this
+requirement was no mere formality.
+
+It is not easy for the modern American to read with full assurance the
+scanty record of Virginia's first years. How, for example, should he
+interpret the suggestion at the beginning of the first charter that the
+adventurers sought chiefly to propagate the "Christian Religion to such
+people, as yet live in darkness and miserable ignorance of the true
+knowledge and worship of God?" It is simple enough to point out that
+the first adventurers in Jamestown showed very little of the
+missionary's spirit, that they included only one minister, and that he
+had enough to do in ministering to the English settlers. It is also
+easy to draw an obvious contrast between the dedicated missionaries who
+so frequently formed the vanguard of Spanish and French settlement in
+America and the adventurous and often unruly men who first settled
+Virginia. In the absence of immediate and continuing missionary
+endeavors, one is naturally inclined to dismiss professions of a
+purpose to convert the Indian as nothing more than a necessary gesture
+toward convention in an age that was still much closer to the medieval
+period than to our own. And yet, on second thought, one begins to
+wonder just how sophisticated such a conclusion may be. He remembers
+how deep was the rift between Protestantism and Catholicism at that
+time, how fundamental to the patriotism of an Englishman was his long
+defense of a Protestant church settlement against the threat of
+Catholic Spain, and how largely the issues of religious life still
+claimed the first thoughts of men. He then may feel inclined to observe
+that the English adventurers, after all, did undertake to establish a
+mission in Virginia at a relatively early date. True, ten years elapsed
+before the effort to provide a school and college for the Indians had
+its beginning, but these were years of a continuing struggle for the
+very life of the colony itself. In the circumstances, perhaps ten years
+should be viewed as a short time.
+
+Be that as it may, there are other questions that have been even more
+bothersome, if only because they have seemed more pertinent to the
+modern interest in Virginia's history. The American has been accustomed
+to view the Virginia colony as the first permanent settlement in his
+country, as the point at which his own history has its beginning, but
+he finds in the Jamestown colony a pattern of activity somewhat
+different from that he associates with the later development of the
+country. What kind of a colony was it? Was it really a colony? Just
+what were the adventurers trying to accomplish in Virginia? Were they
+actually interested in colonization, in the proper sense of the term,
+or were their objectives commercial? These and other such questions
+have claimed much of the attention of those who have sought to
+interpret for their fellow countrymen the early history of Virginia.
+The difficulty arises partly from the American's insistence that the
+later history of his country be taken as the standard for judging
+every action of the first adventurers, and partly from a failure to
+appreciate the extent to which the earlier ventures in Virginia were
+necessarily exploratory in character.
+
+If one of us could ask the adventurers in 1606 what it was they hoped
+to accomplish in America, he probably would be told that it depended
+very much on what they might find there. Although Richard Hakluyt had
+been most industrious in collecting available information from the
+earlier explorations of North America, including those by Spanish and
+French explorers, the specific information at hand was quite definitely
+limited. By the close of the sixteenth century European explorers had
+charted the broad outlines of the North American coast, and here and
+there they had filled in much of the detail, as had the French in
+Canada, the Spaniard and the Frenchman on the coast of Florida, and the
+Englishman along the coastal regions to be later known as Carolina and
+New England. But the information at the command of the adventurers in
+one country was not always available to those of another; indeed,
+within any one country there were shipmasters who carried in their
+heads working charts of coastal waters wholly unknown to the
+geographers and cartographers who sought to serve the larger interests
+of the nation. Thus the London adventurers in 1606, though having at
+hand a substantial body of useful information regarding the coasts, the
+winds, and the currents running northward from the West Indies past St.
+Augustine to Cape Hatteras, and comparable information regarding the
+more northern waters explored by Frobisher, Davis, Gilbert, and others,
+had only a sketchy knowledge of the intervening coastline that would
+soon be explored by Captain Samuel Argall on commission from the
+Virginia Company and by Henry Hudson, an Englishman temporarily in the
+service of Dutch merchants. Even Chesapeake Bay, to which the London
+adventurers dispatched their first expedition, was known to them
+chiefly by the reports of Indians interrogated by Raleigh's agents as
+they worked out from Roanoke Island. The first colonists in Virginia
+gave to London detailed information regarding the lower Chesapeake and
+the James River, but not until 1608 did Captain John Smith find the
+time to explore the upper reaches of the bay and to identify the great
+rivers emptying into it there. It hardly seems necessary to argue the
+utility of such explorations, to which eloquent testimony exists in the
+new bounds immediately fixed for the colony in the second charter. But
+many have been the attempts to pass judgment on the success or failure
+of the first settlers at Jamestown that have been written as though
+their primary assignment had not been to explore.
+
+Exploration and fortification--these two terms are consistently linked
+in the papers on which the early English adventurers jotted notes for
+their guidance or for the instruction of their agents in America. The
+very first objective of the explorers was to locate a suitable site for
+fortification, in order that further explorations might be conducted
+from a secure base. The fortifications to be raised had to meet
+exacting standards, such as would be approved by the military engineers
+with whom the adventurers consulted along with the geographers, the
+cartographers, and the shipmasters who also possessed useful
+information. For these fortifications were intended to provide security
+not so much against the native Indian as against the ships and soldiers
+of Spain. Over the years there had been some debate as to how the fort
+might be best located, with the result that in 1607 it was decided to
+locate it some distance up a river that would afford navigation for an
+ocean-going vessel but would force the enemy to fight his way inland
+against the disadvantage of the warning that could be given by an outer
+guard at the mouth of the river. Such were the considerations that
+shaped the choice of Jamestown as the site of the first permanent
+English settlement in North America. To stand in the middle of the
+Jamestown peninsula for contemplation of its many disadvantages for the
+purposes of agricultural settlement, and even for the health of its
+people, is to lose sight of the main point. One should walk over
+against the river, and consider there the field of fire that was open
+for well placed guns.
+
+And just what was the Jamestown fort supposed to guard? Was it the few
+acres of the modern county of James City, or the right of Englishmen to
+possess the Virginia peninsula, where so much of importance to our
+national history has found its place? Not at all. It was the right of
+Englishmen to be in North America, to fish the waters that lay off its
+coast, to trade with its inhabitants, and to exploit such other
+opportunities as an unexplored and undeveloped continent might offer.
+How far these opportunities might lead no one could tell in
+advance--perhaps even to China.
+
+A trade with China had been a major objective of English adventure
+since the middle of the sixteenth century, when the Muscovy Company had
+had its origins in an attempt to find a northeast passage around the
+Scandinavian peninsula leading to Cathay--Marco Polo's fabulous kingdom
+of northern China. The explorers found instead a profitable trade with
+the territories of Ivan the Terrible, but the Muscovy merchants
+continued to support a variety of ventures seeking the establishment of
+an Oriental trade. Their agents looked into the possibilities of an
+overland trade through Russia to Cathay, and experimented none too
+profitably with a trans-Russia trade with Persia. They gave their
+support to renewed attempts to find a northeast passage and claimed a
+right of license for the numerous efforts that were made in Elizabeth's
+reign to find a northwest passage around or through North America.
+Failing in these efforts, the English merchants finally had challenged
+Portugal's monopoly of trade with the East Indies by way of the Cape of
+Good Hope. The East India Company, chartered by Elizabeth in 1600, had
+gotten off to a good start, and was destined to become one of the great
+empire builders of Britain's history. In 1606, however, the East India
+merchants had had just enough experience with the new trade to begin to
+appreciate some of its difficulties, as in the need to employ larger
+and more expensive ships than were standard in England's maritime trade
+and the great distance to China by way of the Cape of Good Hope.
+Perhaps, after all, some route through America might have the advantage
+over the Cape route. In the opinion of the late Sir William Foster,
+through many years historiographer of the India Office, this was a
+chief reason for the interest Sir Thomas Smith took in Virginia.
+
+Let it be noted that Sir Thomas' interest in Virginia outlasted the
+hope that a successful search for a passage to China might be based on
+Jamestown. Nevertheless, the point may help to explain the marked
+emphasis on this hope that one finds at the beginning of the project.
+Instructions to the first expedition directed the choice of a seat on
+some navigable river, and added, "if you happen to discover divers
+portable rivers, and mongst them any one that hath two main branches,
+if the difference be not great make choice of that which bendeth most
+toward the North-West, for that way you shall soonest find the other
+sea." The other sea, of course, was the Pacific, or as Englishmen were
+likely to say, the South Seas, whose waters also washed the shores of
+China. Vain as was this hope of trade with the Orient through America,
+it was destined for survival, in one form or another, through many
+years. As late as the middle of the nineteenth century, it would be a
+principal argument for the construction of a trans-continental railway.
+
+In 1606 the supposition was that the river system of North America
+might be like that of Russia, where easy portages joining rivers
+flowing in different directions made it possible to travel, most of the
+way by boat, from the north to the south of the country and return.
+"You must observe," advised the adventurers, "whether the river on
+which you plant doth spring out of mountains or out of lakes; if it be
+out of any lake, the passage to the other sea will be the more easy,
+and [it] is like enough that out of the same lake you shall find some
+spring which runs the contrary way toward the East India Sea; for the
+great and famous rivers of Volga, Tanis and Dwina have three heads
+near joynd, and yet the one falleth into the Caspian Sea, the other
+into the Euxine Sea, and the third into the Polonian Sea." For this
+information, the Virginia adventurers were indebted to the Muscovy
+Company, with which Captain Christopher Newport, who commanded the
+ships dispatched to Virginia, had formerly served. It was a good enough
+working theory, based partly on knowledge of the geography of Russia
+and partly on interrogation of the Indians in Carolina by Raleigh's
+men. And the rivers of that part of North America which lies east of
+the Mississippi form just such a system as the Virginia adventurers
+envisaged, except for the fact that the Ohio and other westward flowing
+streams do not empty into the Pacific.
+
+The modern American has usually looked upon such a venture as this as
+something distinctly apart from an agricultural type of endeavor, but
+there is good reason for believing that the London adventurers took a
+different view. They understood the dependence of agriculture upon an
+opportunity to market its products, and they considered the success of
+their commercial ventures to be the surest and the quickest way of
+providing easy access to a market. If a new and practicable route to
+China could be found in America, any colony located close at hand to
+the portage along which the goods of the Orient were moved for
+transshipment to England would find a ready market for food and other
+provisions by supplying the ships engaged in a highly profitable trade.
+More than that, the plenty and the regularity of this shipping would
+provide easy freightage for the encouragement of a variety of
+agricultural and horticultural experiments looking to the production of
+such commodities as sugar, ginger, wine, or vegetable dyes and oils.
+The adventurers well understood the advantage to be gained by
+duplicating the success previously won by the Portuguese and Spaniards
+with such experiments in the Azores, in Madeira, in the Canaries, and
+more recently in the West Indies.
+
+To put the point briefly, Virginia was founded upon many different
+hopes for profitable undertakings--some of them commercial, some
+agricultural, and some industrial. The records show an early interest
+in several extractive industries, including mining, not just for gold
+but for copper and iron as well. First instructions for trade with the
+native Indians reveal an immediate concern for the establishment of
+good relations with them and for laying in a good stock of Indian corn
+as a food reserve, but they show too a concern for the policies that
+would shape the development of a wider trade. Provision in the charter,
+and in the instructions of the royal council, for the creation of
+individual estates according to the laws and customs of England, not to
+mention the guarantee of full legal rights for the inhabitants of the
+colony and for their children, leave no more room for speculation as to
+the intended permanence of the settlement than there is doubt as to the
+expected diversity of its economic activity. But for the time being,
+first things must take first place. Until it had been demonstrated that
+Virginia could provide profitable freightage for the ships of England,
+her future rested upon an insecure foundation. Hence, the initial
+emphasis on the type of activity which promised the more immediate or
+the greater return.
