King James I, from the beginning of
his reign, was deeply desirous of planting the English
nation upon the shores of the New World. It was
with envy and alarm that he witnessed the extension
of the power of Spain and of the Roman Catholic church
across the Atlantic, while his own subjects were excluded
from a share in the splendid prize. He must have
perceived clearly that if the English wished to maintain
their position as a great naval and mercantile people,
the establishing of colonies in America was imperative.
Peru, Mexico and the West Indies added greatly to
the wealth and power of the Spanish King; why should
England not attempt to gain a foothold near these countries,
before it became too late?
But James had no desire to arouse
the hostility of Philip III. Despite religious
differences, despite the hatred of the English for
the Spaniards, he had reversed the policy of Elizabeth
by cultivating the friendship of these hereditary
enemies. And so wedded was he to this design,
that later, when his son-in-law, Frederick of the Palatinate,
was being overwhelmed by a coalition of Catholic nations,
he refused to affront Spain by coming to his rescue.
Yet he knew that Philip considered America his own,
and would resent any attempt of the English to establish
colonies on its shores. So the crafty James resolved
to disguise the founding of a royal colony under the
guise of a private venture. If the Spaniards
complained of the occupation of their territory, he
could free himself from blame by placing the responsibility
upon the London Company. “If it take not
success,” his advisors told the King, “it
is done by their owne heddes. It is but the attempt
of private gentlemen, the State suffers noe losse,
noe disreputation. If it takes success, they
are your subjects, they doe it for your service, they
will lay all at your Majesty’s feet and interess
your Majesty therein."
James was quite liberal in granting
charters to those that had undertaken the settlement,
and he encouraged them as much as was consistent with
his friendship for Spain. It was truly written
of him after his death, “Amongst the ... workes
of the late Kinge, there was none more eminent, than
his gracious inclination ... to advance and sett forward
a New Plantation in the New World." That he was
deeply interested in the undertaking is shown most
strikingly by his consent to the establishment of
the Puritans in America. James hated the tenets
of Calvin from the depths of his soul, and could have
no desire to see them infect the English settlements
in America, yet his solicitude for the welfare of
the colony induced him to yield to the request of the
Pilgrims for permission to settle there. How much
greater was his foresight than that of Louis XIV,
who, by refusing to allow the persecuted Huguenots
to settle in any part of his domains, deprived the
French colonies of what might have been their most
numerous and valuable recruits! When some of
the leading men of the London Company pleaded with
James for the Puritans, the King lent a ready ear.
He was asked to allow them “liberty of conscience
under his ... protection in America; where they would
endeavour the advancement of his Majesty’s dominions,
and the enlargement of the interests of the Gospel”.
James replied that it was “a good and honest
motion”. He refused to tolerate them by
public authority and would not confirm under the broad
seal their petition for leave to worship as they chose,
but he let it be understood that they were not to
be molested in their new homes in any way. And
in this promise they finally decided to put their
trust, feeling that “if afterwards there should
be a purpose or desire to wrong them, though they
had a seale as broad as ye house flore, it would
not serve ye turn; for ther would be means a new found
to recall or reverse it".
But the chief glory of the establishment
of the English in America must be given to the patriotic
and persevering men of the Virginia Company.
It is erroneous and unjust to accuse them of mean and
mercenary motives in founding and maintaining the
colony at Jamestown. Some of them, perhaps, were
dazzled with visions of a rich harvest of gold and
silver, but most must have realized that there was
small chance of remuneration. Many were merchants
and business men of great foresight and ability, and
it is quite evident that they were fully aware of the
risks of the undertaking in which they ventured their
money. What they did hope to gain from the colony
was the propagation of the English Church, the extension
of the English nation and its institutions, and the
increase of British trade.
Over and over again it was asserted
that the first object of the enterprise was to spread
the Christian religion. In 1610 the London Company
declared it their especial purpose “to preach
and baptize ... and by propagation of the Gospell,
to recover out of the armes of the Divell, a number
of poore and miserable soules, wrapt up unto death,
in almost invincible ignorance". The first draft
of the Virginia charter of 1606 declared that the
leading motive of this “noble work”, was
“the planting of Christianity amongst heathens".
The charter of 1609 asserted that the “principle
effect, which we can desire or expect of this action,
is the conversion and reduction of the people in those
parts unto the true worship of God".
