Jamestown - first permanent English settlement in North America.
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Jamestown - first permanent English settlement in North America.
The colony was a private venture, financed and organized by the Virginia Company of London. King James I granted a charter to a group of investors for the establishment of the company on April 10, 1606. During this era, “Virginia” was the English name for the entire East Coast of North America north of Florida. The charter gave the company the right to settle anywhere from roughly present-day North Carolina to New York state. The company’s plan was to reward investors by locating gold and silver deposits and by finding a river route to the Pacific Ocean for trade with the Orient.
A contingent of approximately 105 colonists departed England in late December 1606 in three ships — the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery — under the command of Christopher Newport. They reached Chesapeake Bay on April 26, 1607. Soon afterward the captains of the three ships met to open a box containing the names of members of the colony’s governing council: Newport, Bartholomew Gosnold, one of the behind-the-scenes initiators of the Virginia Company, Edward-Maria Wingfield, a major investor John Ratcliffe, George Kendall, John Martin and Captain John Smith, a former mercenary who had fought in the Netherlands and Hungary. Wingfield became the colony’s first president.
Date
1913.
Culture
USA.
Classification
Postcard.