+
+Newport's fleet of the _Susan Constant_, the _Godspeed_, and the
+_Discovery_ sailed for Virginia in December 1606. While the adventurers
+waited for his return and report on the first discoveries, the Spanish
+ambassador excitedly reported to Spain that the English intended to
+send two vessels to Virginia each month until "they have 2,000 men in
+that country." Actually the plan seems to have been quite different.
+Lord Chancellor Egerton is reported to have declared in 1609: "We ...
+thought at first we would send people there little by little." Whatever
+the plan, this was the practice. Newport's total complement in the
+first fleet was 160 men of whom 104 remained in the colony. He was back
+at Plymouth by late July 1607, and from Plymouth he came on to London
+in August. For cargo he carried clapboard, and his sailors had picked
+up so much sassafras root that the leaders of the colony feared that
+the market for this established staple of the American trade might be
+ruined. He brought with him also ore which he hoped an assay would
+prove to be gold, and he declared the country to be rich in copper.
+With some exaggeration, he announced explorations "into the country
+near two hundred miles" and the discovery of "a river navigable for
+great shippes one hundred and fifty miles." The adventurers responded
+by sending him out again, in October 1607, with 120 prospective
+settlers and what would be greeted in Jamestown as the first supply.
+
+All told, Captain Newport would make five round trips between England
+and Virginia before ending a career that included service of the
+Muscovy Company by dying on the island of Java as an agent of the East
+India Company. He has found no important place in the American
+tradition, partly because Captain John Smith, the Virginia colony's
+first historian, took care to see that Captain Newport did not have a
+hero's role. But those of us who would understand the context in which
+our history first developed will do well to consider the career of
+Christopher Newport.
+
+In carrying out the second supply, which reached Jamestown in September
+1608, Newport had aboard 70 new colonists, including two women and
+eight Polish and German experts in the manufacture of glass, tar,
+pitch, and soap ashes. He had a broad commission for completing the
+exploration of the James River above the falls that much later would
+fix the site of Richmond, and for determining the fate of Raleigh's
+lost colony. He found no answer to that riddle, which remains to our
+own day an intriguing mystery; indeed, he seems not to have found the
+time for any real investigation of the problem. As a result, he brought
+back only rumors of four survivors living on the Chowan River. The
+instruction gains its chief interest from the suggestion it conveys of
+a renewed interest on the part of the adventurers in the area
+previously explored by Raleigh's men. Perhaps the adventurers
+anticipated the further disappointments resulting from the additional
+exploration of the James, and so thought again of the Roanoke River,
+which Captain Ralph Lane had partly explored in 1585 and 1586 with the
+hope that it might lead to China. Perhaps they had an eye mainly for
+the publicity that could be had for any news of Raleigh's colonists.
+Whatever the fact, a renewed interest in the Carolina region would find
+very concrete expression in a new charter the adventurers secured
+shortly after Newport's return to England in January 1609.
+
+The actual bounds of the Jamestown colony under the first Virginia
+charter ran 100 miles along the coast and 100 miles inland from the
+coast. This, at any rate, was the area to which title was promised by
+the charter. The second charter gave title to an area reaching 200
+miles both northward and southward along the coast from Point Comfort,
+at the mouth of the James, and "up into the Land throughout from Sea to
+Sea, West and Northwest." In these greatly enlarged bounds one
+immediately detects three major interests: (1) a desire to control the
+entire extent of any passage that might be found to the South Seas, (2)
+the hope that something might be accomplished in Carolina, and (3) the
+need for a title to the whole of the Chesapeake, whose exploration had
+been completed by Captain John Smith in the preceding summer. In this
+exploration Captain Smith had pointed the way for the colony's later
+expansion, but at the moment the adventurers seem to have viewed the
+Chesapeake as having value chiefly for its fish and trade and for
+further exploration. Dissatisfied with Jamestown, as a place that was
+both unhealthy and exposed to attack from the sea, they advised Sir
+Thomas Gates, on the eve of his departure for Virginia in the spring of
+1609 as the newly appointed lieutenant governor of the colony, to move
+his principal city above the falls on the James, where he would enjoy
+every advantage in an attack by a European foe, or better still, that
+he locate it on the Chowan River in modern North Carolina, "foure
+dayes Journey from your forte Southewards." In an earlier passage of
+his instructions, he had already been advised that he should be guided
+by the general principle of seeking the sun, "which is under God the
+first cause both of health and Riches."
+
+Those who bother to read Gates' instructions will notice the emphasis
+they place on the choice of a _principal_ seat. There were to be other
+towns, and Jamestown would be kept as the chief port of entry, though
+not as the site of the main magazine and storehouse. All told, perhaps
+three "habitations" would be enough for the settlers now to be
+transported. Their number was nothing less than 600 persons, men,
+women, and children--more than all the men who had been sent to
+Virginia in the preceding two years. If the reported statement of Lord
+Chancellor Egerton be accepted, the adventurers after two years of
+exploratory effort had come to feel that "the proper thing is to
+fortify ourselves all at once, because when they will open their eyes
+in Spain they will not be able to help it, and even tho' they may hear
+it, they are just now so poor that they will have no means to prevent
+us from carrying out our plan." It was indeed a poor year for Spain,
+which in 1609 had to agree to a truce in the long struggle with the
+Dutch that ultimately brought legal recognition of the independence of
+Holland. This was the year which also witnessed the exploration by
+Henry Hudson of the river that has ever since borne his name, a river
+on which the Dutch would soon lay the foundations of a shortlived North
+American empire. Only the year before had the French built their fort
+at Quebec. And now the English were determined to fortify Virginia "all
+at once." A once proud monopoly of the new world, and of its
+opportunities, was to be finally broken.
+
+The London to which Newport returned late in January, 1609, was already
+astir with preparations for an adventure such as England had never seen
+before. He sat in consultation with Sir Thomas Smith, as did Richard
+Hakluyt, and Thomas Hariot, who as a young man just out of Oxford had
+gone to Roanoke Island for Raleigh in 1585, and whose _True Report of
+Virginia_, published in 1588, still remained a chief dependence of the
+London adventurers. Hakluyt was preparing for publication a translation
+of the Gentleman of Elva's account of De Soto's expedition through the
+southeastern part of the later United States, an account published in
+April as _Virginia Richly Valued_. To this he added in June a
+translation from Marc Lescarbot's _Histoire de la Nouvelle-France_ for
+the purpose of demonstrating that Virginia "must be far better by
+reason it stands more southerly nearer to the sun." Broadsides
+scattered about London announced the special opportunities awaiting
+those who would join in the new venture, while clergymen in their
+pulpits lent the aid of divine sanction, as in Robert Gray's _Good
+Speed to Virginia_. The broad outlines of the new plan had been
+presented to the public in February by Alderman Robert Johnson in a
+tract entitled _Nova Britannia: Offering Most Excellent Fruites by
+Planting in Virginia_. By the end of that month the adventurers had
+also completed negotiations for the granting of the second charter, and
+had opened their books for subscription to a new joint-stock fund.
+
+The device of the joint-stock fund had been increasingly relied upon by
+English adventurers as they sought the means for financing more distant
+and more expensive ventures. It had the advantage of pooling the
+resources of more than one individual, and of distributing the risk,
+and the Virginia adventure had depended upon joint-stock methods of
+finance from the beginning. It is impossible to speak with exactness
+regarding the financial arrangements of the first years. A provision in
+the first instructions directing the settlers to live, work, and trade
+together in a common stock through a period of five years suggests the
+possibility of a five-year terminable stock, i.e., a fund that would be
+invested and reinvested through a term of five years before it was
+divided, together with the earnings thereon. But other evidence
+indicates that there may have been a separate stock for each of
+Newport's voyages, as was the case with each of the early voyages of
+the East India Company to the Orient. The so-called joint-stock company
+of that day rarely had a permanent joint-stock of the sort identified
+with the modern corporation. Instead, it functioned as a governing body
+representing all of the merchants engaged in a particular trade, who
+traded individually or through a variety of joint-stocks invested under
+the general regulation of the company. And such was the character of
+the Virginia Company.
+
+Whatever may have been the specific terms offered earlier investors,
+those offered in 1609 are clear enough. It was proposed that men
+subscribe at the rate of L12 10s. per share to a common stock that
+would be invested and reinvested over the term of the next seven years.
+Although special good fortune might justify a dividend of some part of
+the earnings at an earlier date, there would be no final dividend,
+which at that time meant a division of capital as well as the earnings
+thereof, until 1616. The dividend promised then would include a grant
+of land in Virginia as well as a return of the capital with profit. How
+much land depended, like the profit, on the degree of success that had
+attended the venture meantime.
+
+One of the inducements for subscription was a promise that all
+adventurers would have a voice in determining the policies of the
+company. Again, it is impossible to say just what had been the
+organization through which the adventurers had previously functioned.
+They probably followed custom by meeting in assemblies or courts (both
+terms were common) when some joint decision was needed, and no doubt
+they relied on the designation of such committees and officers as were
+necessary for the execution of decisions reached in their assembly. It
+may be that the adventurers sitting on the Virginia Council functioned
+also in the character of an executive committee for their fellows. In
+view of the well known tendency for institutions to evolve out of
+earlier practices, with such adjustments as experience may dictate,
+there is reason for believing that important features of the
+organization outlined in the second charter were older than the charter
+itself. But the charter of 1609 offers the first unmistakable evidence
+as to the organization upon which the adventurers depended.
+
+They were there incorporated by the name of "The Treasurer and Company
+of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London, for the first Colony
+in Virginia." Sir Thomas Smith was designated treasurer with power to
+warn and summon the members of the council and of the company "to their
+courts and meetings." The adventurers, "or the major part of them which
+shall be present and assembled for that purpose" were empowered to make
+grants of land according to "the proportion of the adventurer, as to
+the special service, hazard, exploit, or merit of any person so to be
+recompenced, advanced, or rewarded." They were to meet also as occasion
+required for the election of members of the council, which was charged
+with the management of the enterprise on the ground that it was not
+convenient "that all the adventurers shall be so often drawn to meet
+and assemble." The members of the council were listed by name, more
+than fifty of them, beginning with Henry, Earl of Southampton, and
+including the Lord Mayor of London, the Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells,
+Thomas, Lord De la Warr, Sir William Wade, Sir Oliver Cromwell, Sir
+Francis Bacon, Sir Maurice Berkeley, Sir Thomas Gates, Sir Walter Cope,
+Sir Edwin Sandys, Sir Thomas Roe, Sir Dudley Digges, John Eldred, and
+John Wolstenholme. These and their colleagues of the council, which
+included of course Sir Thomas Smith, were the great men of the company,
+not necessarily the heaviest investors but those whose experience, or
+social and political position, argued that they should be on the
+managing board. In short, the subscribers had a basic right to choose
+the directors of the business and to determine the division of its
+rewards, but the great men would run it.