That they were also actuated by a
desire to extend the British possessions and trade
is attested by numerous documents and letters.
The Company declared it their purpose to promote the
“honor and safety of the Kingdome, the strength
of our Navy, the visible hope of a great and rich
trade". One of the leading shareholders wrote
that the colony should be upheld for “ye Honor
and profitt to our Nation, to make provinciall to
us a land ready to supply us with all necessary commodytyes
wanting to us: In which alone we suffer ye Spanish
reputation and power to swell over us." The colonists
themselves declared that one of the objects of the
settlement of America was the extension of British
territory and the enriching of the kingdom, “for
which respects many noble and well minded persons were
induced to adventure great sums of money to the advancement
of so pious and noble a worke".
The Company, in fact, did no more
than take the lead in the work. It was really
the English nation that had decided to second their
King in gaining a foothold in America, and it was
they that insisted that this foothold should not be
relinquished. Again and again the London Company
appealed to the people for support, and never without
success, for all classes of Englishmen felt that they
were interested in this new venture. The spirit
of the nation is reflected in the statement of the
Council for Virginia in 1610, that the Company “are
so farre from yielding or giving way to any hindrance
or impeachment ... that many ... have given their
hands and subscribed to contribute againe and againe
to new supplies if need require".
But although James I and his people
were agreed as to the necessity of extending the English
nation to America, they were not in accord in regard
to the form of government which should be established
there. The King, who was always restive under
the restraint placed upon him by the English Parliament,
had no desire to see the liberal institutions of the
mother country transplanted to Virginia. He wished,
beyond doubt, to build a colonial empire which should
be dependent upon himself for its government and which
should add to the royal revenues. In this way
he would augment the power of the Crown and render
it less subject to the restraint of Parliament.
But to found colonies that would set up little assemblies
of their own to resist and thwart him, was not at all
his intention.
On the other hand, many of the leading
spirits of the London Company hoped “to establish
a more free government in Virginia". Some, perhaps,
feared that the liberties of the English people might
be suppressed by the King, and they looked hopefully
to this new land as a haven for the oppressed.
“Many worthy Patriots, Lords, Knights, gentlemen,
Merchants and others ... laid hold on ... Virginia
as a providence cast before them." In the meetings
of the Company were gathered so many that were “most
distasted with the proceedings of the Court, and stood
best affected to Religion and Liberty”, that
James began to look upon the body as a “Seminary
for a seditious Parliament".
The leader of these liberals was Sir
Edwin Sandys. This man, who was widely known
as an uncompromising enemy of despotism, was heartily
detested by the King. In his youth he had gone
to Geneva to study the reformed religion and while
there had become most favorably impressed with the
republican institutions of the little Swiss state.
He was afterwards heard to say that “he thought
that if God from heaven did constitute and direct
a forme of government on Earth it was that of Geneva".
Returning to England, he had entered Parliament, where
he had become known as an eminent advocate of liberal
principles. He had contended for the abolition
of commercial monopolies; had demanded that all accused
persons be given the assistance of counsel; had denounced
many of the unjust impositions of the Crown; had raised
“his voice for the toleration of those with
whom he did not wholly agree”; and had aided
in drawing up the remonstrance against the conduct
of James towards his first Parliament.
But Sandys and his friends were not
without opposition in the London Company. Many
of the “adventurers”, as the stockholders
were called, were by no means willing to permit the
liberal party to utilize the Company as an instrument
for propagating their political tenets. The great
struggle between the forces of progress and reaction
that was convulsing Parliament and the nation, was
fought over again in the Quarter Courts. At times
the meetings resounded with the quarrels of the contending
factions. Eventually, however, Sandys was victorious,
and representative government in America was assured.
Sandys seems to have planned to secure
from the King successive charters each more liberal
than its predecessor, and each entrusting more fully
the control of the colony to the Company. This
could be done without arousing the suspicions of James
under the pretext that they were necessary for the
success of the enterprise. When at length sufficient
power had been delegated, Sandys designed to establish
in Virginia a representative assembly, modelled upon
the British Parliament.