+
+For the assurance of the adventurers, each of them was listed by name
+in the charter--all told, some 650 of them. In addition to the
+individuals there named, the charter listed some fifty London companies
+which had subscribed in their corporate capacity in response to the
+appeals of London's clergymen and the Lord Mayor. To list all these
+companies would be tedious, but some of them should be named, if only
+for the picture they give of London itself. Here were "the Company of
+Mercers, the Company of Grocers, the Company of Drapers, the Company of
+Fishmongers, the Company of Goldsmiths, the Company of Skinners, the
+Company of Merchant-Taylors, the Company of Haberdashers, the Company
+of Salters, the Company of Ironmongers, the Company of Vintners, the
+Company of Clothworkers, the Company of Dyers, the Company of Brewers,
+the Company of Leathersellers, the Company of Pewterers, the Company of
+Cutlers," and others, including the companies to which belonged the
+city's cordwainers, barber-surgeons, masons, plumbers, innholders,
+cooks, coopers, bricklayers, fletchers, blacksmiths, joiners, weavers,
+plasterers, stationers, upholsterers, musicians, turners, and glaziers.
+This was a national effort, but in a special way it was London's effort
+to serve the nation in response to a call from its leaders.
+
+There is reason to believe that the terms of the charter had been
+agreed upon by the end of February, but the document remained unsealed
+until May, when all who had subscribed could be listed. By that date,
+too, some 600 subjects of the king had agreed to make the adventure in
+person to Virginia. Some of them were smart enough to discount the
+propaganda that had persuaded them, and so they settled for the wages
+offered by the company. But others agreed to go on adventure, i.e. to
+accept the adventurers' offer that their personal adventure to
+Virginia would be counted as one share, at the minimum, in the common
+joint-stock. This was to say that they would be entitled to whatever
+rewards in 1616 might belong to any subscriber in England for L12 10s.;
+and if the personal adventure of the settler in Virginia was considered
+to be worth more, as in the case of a surgeon or one of the high
+officers of the colony, then might the rights of an adventurer in
+Virginia run as high as any belonging to the great adventurers in
+England. The colonists who came to America in 1609 were thus encouraged
+to view themselves as being in no way inferior to those who sent them.
+
+Sir George Somers had been selected as admiral of the great fleet which
+dropped down the Thames from London on May 15 and sailed from Plymouth
+on the second of June with a full complement of nine vessels. Somers
+rode aboard the _Sea Adventure_, whose master was Newport and whose
+passengers included Sir Thomas Gates and William Strachey, the newly
+appointed secretary of the colony. Ahead of them had gone Captain
+Samuel Argall, to find a new route to Virginia running north of the
+Spanish West Indies, and to make a test of the Chesapeake fisheries.
+Somers guided his ships along a route that had long been familiar to
+him, the route discovered by Columbus for Spain and the route that
+Newport and other English adventurers had consistently followed to the
+more southern parts of Virginia, but he tried to stay above the
+channels regularly followed by the ships of Spain. Such, at any rate,
+were his instructions, and for seven weeks out of Plymouth all went
+well. But then a storm struck, no doubt an early hurricane of the sort
+so familiar to residents of the east coast today, a storm which
+separated the _Sea Adventure_ from the other vessels and carried it to
+destruction off the coast of Bermuda. Providence brought crew and
+passengers, all 150 of them, safely ashore to begin an idyll that would
+be celebrated in Shakespeare's _Tempest_ and would be turned to
+advantage by the adventurers in their later propaganda. In Bermuda they
+found food in plenty--fish, fowl, and hogs that ran wild--and a most
+healthful climate. But for almost a year Virginia would struggle
+without the leadership of Somers, Newport, or Gates, and without the
+sure authority of instructions and commissions they had carried aboard
+the _Sea Adventure_.
+
+After ten months the shipwrecked colonists had fashioned from the
+cedars of Bermuda, which reminded them of the cedars of Lebanon, two
+small vessels named the _Patience_ and the _Deliverance_. The ships
+were stoutly enough built to carry the full company to Virginia in May
+1610, but at Jamestown they found only want and confusion. The other
+vessels in Somers' fleet had straggled into the bay the preceding
+summer with their storm-tossed passengers, but the following winter had
+been a nightmare. This was the winter that was destined long to be
+remembered as the starving time, the time when one man was reported
+even to have eaten his wife. Only a handful of the settlers, new and
+old, had survived, and Somers and Gates saw no choice but to abandon
+the colony. It was saved by the providential arrival early in June of
+Lord De la Warr, who brought with him 150 new colonists and a
+commission as the colony's governor. Somers went back to Bermuda in the
+hope of laying in a stock of pork for Virginia, but there he died and
+his seamen ran for England.
+
+The disturbing news of these tragic events reached London piecemeal.
+First came the news in the fall of 1609 that the _Sea Adventure_, with
+Somers, Gates, Newport, and Strachey, had been lost. This was a severe
+blow to the leaders of the company, who had planned to send De la Warr
+out with perhaps as many colonists as Somers had carried. Already the
+enthusiasm engendered by the promotional campaign of the preceding
+spring had begun to decline, as some men took second thought.
+Subscriptions at that time had been enlisted on an understanding that
+they might be paid in installments, and the adventurers now often found
+it difficult to collect what had been promised. During the winter they
+published an extraordinarily frank promotional piece, _A True and
+Sincere Declaration of the Purpose and Ends of the Plantation Begun in
+Virginia_. In this pamphlet, they did the best they could to stir again
+the high hopes of the preceding spring, but they had to admit what all
+London knew, that the news was not encouraging. And so they appealed to
+the honor of the subscribers, that they remember those in Virginia who
+had staked their lives on the promises made by other men. It must be
+said that the adventurers did very well indeed, in the circumstances,
+to get De la Warr away in the spring with three vessels and 150
+recruits for the colony.
+
+Had he been able to send back a favorable report on the situation in
+Virginia, the adventurers probably would have found their position not
+too difficult. Instead, Sir Thomas Gates returned to London in
+September 1610 with a report that caused the adventurers to consider
+seriously whether the whole project should not be abandoned. Gates
+himself was subsequently credited with having clinched the decision in
+favor of continuance by arguing that sugar, wine, silk, iron, sturgeon,
+furs, timber, rice, aniseed, and other valuable commodities could be
+produced in Virginia, given the necessary time and support. The
+adventurers saw also the promotional possibilities of Somers' shipwreck
+at Bermuda, or rather, the remarkable experience which had followed it.
+Was this not an encouraging sign of God's providential care? Of His
+willingness to support the English in Virginia? This was a question
+London was invited to contemplate again and again during the months
+that followed.
+
+No doubt, the courage of a few key leaders, among whom Sir Thomas Smith
+was now quite definitely the chief, had a large part in the decision to
+continue. Certainly, it took courage to launch the new campaign for
+funds to which the adventurers committed themselves in the fall of
+1610. The estimated need ran to L30,000. All former subscribers were
+urged to subscribe another L37 10s. on agreement that the subscription
+would be paid in at the rate of L12 10s. per year over the next three
+years. Others were invited to subscribe on the same terms. The Lord
+Mayor appealed once more to the London companies, and plans were made
+for inviting the other towns of England to contribute. In November the
+Company published _A True Declaration of the Estate of the Colonie in
+Virginia_ for the purpose of refuting "scandalous reports" tending to
+discourage subscriptions. Richard Rich presented, probably at the
+suggestion of the adventurers, his _Newes from Virginia, the Lost
+Flocke Triumphant_, a poem celebrating the shipwreck of the _Sea
+Adventure_ and the providential survival of its passengers. And to this
+Silvanus Jourdan added his _Discovery of the Barmudas_, a pamphlet
+recounting the experience of Somers and his colleagues in the islands.
+It was written, declared the author, "for the love of my country; and
+... the good of the plantation in Virginia."
+
+It is not so remarkable that the adventurers failed to achieve their
+goal of L30,000 as that they actually secured the subscription of
+approximately L18,000 by the spring of 1611. The records of the company
+are so incomplete for any time prior to 1619, when the only surviving
+court minutes have their beginning, that it is impossible to give the
+comparative figures one would like to have. But there is evidence
+suggesting that the fund raised in 1609 may not have been larger than
+L10,000. If this be true, the success of this second campaign for funds
+becomes all the more remarkable. One can hardly explain it in terms of
+the ordinary calculations of a business community. Perhaps the
+adventurers believed their own propaganda, were themselves responsive
+to the kind of patriotic appeal that was made in the spring of 1610,
+when they were trying to get Lord De la Warr's expedition ready. "The
+eyes of all Europe," said the adventurers, "are looking upon our
+endeavours to spread the Gospell among the heathen people of Virginia,
+to plant an English nation there, and to settle a trade in those parts,
+which may be peculiar to our nation, to the end we may thereby be
+secured from being eaten out of all profits of trade by our more
+industrious neighbors."
+
+With the new funds, the adventurers equipped two expeditions which
+sailed for Virginia in the spring of 1611. The first to leave carried
+300 men, in three ships, under the command of Sir Thomas Dale, another
+veteran of the Netherlands fighting who had been commissioned as
+marshal of the colony. It was impossible not to be impressed by the
+evidence that a lack of discipline had contributed to the colony's
+woes, and Dale, who sailed in March, undoubtedly was intended to draw
+upon his experience as a soldier for the better discipline of the
+colonists. Sir Thomas Gates, who followed Dale out in May, had a
+broader task. He would continue to serve as the lieutenant governor
+under Lord De la Warr, and, like Dale, he carried 300 passengers. But
+his six ships also carried much more. One of the basic problems of
+original colonization, though it has often been lost sight of, was to
+stock the colony with cattle, hogs, poultry, etc. Later colonists, in
+Maryland or Carolina, would buy these essentials in Virginia, but the
+Virginia colonists had no established neighbor of their own nation on
+which to rely, and during the starving time they had literally eaten
+themselves out of stock. Nothing could better illustrate the fact that
+the Virginia adventurers in 1611 had to begin all over again than the
+100 cattle, the 200 swine, and the poultry in unspecified numbers Gates
+had aboard his ships as they set their course westward. And if any one
+wishes to estimate the value of a cow that had been transported across
+the Atlantic, let him notice the penalty imposed by Dale's laws, so
+called, for killing one.
+
+As Gates dropped down the Thames in May, the adventurers must have
+relaxed with the satisfaction that comes from real achievement. Twice
+now, within the span of two years, they had raised a great fund with
+which they sent each time nine vessels and 600 colonists to Virginia.
+Indeed, they had done even more. Counting Argall's ship, which sailed
+ahead of Somers in the spring of 1609, and the three vessels going over
+with De la Warr in 1610, the company had dispatched to Virginia no less
+than 22 vessels and close to 1,400 colonists in a two year period. But
+Gates had hardly cleared the coasts of England before Lord De la Warr,
+of all persons, turned up in London, to the great consternation of his
+fellow adventurers.
+
+A general assembly of the adventurers on June 25 listened to his
+explanation, which was promptly published by order of the council.
+The story briefly was this. Ever since he had reached Virginia
+the preceding June he had suffered a succession of violent
+sicknesses--fevers, the flux, gout, and finally scurvy, "till I was
+upon the point to leave the world." In preference to this he left
+Virginia in a vessel commanded by Argall, and in the hope that he might
+recover his health with the aid of hot baths in the West Indies.
+Contrary winds had forced him to alter his course to the Azores, where
+oranges and lemons had cured him of the scurvy. He then resolved to
+return to his post, but was persuaded to seek first a full recovery of
+health "in the naturall ayre of my countrey." He deplored the ill
+effects on the Virginia project of his return home, but argued that it
+would have been far worse for Virginia had he remained there only to
+die.
+
+A nice advertisement this for the healthfulness of Virginia's climate.
+One might wonder at the council's decision to publish the report were
+it not for the obvious fact that the alternative would have been worse
+still. Some explanation had to be given the public, for the adventurers
+had counted heavily on the presence of Lord De la Warr in Virginia to
+offset the discouragement of earlier reports from Jamestown, as their
+promotional literature amply demonstrates. He was a nobleman, the head
+of a great family, and a member of His Majesty's Council for Virginia.
+"Now know yee," reads the commission he had received in February 1610,
+"that we his Majesties said Councell upon good advise and deliberation
+and upon notice had of the wisedome, valour, circumspection, and of the
+virtue and especiall sufficiencie of the Right Honourable Sir Thomas
+West, Knight Lord la Warr to be in principall place of authoritie and
+government in the said collonie, and finding in him the said Lord la
+Warr propensness and willingness to further and advance the good of
+the said plantation, by virtue of the said authoritie unto us given by
+the said letters pattents have nominated, made, ordained and apointed
+... the said Sir Thomas West, Knight Lord la Warr to be principall
+Governor, Commander and Captain Generall both by land and sea over the
+said colonie and all other collonies planted or to be planted in
+Virginia or within the limits specified in his Majesties said letters
+pattents and over all persons, Admiralls Vice-Admirals and other
+officers and commanders whether by sea or land of what qualitie soever
+for and during the term of his natural life, and do hereby ordaine and
+declare that he the said Lord la Warr during his life shall be stiled
+and called by the name and title of Lord Governor and Captain General
+of Virginia." And now, after little more than a year and before the
+subscribers to the new joint-stock fund had paid in their second
+installment, the Lord Governor and Captain General of Virginia was back
+in London to make a public confession that in Virginia he had nearly
+died of the ague, flux, and scurvy. From time to time thereafter the
+company publicly suggested that the Lord Governor might soon return to
+his post, but he did not undertake to do so until 1618 and then he died
+on the way.
+
+Once more the leaders of the company showed determination. Delinquent
+subscribers were carried to court in a series of chancery actions
+extending into 1614. How much was collected in this way cannot be said,
+but the complaints entered in chancery have provided most helpful clues
+to an understanding of the company's financial history. It seems
+unlikely that anything collected as a result of these actions served to
+do more than reduce an indebtedness incurred by the company in 1611 on
+the promise of its subscribers. One thing is certain: there was no
+chance of floating another subscription. By 1612 the adventurers were
+complaining that only the name of God was more frequently profaned in
+the streets and market places of London than was the name of Virginia.
+After that year the Virginia lottery, its winning tickets entitling the
+holder to an exchange for shares in the Virginia joint-stock, became
+the company's chief dependence. Now and again there would also be found
+some person who wanted to go to Virginia at his own cost, and was
+willing to pay the cost in return for shares of stock guaranteeing an
+ultimate title to land in the colony. These transactions, at a time
+when Virginia's name had lost its magic, were perhaps too few to
+suggest to any one of the adventurers that here was the future, not
+only of the company, but of English colonization in North America.
+Although the Virginia Company continued to be active for thirteen years
+after 1611, the last of its great joint-stock funds was the one to
+which men made their subscriptions just before Lord De la Warr came
+home.
+
+To this statement perhaps a qualification should be added. Virginia at
+first had been to Englishmen America itself, and so it had remained in
+a very real sense, despite an obvious tendency since 1609 for the
+adventurers to pin their hopes increasingly on what might be found
+within the reach of Jamestown. The continuance of the Virginia
+adventure became thus not simply a matter of keeping the Jamestown
+colony alive. What mattered was that somewhere in North America the
+great task to which the company had committed itself should go forward.
+And where better, after 1611, could this be tried than in the Bermudas?
+Divine providence had pointed the way, so clearly that it might even be
+possible to raise the needed funds in London. Moreover, Sir George
+Somers, by being shipwrecked there and subsequently by dying there, had
+provided a name for the islands that was both English and suggestive of
+a climate so healthful that even Lord De la Warr might prosper there.
+Accordingly, the leading members of the Virginia Company in 1612
+undertook the colonization of the Somers Islands, a designation often
+written as the Summer Islands, and for that purpose they subscribed to
+a new joint-stock fund. The Bermuda joint-stock, however, seems to
+have been a much more modest fund than that subscribed either in 1609
+or 1611.
+
+There was nothing unusual in thus creating within the framework of the
+Virginia Company a special stock for investment under the direction of
+its own officers and committees in the colonization of Bermuda. In the
+great companies of London it was customary that each stock should be
+separately administered. The only technical difficulty lay in the fact
+that Bermuda was located outside the geographical limits granted the
+Virginia adventurers. Under the second of their charters, rights at sea
+(on both seas) had extended out from the coasts for only 100 miles,
+which for the purposes of 1612 was not far enough. The adventurers,
+therefore, sought and secured a third charter granting them rights
+along the coast of Virginia, within the limits of 41 deg. and 30 deg. of
+northerly latitude, to a distance of 300 leagues, in order to include
+"divers Islands lying desolate and uninhabited, some of which are
+already made known and discovered by the industry, travel, and expences
+of the said Company, ... all and every of which it may import the said
+Colony [of Virginia] both in safety and policy of trade to populate and
+plant."
+
+This extension of bounds undoubtedly represents the chief reason for
+seeking the third Virginia charter, but the leaders of the company,
+while they had the opportunity, also included other significant
+provisions. Especially significant was a decision to enlarge the
+authority belonging to the general assembly of the adventurers. To its
+former prerogatives, which had been chiefly to elect members of the
+council and to determine the apportionment of lands, the third charter
+added three fundamental rights: to elect all officers of either company
+or colony, to admit new members to the fellowship of the company, and
+to draft laws and ordinances for the welfare of the plantation.
+Heretofore, the council had been the true governing body, though
+subject to a right of election and displacement by the adventurers in
+general assembly. Now the general court of the adventurers was to
+govern, with the council as its executive agency. Since voting in the
+Virginia courts, as in those of other companies at the time, was by
+head rather than by share, this provision of the charter can be
+interpreted only as an attempt by the great men of the company to
+encourage a renewed interest on the part of the general body of
+adventurers by enlarging their influence on the conduct of the
+company's affairs. It was the third charter which also authorized the
+establishment of the Virginia lottery--the first of many attempts in
+American history to exploit the gambler's instinct for the support of a
+worthy cause. In the charter the king also gave assurance that his
+courts would view favorably the company's suits against delinquent
+subscribers.
+
+[Illustration: Merchants of Virginia.
+
+The Company of Merchants, called _Merchants of Virginia_, _Bermudas_,
+or _Summer-Ilands_, for (as I heare) all these additions are given
+them. I know not the time of their incorporating neither by whom their
+Armes, Supporters, and Crest were granted, and therefore am compelled
+to leaue them abruptly.
+
+From John Stow, _Survey of London_, 1632
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Virginia Seal
+
+Courtesy Mrs. L. T. Jester and Mrs. P. W. Hiden]
+
+[Illustration: A Declaration for the certaine time of dravving the
+great standing Lottery
+
+Heading for the Broadside issued by _The Virginia Company_, London,
+1615
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library. From photograph in Virginia Historical
+Society.]
+
+[Illustration: Royal Exchange, London. As it was in the time of the
+Virginia Company.
+
+Photo by New York Public Library]
+
+[Illustration: Captain John Smith
+
+From _The London Company of Virginia_ (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: THOMAS WEST, _Third Lord de la Warr_
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: SIR THOMAS SMITH (or SMYTHE)
+
+"The Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Smith, of London, Knight, one of his
+Maiesties Councell for Virginia, and Treasurer for the Colonie, and
+Gouernour of the Companies of the Moscovia and East India Merchants"
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of The Skinners' Company, London.
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Henry Wriothesley
+
+(Third Earl of Southampton)
+
+From the painting by Michiel Jansz van Miereveldt
+
+From _The London Company of Virginia_ (New York and London, 1908)
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: SIR EDWIN SANDYS
+
+From the Original Portrait by an Unknown Artist, now in the possession
+of Sir Edmund Arthur Lechmere, Bart, Bramham Gardens, London, England
+
+From Alexander W. Weddell, _Virginia Historical Portraiture_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: Sir Thomas Dale
+
+Portrait by an unknown artist of the Anglo-Flemish School painted in
+oils early in the 17th Century. The original portrait is preserved in
+the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+[Illustration: HENRY STUART
+
+_Prince of Wales_
+
+From Alexander Brown, _The Genesis of the United States_
+
+Photo by Virginia State Library.]
+
+The new charter having received the final seal in March 1612, a new
+colony was established in Bermuda in the following July. Its early
+history has a double significance for the later history of Virginia. In
+the first place, the Bermuda colony emphasizes the growing interest of
+the adventurers in what might be produced in America as against what
+might be found by way of America. The occupation of the Bermuda Islands
+might almost be described as a retreat from the earlier search for a
+passage to China. The move could be viewed also as a reassertion of an
+old interest in plundering the Spaniard, for the Bermudas lay athwart
+the homeward route of Spain's treasure fleets. But in any case the
+primary interest was in America and its own peculiar opportunities, and
+the attention given by the early settlers in Bermuda to experiments
+with tobacco, sugar, wine, ginger, and other such commodities suggests
+that their purpose was not so much to plunder the Spaniard as rather to
+emulate his success as a planter in the West Indies. Secondly, the
+adventurers showed a marked inclination to encourage each adventurer to
+meet his own costs. Provision was made for an early survey and division
+of the land, with the result that men put their money chiefly into the
+development of their own estates. A final survey was not completed
+until 1617, but at that date some of the Bermuda adventurers at least
+had known who their tenants were and approximately where their land
+would lie for three full years. Whether for these or for other reasons,
+Bermuda grew while Virginia languished. By 1616 over 600 colonists had
+reached the Somers Islands, where most of them survived. In contrast,
+Virginia had that year 350 people.
+
+The Bermuda subscribers had been separately incorporated as the Somers
+Island Company with its own royal charter in 1615. Indeed, ever since
+1612, when the Bermuda adventurers helped to relieve the financial
+embarrassment of the Virginia Company by paying L2,000 for its newly
+acquired title to Bermuda, the Somers Island adventurers seem to have
+functioned increasingly as a separate corporation. But the membership
+of the two companies was much the same. It had been the more active and
+interested of the Virginia adventurers who subscribed to the Bermuda
+joint-stock in 1612, and for twelve years thereafter the active
+membership of the Virginia Company came so close to duplicating the
+membership of the Bermuda Company that the two bodies often met
+virtually as one. Until 1619 Sir Thomas Smith served as governor of
+both companies.
+
+The growing interest of the London adventurers after 1612 in the
+colonization of Bermuda did not mean that Virginia was wholly
+neglected. Funds secured from the lottery and from suits against
+delinquent subscribers were enough to keep the project alive. In 1612
+the adventurers even sent out a stock of silkworms for a test of silk
+production. Needless to say, returning ships brought back no silk; nor
+did they bring sugar or wine. Lumber, including the valuable black
+walnut, seems to have provided the chief cargo for return voyages. A
+shipment of tobacco, Virginia's first, in 1614 gave some ground for
+arguing that the agricultural experimentation to which the colonists
+had been committed for several years now would pay off eventually. So
+argued Sir Thomas Gates on his return home this same year after three
+years of service in the colony, but the fact that he had come back
+from Virginia apparently made more of an impression than did his
+argument. Others also came home, their contracted term of service
+ended, and rarely did they bring any news from Virginia which added
+good to its name. Instead, they talked of the severe discipline under
+which they had been forced to live, and made sport of the too hopeful
+propaganda which had first persuaded them to become adventurers in
+Virginia. The discipline, chiefly associated with Dale's office as
+marshal, made his loyal decision to remain in the colony for another
+two years as lieutenant governor a further contribution to the ill
+repute of Virginia's name.