Under the provisions of the charter
of 1606 Virginia had been, in all but form, a royal
colony. The King had drawn up the constitution,
had appointed the Council in England, and had controlled
their policies. This charter had granted no semblance
of self-government to the settlers. But it was
declared “They shall have and enjoy all the
liberties, franchises, and immunities ... to all intents
and purposes, as if they had been abiding and born,
within ... this realm of England". This promise
was not kept by the Kings of England. Several
of the provisions of the charter itself were not consistent
with it. In later years it was disregarded again
and again by the royal commissions and instructions.
Yet it was of the utmost importance, for it set a
goal which the colonists were determined to attain.
Throughout the entire colonial period they contended
for all the rights of native Englishmen, and it was
the denial of their claim that caused them to revolt
from the mother country and make good their independence.
Provision had also been made for trial by jury.
James had decreed that in all cases the Council should
sit as a court, but in matters of “tumults,
rebellion, conspiracies, mutiny, and séditions
... murther, manslaughter”, and other crimes
punishable with death, guilt or innocence was to be
determined by a jury of twelve. To what extent
the Council made use of the jury system it is impossible
to say, but Wingfield states that on one occasion
he was tried before a jury for slander, and fined
L300.
The second charter had been granted
in 1609. This document is of great importance
because through it the King resigned the actual control
of the colony into the hands of the Virginia Company.
And although this did not result immediately in the
establishment of representative government, it strengthened
the hands of Sandys and made it possible for him to
carry out his designs at a future date. Under
this charter the Company might have set up liberal
institutions at once in Virginia, but conditions were
not ripe, either in England or in America, for so
radical a change.
In 1612 the third charter had been
granted. This had still further strengthened
the Company and made them more independent of the King.
It gave them the important privilege of holding great
quarterly meetings or assemblies, where all matters
relating to the government of the colony could be
openly discussed. Still Virginia remained under
the autocratic rule of Dale and Gates.
In 1617 or 1618, however, when the
liberals were in full control of the Company, it was
decided to grant the colonists the privilege of a
parliament. In April, 1618, Lord De la Warr sailed
for Virginia to reassume active control of affairs
there, bringing with him instructions to establish
a new form of government. What this government
was to have been is not known, but it was designed
by Sir Edwin Sandys, and beyond doubt, was liberal
in form. Possibly it was a duplicate of that
established the next year by Governor Yeardley.
Most unfortunately, Lord De la Warr, whose health
had been shattered by his first visit to Virginia,
died during the voyage across the Atlantic, and it
became necessary to continue the old constitution
until the Company could appoint a successor.
In November, 1618, George Yeardley
was chosen Governor-General of Virginia, and was intrusted
with several documents by whose authority he was to
establish representative government in the colony.
These papers, which became known as the Virginia Magna
Charta, were the very corner-stone of liberty in the
colony and in all America. Their importance can
hardly be exaggerated, for they instituted the first
representative assembly of the New World, and established
a government which proved a bulwark against royal
prerogative for a century and a half.
Governor Yeardley sailed from England
January, 1619, and reached Virginia on the 29th of
April. After some weeks of preparation, he issued
a general proclamation setting in operation the Company’s
orders. It was decreed, “that all those
who were resident here before the departure of Sir
Thomas Dale should be freed and acquitted from such
publique services and labors which formerly they suffered,
and that those cruel laws by which we had so long
been governed were now abrogated, and that now we
were to be governed by those free laws which his Majesty’s
subjects live under in Englande.... And that they
might have a hand in the governing of themselves,
it was granted that a General Assembly should be held
yearly once, whereat were to be present the Governor
and Counsell, with two Burgesses from each plantation
freely to be elected by the inhabitants thereof; this
Assembly to have power to make and ordaine whatsoever
lawes and orders should by them be thought good and
proffittable for our subsistence."
The exact date of the election for
Burgesses is not known. The statement that the
representatives were to be “chosen by the inhabitants”
seems to indicate that the franchise was at once given
to all male adults, or at least to all freemen.
“All principall officers in Virginia were to
be chosen by ye balloting box.” From the
very first there were parties, and it is possible
that the factions of the London Company were reflected
at the polls in the early elections. The Magna
Charta made provision for the establishment of boroughs,
which were to serve both as units for local government
and as electoral districts. No attempt was made
to secure absolute uniformity of population in the
boroughs, but there were no glaring inequalities.
With the regard for the practical which has always
been characteristic of Englishmen, the Company seized
upon the existing units, such as towns, plantations
and hundreds, as the basis of their boroughs.