+
+Dale finally came home in 1616, the year in which the dividend on the
+1609 joint-stock fell due. The contrast between the high hopes of 1609
+and the reality of 1616 was all too painfully apparent. Six hundred
+men, women, and children had sailed for Virginia in the first of these
+years under a plan to live and work together for a seven year period.
+They would share, each according to his particular skill or aptitude,
+in the common task of planting a colony, and they would live out of a
+common store. By 1616, towns were to have been built, churches and
+houses raised, and an increasing acreage brought under cultivation. A
+variety of profitable crops would have been tested, and markets
+established for them. The original stock of cattle would have increased
+through care until there were enough for all. At the same time, the
+trade with the Indians would have been put on a profitable basis, as
+would have mining operations and perhaps even a trade to Cathay. Such
+was the general prospect to which so many adventurers had responded in
+1609. To the modern student all this seems so unrealistic as to be
+almost unbelievable, but unless one grasps the reality of the original
+dream he cannot hope to comprehend the extent of a later
+disillusionment.
+
+There were no funds to be divided in 1616, but the company did declare
+a dividend of land--not the 500 acres per share that Alderman Johnson
+had suggested as a possibility in 1609 but the more modest total of 50
+acres. This 50 acres, however, was designated as a first dividend.
+Others would follow, for an ultimate total of perhaps 200 acres per
+share, as the area in the colony's "actual possession" was enlarged.
+Plans were announced for dispatching a new governor to Virginia with
+instructions for completing the necessary surveys, and the adventurers
+were urged to seize the opportunity to gain a desirable priority in the
+location of their shares by contributing L12 10s. toward meeting the
+necessary costs. In return for this contribution, the adventurer would
+be entitled to an additional 50 acres. The land now to be divided was
+that lying along the James River, and only those adventurers who
+submitted to the additional levy would be entitled to share in the
+division, except apparently for adventurers then living in the colony.
+These were the old planters, as they came to be called, whose rights
+paralleled those of the old adventurers in England. It is evident that
+the adventurers were in no position to claim a monopoly as the just
+reward of their past sacrifices, for they also offered an immediate
+dividend, on terms no different from those governing the rights of the
+old adventurers, to any new adventurer who wished to join by paying L12
+10s. per share. Such was the estate to which the Virginia Company had
+been reduced after ten years of effort.
+
+To employ a term that was destined to become common at a later period
+of American history, the Virginia Company had become nothing more than
+a land company. Its one asset was the land that had been bought with
+the sacrifices of the first ten years, and after 1616 all of its plans
+depended upon the hope that it might use its power to give title to
+that land as an inducement for investment in the colony. In its
+advertisement in 1616 adventurers, both old and new, were invited to
+take up shares for occupancy by themselves or for development by
+tenants sent for the purpose. Perhaps because the first response to
+this appeal was disappointing, the company provided an additional
+inducement in 1617 by promising 50 acres per head for every person
+sent to the colony, the payment being due to the one who bore the cost.
+This was the Virginia headright, as it came to be called, which was
+destined to remain the chief feature of the colony's land policy
+through many years after the demise of the company itself. Intended at
+first to encourage the adventurers in England to send the labor that
+was necessary for the development of the land, it served thereafter as
+a land subsidy of the immigration on which the colony lived and grew.
+
+By 1618 the fortunes of Virginia were taking a turn for the better. The
+adventurers, or some of them at least, found encouragement in continued
+shipments of tobacco. These shipments were small and the quality of the
+tobacco could not be compared with the Spanish leaf of West Indian
+production which was finding a growing market in London despite King
+James's known disapproval of the habit on which the market grew. But
+the quality of Virginia tobacco, for which Sir Thomas Smith seems to
+have found a first market in the East Indies, no doubt could be
+improved as the planters learned the art of its cultivation and the
+adventurers found for them a better weed. No doubt, too, this success
+with tobacco, whatever the imperfections of the current product, could
+be viewed as a harbinger of other successful attempts to produce
+commodities the Spaniard had for so long and so profitably grown in his
+West Indian plantations.
+
+Further encouragement came from the willingness of the handful of
+planters already in Virginia to remain there, and from the decision of
+Ralph Hamor and Samuel Argall, both of whom had formerly served the
+company in the colony, to return there. Especially significant were the
+arrangements under which Hamor and Argall planned their return early in
+1617. One of the problems that had undoubtedly discouraged the
+adventurers from taking up the company's offer of a land grant in 1616
+was the question of the supervision that could be provided for such
+tenants as they might elect to put on the land. In Bermuda, the
+adventurers had found an answer, or rather thought they had, by
+dividing the land into tribes, later designated as parishes, over which
+a bailif would exercise an office that was partly civil and partly
+traditional on the landed estates of England. In Virginia, Hamor and
+Argall pointed the way to a solution by entering into an association
+with several of the adventurers in England for the development of a
+jointly held plantation. Thus, in January 1617, the company awarded 16
+bills of adventure to Hamor and six associates for the 16 men they
+proposed to transport to Virginia at their own charge. The following
+month saw a similar transaction with Captain Argall and his associates,
+five adventurers who had joined with this seasoned veteran to send out
+a total of 24 men. Argall went also as lieutenant governor in
+succession to George Yeardley, who had been left as deputy by Dale on
+his return to England in 1616, but the cost of getting the new governor
+out to his post seems to have been met entirely by his own associates.
+The arrangement has an obvious pertinence to an understanding of
+Argall's unhappy experience as governor, for he was later charged with
+neglect of the public interest through too great concern for his own
+personal interests. But here the emphasis belongs to the equally
+obvious fact that some of the adventurers were responding to an
+opportunity to send out tenants who would work under the management and
+direction of an experienced colonist.
+
+In 1618 George Yeardley was back in London consulting with other
+adventurers, including some of the leading members of the company, who
+were interested in forming associations for the development of
+"particular plantations." Late in the year he sailed for the colony as
+the newly designated governor of Virginia. With him he carried
+instructions which record for us further developments in the company's
+land policy. All adventurers, including delinquents who would pay up
+their subscription, were now promised 100 acres of land on the first
+dividend for each share of stock, and another 100 acres as a second
+dividend after the first had been occupied. Such of the ancient
+planters as had paid their own way to Virginia, which was to say those
+who had settled at their own cost before Dale's departure in 1616, were
+also to receive grants in like amount. The adventurers were encouraged
+to pool their rights for a common grant of land by the promise that
+their estate could be developed under their own management and would be
+treated as a separate administrative unit for civil and military
+purposes. What the company had in mind were the larger associations
+already formed or on the point of being formed, such as that for the
+settlement of Southampton Hundred, which eventually embraced a nominal
+area of perhaps as much as 100,000 acres and in which the associated
+adventurers invested a total of some L6,000. Another example is the
+association of Sir William Throckmorton, Sir George Yeardley, Richard
+Berkeley, George Thorpe, and John Smyth of North Nibley which early in
+1619 received a first joint grant of 4,500 acres and which founded
+above Jamestown the plantation known as Berkeley Hundred. These new
+associations were very much the same as the association of the Virginia
+adventurers which in 1612 had undertaken the colonization of Bermuda.
+For the development of their common grant they pooled the necessary
+capital in their own joint-stock fund and directed its investment
+through their own courts, assemblies, or committees as they saw fit.
+For every tenant sent to the plantation, the associated adventurers
+were entitled to an additional headright of 50 acres. They were awarded
+also an additional 1,500 acres for the support of public charges in the
+hundred, such as those incurred for the maintenance of a church and
+minister.
+
+How many of the colonists who migrated to Virginia between 1618 and
+1624 went by agreement with such associations as these is difficult to
+say, but there can be no doubt that they were a very large part of the
+total. The Virginia Company, which had served theretofore as the
+immediate colonizing agent, was becoming more and more a supervisory
+body for the encouragement of individual and associated adventurers in
+their own colonizing efforts. For itself, the company looked forward to
+a continuing revenue from quitrents to be paid, at the rate of two
+shillings per hundred acres after a term of seven years from the
+original grant, by all save the ancient adventurers and the planters
+who had migrated before 1616 at their own costs. To this revenue from
+quitrents could be added the benefit to be expected from the company's
+control of the colony's trade.
+
+As in 1609, there seems to be no doubt that all plans looked ultimately
+to the establishment of individual land titles. Where the record has
+survived, the associated adventurers clearly intended that their common
+grant would in time be divided. In the case of Berkeley Hundred, the
+evidence suggests too that the associates used the promise of a share
+in this division for the recruitment of their first tenants. Yeardley's
+instructions reaffirmed the company's promise of a headright in terms
+inviting the migration of individual settlers at their own cost.
+
+To understand the plans of 1618, the modern American needs to dismiss
+any idea that the isolated farm house of later America represented the
+ideal toward which men looked at this time. He should think rather of
+the English village community, or of the New England town, where men
+lived together with the advantages of a close social relationship and
+where the land they cultivated lay close at hand to the village and its
+church. If the associated adventurers continued to depend for a time on
+variations of the original joint-stock plan, it was not merely because
+they wanted to share the risk of a still uncertain venture or because
+they were seeking some useful device for meeting the problems of
+management. It was also because the plantation they hoped to establish
+was to have at its heart a town, and it was thought that the town could
+best be built through some common effort.
+
+What has been said above is not intended to suggest that the company's
+role after 1618 was to be purely supervisory. Although it had an
+accumulated debt of some L9,000, or possibly because of this debt, the
+company agreed for the encouragement of individual adventurers to
+assume heavy responsibilities of leadership. It directed Yeardley to
+lay out four towns, or boroughs, along the James in which grants to
+individuals or the lesser associations would fall--Kecoughtan at the
+mouth of the James, Henrico at the head of its navigation, and in
+between Charles City and James City. From the Bermuda adventurers the
+company borrowed the idea of establishing a public estate intended to
+meet as nearly as possible all costs of government. In each borough
+3,000 acres were to be set aside as the company's land for cultivation
+by its own tenants, who would work at half shares. Out of the company's
+moiety would come the support of all superior officers, excepting the
+governor, for whom an additional 3,000 acres would be set aside in
+James City. The company thus committed itself to a not inconsiderable
+program of colonization on its own responsibility.
+
+One wonders what it was that inspired this renewed, and most ambitious,
+venture in Virginia--a venture that would carry to Virginia over the
+next five years something like 4,500 colonists. Several possibilities
+can be suggested. First of all, it should be noted that the interest of
+the London adventurers in the colonization of America had never
+faltered, despite repeated disappointment, since they had originally
+laid their hands to the task in 1606. This, at any rate, is true of the
+adventurers who led, and more especially of Sir Thomas Smith. After it
+had become no longer possible to push the adventure in Virginia, they
+had turned to Bermuda, where an initial success seems to have
+encouraged another try in Virginia. The plans adopted for Bermuda and
+later for Virginia indicate that the adventurers shrewdly capitalized
+on the desire of Englishmen in many different walks of life for title
+to the undeveloped lands of America. A newly stirring missionary
+impulse had its part to play, if only by giving to the name of Virginia
+more helpful associations. Argall had captured Pocahontas, the favored
+daughter of Powhatan, and with her as hostage the colonists had forced
+a peace with a heretofore implacable foe. More than that John Rolfe had
+married the Princess Pocahontas, as the English liked to call her, and
+Sir Thomas Dale as his last major service to the colony had brought her
+to England in 1616. In London, at court, and elsewhere, she and her
+entourage of Indian maidens had been a most effective advertisement of
+Virginia. Even after her own death in 1617, her maiden consorts had
+stayed on for many months before being finally returned to Virginia by
+way of Bermuda. Since 1613 the Virginia Company had leaned heavily on
+the missionary appeal in its efforts to encourage continued support of
+the colony, and it may well have been the company itself which prompted
+the bishops of the Church of England in the year of Pocahontas' death
+to sponsor a collection of funds for an Indian mission in Virginia. In
+any case, the approximately L1,500 raised for the purpose were turned
+over to the company, which in 1618 ordered Yeardley to set aside 10,000
+acres at Henrico for the support of an Indian college.
+
+The adventurers in 1618 also decreed certain legal and political
+reforms that were helpful in giving Virginia a better name than it had
+enjoyed for several years past. Disgruntled colonists returning from
+Jamestown had brought exaggerated stories of Dale's discipline, with
+the result that Virginia had gained the reputation almost of a penal
+colony. The company's renewed guarantee that the settlers would enjoy
+the full common law rights of Englishmen at home was coupled with
+provision for a general assembly of the colonists, a body which first
+met at Jamestown in 1619. In short, the company had the benefit in
+1618, as so frequently in the past, of leadership of the highest
+quality.
+
+Sir Thomas Smith was still the governor of the company in 1618, and
+without question his leadership must be considered to be a major factor
+shaping the new life then being infused into the colony. But a
+factional strife that would soon help to destroy the company already
+had made its appearance. The sources of this factionalism were varied,
+and some of them had little to do with the affairs of Virginia. Thus,
+at this time Sir Thomas found a determined enemy in the Rich family,
+headed by the wealthy Earl of Warwick and represented most ably by Sir
+Nathaniel Rich, who for many years was an active leader in the House of
+Commons. Warwick had a way of investing in voyages which bordered
+closely on piracy, and as a result of one such investment had become
+involved in a long and bitter conflict with Smith as the governor of
+the East India Company. Unquestionably of more fundamental importance
+was a growing opposition to Smith that was based upon discontent with
+the former management of the Virginia project. It seems almost as
+though the Virginia adventurers, before they could place full
+confidence in the new program for the colony's development, had to find
+some more satisfying explanation for the company's previous failures by
+charging gross mismanagement of its affairs. Such, at any rate, was the
+conviction to which many adventurers came, chiefly it would seem the
+lesser adventurers who were easily prejudiced against the great
+merchants of London, of whom Sir Thomas was the chief. In a company
+where the ultimate power to decide had been vested since 1612 in a
+general assembly of the adventurers voting by head rather than by
+share, the discontent of the lesser adventurers could become under the
+guidance of an effective leader a very potent force.
+
+The leader was found in Sir Edwin Sandys, one of the ablest
+parliamentarians of seventeenth century England. Sandys himself was not
+one of the lesser adventurers. He had been a member of the Virginia
+Council since 1607, and in 1611 he had responded to the company's
+appeal for a subscription of L37 10s. by subscribing double that
+amount, thereby matching the subscription of Sir Thomas Smith. With the
+aid of other prominent adventurers, including the Earl of Southampton,
+and by making common cause for the moment with the Rich faction, Sir
+Edwin won election to the governorship of the company in the spring of
+1619. In the absence of anything approaching a full record, it is
+impossible to say what justification there may have been for the
+charges of mismanagement that were brought against Smith's
+administration. It would not be surprising if over the long and
+frequently discouraging years of his leadership, and especially in the
+period since 1612, some irregularities, some carelessness had crept
+into the conduct of the company's business. A very noticeable result of
+Sandys' election was an effort to systematize the company's procedures
+by adoption of new standing orders and regulations, and to bring order
+out of an alleged confusion of the company's records, especially those
+pertaining to the rights of the adventurers to land in Virginia. But it
+is possible to speak with full assurance on only one point: no other of
+the adventurers had shown more courage or more devotion to the colony,
+no other of them deserves to be better remembered than Sir Thomas
+Smith.
+
+There can be no question, however, that the reviving interest in
+Virginia received an additional stimulant from the fact that the
+business now had a new management. At the close of 1618, and largely as
+the result of emigration during that year, the population of the colony
+stood at approximately 1,000 persons. During the year after Sandys'
+election, a total of 1,261 emigrants left England for Virginia, over
+800 of them at the company's charge. This substantial evidence of the
+company's determination to assume the lead encouraged additional
+associations of adventurers to take up patents for their own
+plantations, with the result that by the summer of 1622 the council
+could announce that over 3,500 people had migrated to Virginia since
+the spring of 1619. This was a remarkable record, testifying to the
+very great gifts Sir Edwin possessed as a leader and the confidence men
+placed in his leadership.
+
+The minutes of the company's courts have survived for the period after
+the election of Sandys, and so it is possible to get a clearer picture
+of the company's organization and procedures than can be had for any
+earlier date. Further help comes from the "Orders and Constitutions"
+drawn up after Sandys' election and published in 1620 as part of a
+pamphlet skilfully written to convey the impression that Virginia's
+affairs were then being managed much better than in the past. The
+company depended basically upon decisions reached in four great quarter
+courts, which were general assemblies of all the adventurers who wished
+to attend and which were scheduled for regular meeting on next to the
+last Wednesday of each of the quarterly terms in which the king's
+courts sat at Westminster. Only a quarter court could elect officers,
+either of the colony or of the company, enact laws and ordinances, or
+determine policies governing the distribution of lands in the colony
+and the conduct of its trade. On the Monday preceding each meeting of
+the quarter court, a preparatory court would settle the agenda for the
+following Wednesday, in order that the members might have warning of
+the business to be taken up at that time. Each fortnight, except in the
+"long vacations" between court terms, an ordinary court would meet,
+again on Wednesday, with a quorum that required the presence of at
+least five members of the council, the treasurer or his deputy, and
+"fifteene of the generality." The hour of meeting for all courts was 2
+P.M., and at no court could a question be put after 6 P.M. A decision
+reached by any lesser court, including the extraordinary court that
+might be called in case of special emergency, could be overridden by a
+quarter court. This was the governing body of the company, a popular
+assembly in which Sir Edwin often demonstrated his special talent as a
+parliamentary tactician. Attendance varied according to the importance
+of the business at hand, but as many as 150 might attend.
+
+The quarter court meeting in Easter term was a court of elections,
+where the members cast their votes for all principal officers by secret
+ballot. Except for members of the council, all offices of the company
+were held by annual election. The chief office was that of the
+treasurer, as the governor of the company was still officially
+designated. As frequently as not, in common usage he was known as the
+governor, but the charters had fixed the title of his office and in so
+doing had pointed up a primary responsibility of the office. The
+governor of the Virginia Company was in fact its treasurer. After 1619
+no man could hold the position for longer than three years, and no man
+was eligible for election to it if already he was serving as the
+governor of another company, except that he might also serve as the
+governor of the Somers Island Company. The election court might vote a
+reward for services rendered, but the treasurer, like other principal
+officers, served without fixed compensation.
+
+His chief assistant, and the second officer in rank, was the deputy. As
+the title suggests, he might be deputized to perform virtually any
+function of the governor, including that of presiding at courts in the
+governor's absence. But he also had important functions of his own. He
+is perhaps best described as the chief administrative officer of the
+company. He was specifically charged with superintendence over all
+lesser officers, and he had a primary responsibility for contracts and
+other business arrangements relating to the dispatch of shipping,
+provisions, and passengers to Virginia and to the receipt, storage, and
+marketing of cargoes returned from the colony. At all times, he acted,
+or was supposed to act, in accordance with instructions from the court,
+council, or treasurer, but all such instructions were necessarily
+general in character. Many were the opportunities to use his own
+judgment, or to confer a favor, as he handled business transactions
+involving hundreds or even thousands of pounds. For his assistance and
+perhaps to keep a watch on him, he had a committee of sixteen men
+chosen by the court under a provision requiring that a fourth of the
+number should be changed each year "to the end [that] many be trained
+up in the businesse." The committee may have been new, but the deputy's
+office was old. It had been occupied for many years before the spring
+election of 1619 by Alderman Johnson. Some of the more serious charges
+brought against Smith's administration related to the management of
+the magazine, as the stock of supplies periodically forwarded to the
+colony was generally described. Johnson had managed the successive
+magazines, each separately financed by its own joint-stock, until in
+1619 he was replaced by John Ferrar.
+
+The council, still described as His Majesty's Council for Virginia, had
+become a large and unwieldy body, with many of its members inactive.
+Its influence on the conduct of Virginia's affairs was now decidedly
+less important than in the earlier years. According to the Orders and
+Constitutions, no one "under the degree of a Lord or principall
+magistrate" was thereafter to be elected to the council except "such as
+by diligent attendance at the courts and service of Virginia for one
+year at least before, have approved their sufficiency and worth to the
+Companie." As this statement strongly suggests, a place on the council
+was for many members an honorary post through which one might lend the
+prestige of a great name to a worthy undertaking without assuming much
+real responsibility. Nevertheless, the legal powers of the council
+under the Virginia charters made its services indispensable, and made
+it desirable that at least a few of its members should be intimately
+acquainted with the business. The treasurer was supposed to consult
+with the council on important occasions, and especially on matters
+pertaining to the government of the colony. All formal instructions to
+officers in the colony had to be sent in the name of the council and
+over its seal. In any case of removal from office, in London or at
+Jamestown, the cause had to be considered in council before it could be
+taken before the adventurers. But any seven members made a quorum
+giving full power to actions taken in council, and the treasurer, who
+was always a member of the council, had the custody of its seal.
+
+Two of the seven auditors now required for annual review of
+disbursements and receipts had to be members of the council. The
+auditors' office had grown out of the disputes over the accounts of Sir
+Thomas Smith, and in addition to the annual auditing of the
+treasurer's report, which had to be submitted to the Easter court, they
+were charged with responsibility for a close review of all earlier
+records of the company. The primary purpose was to establish a full and
+exact list of all subscriptions, with notation especially of
+delinquencies. Salaried officers of the company were a secretary, a
+bookkeeper, a husband (or as we would say, an accountant), and a bedel
+or messenger. The secretary served all courts held by the adventurers,
+the council, and the auditors, or by standing and special committees,
+of which last the adventurers appointed quite a number. In addition,
+the secretary was custodian of the company's records.
+
+Although Sir Edwin Sandys continued to be the actual leader of the
+company until its dissolution in 1624, his tenure of the treasurer's
+office was limited to a single year. When the adventurers assembled for
+the annual elections in the spring of 1620, they were much disturbed to
+receive instruction from the king that Sir Edwin was not to be
+re-elected. Instead, the king suggested the choice of some merchant of
+means and wide experience--perhaps Sir Thomas Smith, Sir Thomas Roe,
+Alderman Robert Johnson, or Mr. Maurice Abbott.
+
+Whether Sandys could have been elected in the absence of this
+interference by the king, which the adventurers protested as an
+unwarranted invasion of their liberty, is itself an interesting and
+debatable question. By his many criticisms of the previous conduct of
+the company's affairs, Sandys had won the undying enmity of Sir Thomas
+Smith and his important friends. More than that, he had quarreled with
+his ally of the preceding year, the Earl of Warwick, who had
+connections hardly less impressive than those enjoyed by Sir Thomas.
+The quarrel with Warwick was over a question of piracy, as Sir Edwin
+chose to regard it. One of Warwick's ships, the _Treasurer_, had sailed
+from England in April 1618 with a license to capture pirates, which was
+one way of getting a ship cleared from English ports for depredations
+against the Spaniard at a time when the king had set his face against
+all such activity. The _Treasurer_ had called at Jamestown, where
+Governor Argall, who had rendered important services to the colony but
+who had special reason to understand that his position in Virginia
+depended upon the good will of important members of the company, helped
+to outfit the vessel for a raid on the West Indies. Recent studies, and
+especially those of David Quinn, a British scholar, argue strongly that
+the earlier ventures of Gilbert and Raleigh had been inspired very
+largely by the desire to establish some base on the North American
+coast that would be useful in attacks upon Spanish possessions and the
+trade routes which joined them to Spain. But it is evident enough that
+by this time the leaders of the Virginia Company were chiefly fearful
+that Spain might attack their colony before it was securely fortified,
+and before it had fulfilled the promise of rewards far greater than
+anything freebooting ventures could offer. As a result, Governor
+Yeardley, on instruction from London, denied the courtesies of
+Jamestown to the _Treasurer_ on its return in 1619, and won for Sandys
+thereby the bitter resentment of the Rich family.
+
+The king's interference in the election of 1620 has naturally become a
+celebrated incident in the history of Virginia. Sir Edwin was a leader
+in parliament, which before the century was out would establish its
+supremacy in the government of England, and the Virginia Company in
+1620 had only recently established the first representative assembly in
+North America. To historians who have sought the larger meaning of the
+American experiment, it has often seemed that the king must have been
+guided by a fear of representative government--in other words, that his
+motives were largely political. No doubt, he was more easily persuaded
+to enter an objection to Sandys' re-election because of Sir Edwin's
+opposition to royal policies in the house of commons, but there is no
+contemporary evidence to suggest that the king had even noticed the
+Assembly which met at Jamestown in 1619. Moreover, that Assembly had
+been authorized before Sandys' election, at a time when Sir Thomas
+Smith was still in the chair, and anyone who thinks the motion had been
+carried over Smith's opposition should take note that the same kind of
+representative assembly was established in 1620 for Bermuda, over whose
+fortunes Sir Thomas would continue to preside until 1621. Not until the
+middle of the seventeenth century, at the time of Cromwell, does it
+appear that anyone even suggested that the primary reason for the
+king's interference was fear of a significant development in the
+history of representative government.
+
+What actually happened in 1620 would seem to be clear enough. Sir
+Thomas Smith had connections that reached all the way into the king's
+bedchamber, and there he effectively argued that Sandys did not know
+his business. It was an argument that found not a little justification
+in the fact that the company had to admit by a broadside published in
+the very month of the election court that hundreds of the colonists
+sent to Virginia in the preceding year had died within a short time of
+their arrival there, and it may be that Sir Thomas apprehended the even
+greater disasters soon to overtake the colony. A more likely
+supposition, however, is that he seized upon this news from the colony
+as an opportunity to vent his resentment against Sandys, a resentment
+that must have become more bitter with each of Sir Edwin's promotional
+releases advertising the great improvements now to be found in the
+management of Virginia's affairs. The legal basis on which the king
+acted was probably debatable. No doubt, he depended upon the provision
+in the charter requiring that all members of the council, of which the
+treasurer was the head, be sworn to the king's service. But membership
+on the council was for life, and Sir Edwin had taken his oath as a
+member of the council as early as 1607. Perhaps the king took advantage
+of the company's regulations requiring an annual election and that the
+treasurer be sworn following his election. Whether this was a new
+requirement cannot be said. It can only be suggested that the king
+intended to say that if Sir Edwin were re-elected he would not give him
+a necessary oath of office. It may be, too, that he stood quite simply
+on the prerogative of his office to insist that his subjects in
+Virginia were entitled to royal protection. In any case, the
+adventurers chose not to defy the king's wish.
+
+Having protested his interference as unwarranted, the quarter court in
+May 1620 adjourned without electing a treasurer. Instead, the
+adventurers appointed a special committee to call on the king for the
+purpose of acquainting him with the true facts regarding "the managing
+of their business this last year" and to ask for a free election.
+Sandys himself appealed to the royal favorite, the young Duke of
+Buckingham, but with no effect on the king's decision. When the
+adventurers reassembled late in June, they elected the Earl of
+Southampton as treasurer. Thus, in a sense both parties to the dispute
+emerged victorious. Sandys was no longer treasurer, but the adventurers
+had refused to elect a merchant and Southampton would preside
+thereafter in behalf of Sandys. There can be no doubt that Sandys
+continued to be the leader of the company. Moreover, in 1621 he
+extended his power by gaining control of the Somers Island Company
+through the election of Southampton to its governorship.
+
+A question that naturally arises is that of how, or why, Sir Edwin was
+able to survive this challenge to his leadership. The news from
+Virginia was by no means encouraging. Given the long record of
+disappointment there, and the many men who previously had died there,
+the fact that several hundred of the most recent settlers had succumbed
+might have been expected to unsettle any administration. Perhaps it was
+the king's interference, serving as it did to rally the adventurers in
+defence of the company's liberty. Perhaps Sir Thomas was guilty of too
+naked a display of his power, with the result that the lesser
+adventurers, who already had been taught to view the great merchants of
+the company with suspicion, rallied to the support of Sandys. Perhaps
+it was because the Earl of Warwick and Sir Thomas had not learned yet
+the need for effective teamwork; both men disliked Sandys, but they had
+their own quarrels and they would not form a real coalition against him
+for another two years. All these possibilities must be given
+consideration, but there would seem to be still another reason,
+possibly the most important of all.
+
+Sir Edwin Sandys was a man of remarkable gifts, and nowhere are these
+gifts better demonstrated than in his ability to stimulate the highest
+hopes for Virginia. Before him only Richard Hakluyt, a patriot now dead
+four years, had managed better to depict the promise America held for
+Englishmen. Sandys wrote no major work on the subject, and even the
+company's promotional pamphlets, which he undoubtedly shaped in some
+large part, lacked the fire that Hakluyt, or even Alderman Johnson,
+could impart to that branch of literature. It must be said also that
+Sandys added no new idea to those which for a generation past had
+guided Englishmen in their American ventures. His program included not
+a single objective that the Virginia Company had not theretofore tried
+to realize; the chief contrast with former programs was the absence of
+any emphasis on the prospect that a route to the South Seas might be
+found, an objective the adventurers had dropped for all practical
+purposes a good many years before Sandys became their treasurer. But
+Sandys had confidence, a systematic and orderly mind, and a persuasive
+way of talking in the quarter court or in conference with the
+individual adventurer who contemplated some new risk of capital. As a
+result, he managed to convey the impression that plans had now been so
+well thought through that Hakluyt's objectives in America had at last
+become attainable.
+
+Leaving aside the search for a passage to China, which may never have
+been so important to Hakluyt as it was to the people whose interest in
+America he sought to enlist, Sandys undertook to carry through, all at
+once, the program Hakluyt had outlined for Queen Elizabeth as early as
+1584 in his famous "_Discourse on Western Planting_." It was a program
+that looked to the development in America of products that would free
+England of dependence upon trades with other parts of the world which
+were in any way disadvantageous to England, and that would guarantee to
+any Englishmen who developed such products a sure profit on their
+investment. It was a program that had taken its shape first from the
+prospect, in Raleigh's day, of an early war with Spain, and perhaps it
+should be noted that when Sandys came to office in 1619 the Thirty
+Years War had only recently had its beginning with the king's own
+son-in-law a central figure. The war has gone down in our history books
+as the last of the great religious wars, and many were the Englishmen
+who thought that England should be, or would be soon involved.
+
+In Virginia, Sandys promised to produce iron. It is strange that the
+attempt to develop an iron industry in Virginia, on which the company
+spent all told something like L5,000, should have made less impression
+on modern historians than has an early and brief search for gold that
+was incidental to other explorations. The iron industry in England was
+suffering from the depletion of the island's wood supply, which was
+still depended upon for smelting, and Virginia promised an unlimited
+supply. Other industries that he hoped to develop in the colony are
+suggested by a list of tradesmen the company invited to adventure to
+Virginia in 1620: among them, sawyers, joiners, shipwrights,
+millwrights, coopers, weavers, tanners, potters, fishermen,
+fishhookmakers, netmakers, leather dressers, limeburners, and dressers
+of hemp and flax. Even more important because so much depended upon
+persuading the individual adventurers to invest their own money in the
+development of their land, were plans for the production of sugar,
+wine, indigo, silk, cotton, olive oil, rice, etc. In the development of
+these products Sandys intended the public lands--those cultivated under
+the direct supervision of the company and by its own tenants--to serve
+more or less in the capacity of experimental farms. For their planting
+he sought seeds and plants from various parts of the world. On the
+college land he had some 10,000 grapevines set out, and sent for their
+care foreign experts imported from the continent. To make sure that
+private estates would not be devoted wholly to tobacco, as yet the
+colony's only proven staple, he wrote into land patents a stipulation
+that other staples would be given a trial.
+
+To find the money for investment in the public lands was no easy task.
+No common joint-stock fund could be raised in 1619, if only because the
+company's plans depended chiefly upon the hope of inducing the
+adventurers to invest in their own lands. It cannot be said how
+successful were the renewed attempts to collect from delinquent
+subscribers, but perhaps some help came from that source. Sandys
+depended also, as had Smith before him, on the Virginia lottery,
+perhaps more than upon any other source, for the lottery was terminated
+early in 1621 by order of the privy council on grounds that included
+the complaint of parliament that the lottery had become a public
+nuisance. A very substantial help to Sir Edwin was the bishops' fund
+for an Indian college and additional funds raised for the support of an
+Indian school in the colony. The total ran to better than L2,000. It
+had been decided in 1618, well before Sandys' election, that the money
+from the bishops' fund would be invested in an estate to be known as
+the College Land, and the precedent thus set was followed in disposing
+of funds subsequently made available to the company for an Indian
+school. In practical terms, these decisions meant that all mission
+funds were used to send out tenants on the promise that a half-share of
+the wine and other such commodities as they might produce would in time
+provide a permanent endowment for the school and the college. The
+decision reflects both the extraordinary poverty of the company and the
+extraordinary confidence with which its leaders approached their new
+ventures in Virginia.
+
+By the spring of 1621, when the bulk of the college funds had been
+expended and the lottery was terminated, Sir Edwin's financial
+resources had become even more skimpy and uncertain. Some projects,
+such as that for the settlement of Italian glass-workers who were to
+manufacture pottery and beads for use in the Indian trade, could be
+financed by subscriptions to a special joint-stock, but this device
+offered no help in meeting general expenses. As a result, Sandys
+continued to take certain shortcuts, or perhaps the blame should rest
+rather on Deputy John Ferrar. In any case, the colonists complained
+that shipping came out so overloaded with passengers as to invite the
+epidemic disease with which they usually suffered on landing, and which
+made of newcomers a useless burden on the colony for some time after
+their arrival. The deathrate among the colonists continued to be high.
+The time and energy required to house them, or to feed them,
+unavoidably forced delay with projects on which Sandys had pinned his
+chief hopes. He was especially disappointed over the slow progress of
+agricultural experimentation. Accordingly, when Yeardley's three year
+term was ended in 1621 and Sir Francis Wyatt was sent as his
+replacement, Sir Edwin also sent his brother, George Sandys, as
+appointee to a new office of treasurer. He was given special charge of
+all projects looking to the development of new staple commodities and
+was intrusted with the collection of rents, of which the company
+claimed L1,000 were presently due. These rents, which were to be
+collected largely from half-share tenants who had migrated within the
+preceding three years, undoubtedly now constituted the company's main
+hope for an immediate revenue. Except in a very few instances, no
+quitrents would be payable until 1625, and so general had been the
+disappointment experienced so far with special projects that further
+time would have to be allowed before any return from them could be
+expected. In short, the company had exhausted its very limited
+resources in getting Wyatt and George Sandys out to Virginia, and had
+nothing left but hopes for the future and the anticipation of a small
+immediate revenue from the rents of its own tenants, most of which had
+already been assigned to such special charges as the support of public
+officers in the colony. In London, virtually the only asset left to the
+company was the will and determination of Sir Edwin Sandys.
+
+In these circumstances, Sandys necessarily devoted his main energies
+after 1621 to the problem of tobacco, the only marketable staple the
+colony had as yet produced. It was an old problem, but one now filled
+with new difficulties. In earlier days, when it had been hoped that
+tobacco might be one of a variety of staples produced in the colony,
+the Virginia Company, like the Bermuda Company, had lent encouragement
+to efforts looking to its production. But hardly had early experiments
+proved successful before the adventurers faced the risk that tobacco
+would take over the colony entirely. There is nothing surprising in
+this development, for a tobacco plant, unlike a grapevine or an olive
+tree, matures within a few months of its planting, and the tobacco
+habit at this time was a thing of comparably rapid growth in many parts
+of the world. To settlers who had been staked by adventurers ever
+insistent upon a prompt return of their capital, or who wondered how
+best to procure the means to make payment for the supplies brought in
+the next magazine ship, the obvious answer was to plant the land to
+tobacco. After doing this, if time and energy remained, they might try
+some of Sir Edwin Sandys' ideas--maybe set out a few grapevines or
+mulberries, as they had been instructed to do. There was good reason
+for the growing fear among the leading adventurers in London that
+tobacco might put a blight on all other projects.
+
+More than that, the increasing shipments of tobacco, especially in view
+of the still relatively poor quality of the Virginia leaf, gave the
+colony a bad name just when its good name was so important to the
+promotional efforts of the company. The tobacco habit did not yet have
+the respectable associations it would later acquire in the eighteenth
+century. Instead, it was associated with tippling or bawdy houses,
+where in truth a pipe was most easily had by the contemporary resident
+of London. Moral considerations were reinforced by an additional
+concern for the public interest. So much of the weed consumed came from
+Spain that thoughtful men were inclined to consider how much England
+paid out, to the profit of the Spaniard, for a commodity which added
+nothing to the well being of the country. Had it not been for the
+influence of Virginia and Bermuda adventurers in the House of Commons,
+Parliament in 1621 might well have prohibited all importation of
+tobacco into England. And in all England there was no more vigorous
+opponent of tobacco than the king himself. Indeed, the king had even
+written a book on the subject.
+
+The attitude of King James had a most important bearing on another
+angle of the problem. Under its charter, the company had been allowed a
+seven year exemption from import duties on cargoes brought from
+Virginia. When this exemption expired in 1619, the government
+immediately imposed a duty that was fixed early in 1620 at 1s. per
+pound of tobacco. Though this was only half the duty paid by Spanish
+tobacco, it was nonetheless a heavy burden to be imposed upon leaf that
+was declared never to have sold at more than 5s. a pound and that
+brought an average of only 2s. for the better grade in 1620.[A] The
+adventurers' attempted escape by shipping their tobacco to Holland won
+them a sharp reprimand from the privy council, and an order to bring
+all of Virginia's tobacco to England for payment of his majesty's
+customs. As negotiations with the king's ministers for some relief
+continued, it was proposed in 1622 that the Virginia and Bermuda
+adventurers might take over the tobacco monopoly, which was a grant of
+the sole right to import tobacco of any sort into the kingdom in return
+for a fixed contribution to the royal revenues. The holder of such a
+monopoly--a very common device at the time--was entitled to collect the
+customs and to hope that what he collected, plus the advantage of a
+monopolistic control of the market, might enable him to clear a profit
+on the transaction. Here, in other words, was a proposal that might
+provide the needed relief, even some income for the company's hard
+pressed treasury. The Virginia Company by 1622 was in no position to
+ignore such an opportunity and fortunately, the Sandys faction was now
+in control of the Somers Island Company. A joint committee of the two
+companies, headed by Sir Edwin himself, entered into negotiations for
+what was known as the tobacco contract.
+
+The bitterest factional strife in the history of the London adventurers
+soon followed. It is a complicated story, too complicated and too long
+to be told fully here. Briefly, both the terms agreed upon by Sandys
+and his proposals for the management of the contract, proposals which
+left Sandys and his cohorts in full control, touched too closely the
+vital interests of some of his bitterest enemies. In Bermuda, as in
+Virginia, the hope of an early profit from the production of sugar,
+silk, wine, indigo, and other such commodities had proved vain, and
+like Virginia, Bermuda lived by the tobacco it grew. The Earl of
+Warwick and members of his family had made especially heavy investments
+in their Bermuda properties, and Sir Nathaniel Rich became the floor
+leader, as it were, of an attempt to defeat the contract. Sir Thomas
+Smith and his friends joined in the effort. Especially objectionable in
+the view of the opposition were plans for placing the management of the
+contract in the hands of salaried officials, with Sir Edwin as director
+at a salary of L500. At one Virginia court, meeting early in December,
+the debate got so out of hand that it required several additional
+sessions to straighten out the minutes in order that appropriate
+penalties might be imposed upon Mr. Samuel Wrote, a member of the
+Virginia council whose unrestrained charges of graft violated the
+company's rules and offended the court's sense of its own dignity. In
+the end the opposition elected to make the final test in a Bermuda
+court, whose consent was necessary to close the contract and where
+Sandys' opponents included the more substantial investors in that
+colony. The test came in February 1623, and Sandys won. But it could be
+demonstrated that had the vote been by share rather than by head, as
+was the rule in both companies, he would have been defeated. Sandys'
+opponents in the Bermuda Company all along had complained of a plan to
+distribute the charges of the contract equally between the two
+companies, arguing that the Virginia tobacco had a greater value and
+should therefore carry a proportionately larger charge. And now they
+were in a position to argue that the Virginia Company, in whose courts
+for some time they had steadfastly refused even to vote on the salary
+question, sought to exploit the younger plantation, as was evidenced by
+the opposition of the adventurers to whom Bermuda's tobacco chiefly
+belonged. With this argument, Sandys' opponents promptly carried the
+whole question before the privy council.
+
+This was in the spring of 1623. During the course of the preceding
+debate, news had come of an Indian massacre in Virginia that had cost
+the lives of over 350 colonists. The faction-ridden and bankrupt
+company had stirred itself to send such aid as it could, but now came
+the word that this had not been enough. By the testimony of Sandys' own
+brother, though this testimony may not have been immediately available
+to his enemies, another 500 colonists had died before the year was out
+as a result of the dislocations occasioned by the massacre, and as a
+result of the failure of the company to send enough aid. The tobacco
+contract dropped into a position of secondary importance as Sandys'
+opponents, with Alderman Johnson taking the lead, petitioned the king
+for a full investigation of the situation in Virginia and of the recent
+conduct of its affairs.
+
+Whatever one may think of Sir Edwin Sandys, or of the motives which
+inspired his opponents, there can be no question as to the correctness
+of the action taken by the government. The leaders of the two factions
+were called before the privy council on April 17, where they displayed
+so "much heat and bitterness" toward one another as to make it
+difficult to get on with the business. In the end, the council won
+agreement that a special commission should be established for an
+investigation of the state of the colony's affairs, the agreement
+coming finally when the council conceded the demand of Sandys'
+supporters that the investigation should begin with the administration
+of Sir Thomas Smith. Accordingly, on May 9, a commission was issued to
+Sir William Jones, justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and six other
+gentlemen "to examine the carriage of the whole business." Meantime, a
+letter had been prepared by the privy council to acquaint the colonists
+with the fact that their affairs had been taken into "His Majesty's
+pious and princely care" and to encourage them "to go on cheerfully in
+the work they have in hand." The central issues all pertained to
+Virginia, but in the circumstances there was no choice but to include
+both companies in the province of the Jones commission.
+
+The appointment of the Jones commission ended, for all practical
+purposes, the control of the Virginia Company over the colony. The
+company lingered on as an agency chiefly through which the Sandys
+faction prepared its briefs for the attention of the commissioners, or
+through which orders from the commissioners might be implemented. All
+of the company's records were impounded by the commission, which also
+took charge of all correspondence with the colony. The records of the
+company demonstrated all too clearly the bankrupt state of its
+finances. The hearings before the commissioners demonstrated with equal
+clarity the hopeless division of the adventurers by bitter factional
+strife. Correspondence from the colony brought evidence of a desperate
+situation. Even Sandys had to admit that no more than 2,500 colonists
+were still alive in the colony, which was to confess an attrition,
+mainly by death, of something over 40 percent of the colonists residing
+in Virginia, or sent to Virginia, since he had assumed responsibility
+for the management of its affairs. Actually, the situation was much
+worse than these figures suggested, for a census taken in Virginia
+early in 1625 showed a total population of only 1,275. In the fall of
+1623 the privy council invited the company to surrender its charter on
+the promise that a new one would be issued to cover all individual
+rights and grants, but with a revision of the plan of government that
+would place the control of the colony under the more immediate
+supervision of the king. In effect, the proposal was to return to
+something close to the original plan of 1606. When the adventurers, in
+a court from which Sandys' enemies largely absented themselves,
+rejected this proposal, the government began quo warranto proceedings
+against the company in the court of Kings Bench. On May 24, 1624, that
+court gave its decision for recall of the Virginia charters. And so
+ended the Virginia Company.
+
+The Bermuda Company had been dragged into the investigation chiefly
+because of the close ties joining it to the older company. There was no
+emergency in the colony, and its debts were not beyond the capacity of
+Sir Thomas Smith and other leading adventurers to pay. As a result, the
+Somers Island Company lasted on for another sixty years.
+
+One who looks back from 1624 over the brief and frequently troubled
+history of the Virginia Company may debate, as historians have often
+done in the past, just what should be said by way of conclusion.
+Perhaps it is this: here were men who out of their disappointment
+quarreled bitterly and by their quarrels helped to destroy an agency
+through which in the past they had worked together, with a remarkable
+devotion to the public interest, for the achievement of great
+objectives. No doubt, their greatest fault had been to set their goals
+too high. Certainly, their greatest virtue was persistence in the faith
+that great things could be done for England in America, a faith
+destined in time to be justified by the course of history.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote A: For purposes of comparison, it may be noted that Spanish
+tobacco was declared to have been sold for as much as 20s. a pound. The
+"filthy weed" was not yet "the poor man's luxury."]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Virginia Company Of London,
+1606-1624, by Wesley Frank Craven
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