In some cases several of these units were merged to
form one borough, in others, a plantation or a town
or a hundred as it stood constituted a borough.
As there were eleven of these districts and as each
district chose two Burgesses, the first General Assembly
was to contain twenty-two representatives.
The Assembly convened at Jamestown,
August 9th, 1619. “The most convenient
place we could finde to sitt in,” says the minutes,
“was the Quire of the Churche Where Sir George
Yeardley, the Governor, being sett down in his accustomed
place, those of the Counsel of Estate sate nexte him
on both hands excepte onely the Secretary then
appointed Speaker, who sate right before him, John
Twine, the clerk of the General Assembly, being placed
nexte the Speaker, and Thomas Pierse, the Sergeant,
standing at the barre, to be ready for any service
the Assembly shoulde comand him. But forasmuche
as men’s affaires doe little prosper where God’s
service is neglected, all the Burgesses tooke their
places in the Quire till a prayer was said by Mr. Bucke,
the Minister.... Prayer being ended,... all the
Burgesses were intreatted to retyre themselves into
the body of the Churche, which being done, before
they were fully admitted, they were called in order
and by name, and so every man tooke the oathe of Supremacy
and entered the Assembly."
The body at once claimed and made
good its right to exclude Burgesses who they thought
were not entitled to seats. The Speaker himself
raised an objection to admitting the representatives
of Warde’s plantation, because that settlement
had been made without a commission from the London
Company. But Captain Warde promised to secure
a patent as soon as possible, and the objection was
waived. The Assembly refused absolutely, however,
to seat the Burgesses from Martin’s Hundred.
Captain Martin had been one of the first Council for
Virginia, and as a reward for his long services had
been granted privileges that rendered him almost independent
of the government at Jamestown. He was summoned
before the Assembly and requested to relinquish these
extraordinary rights, but he refused to do so.
“I hold my patent,” he said, “for
my service don, which noe newe or late comer can meritt
or challenge." So the Assembly, feeling that
it would be mockery to permit the Burgesses from Martin’s
Hundred to assist in the making of laws which their
own constituents, because of their especial charter,
might with impunity disobey, refused to admit them.
The legislative powers granted the
Virginia Assembly in the Magna Charta, and continued
with slight alterations after the revocation of the
charter of the London Company, were very extensive.
The Assembly could pass laws dealing with a vast variety
of matters appertaining to the safety and welfare
of the colony. Statutes were enacted in the session
of 1619 touching upon Indian affairs, the Church, land
patents, the relations of servants and landlords,
the planting of crops, general morality in Virginia,
the price of tobacco, foreign trade, etc.
The collected laws of the entire colonial period fill
many volumes, and cover a vast variety of subjects.
But there were three things which limited strictly
the Assembly’s field of action. They must
pass no statutes contravening first, the laws of England;
secondly, the charters; thirdly, the instructions
sent them by the London Company. When the colony
passed into the hands of the King, all statutes were
forbidden that conflicted with the charters, or with
the instructions of the Crown. These restrictions
lasted during the entire colonial period, but they
were not always carefully regarded. The Company,
and later the King, retained two ways of nullifying
legislation which was unauthorized, or was distasteful
to them. First, there was the veto of the Governor.
As the guardian of the interests of England and his
monarch, this officer could block all legislation.
Secondly, the Company, and later the King, could veto
laws even though the Governor had consented to them.
But the most important power exercised
by the Assembly was its control over taxation in Virginia.
In the very first session it made use of this privilege
by ordering, “That every man and manservant of
above 16 years of age shall pay into the handes and
Custody of the Burgesses of every Incorporation and
plantation one pound of the best Tobacco". The
funds thus raised were utilized for the payment of
the officers of the Assembly.
The levy by the poll, here used, was
continued for many years, and became the chief support
of the government. As the colony grew, however,
and the need for greater revenues was felt, customs
duties and other forms of taxation were resorted to.
Large sums were raised by an export duty upon tobacco.
At times tariffs were placed upon the importation of
liquors, slaves and other articles. But these
duties had to be used with great care, for the carrying
of the colony was done chiefly by English merchants,
and Parliament would permit nothing detrimental to
their interests.
The Assembly claimed the exclusive
right to levy general taxes. The Governor and
Council time and again tried to wrest this privilege
from them, but never with success. The Burgesses,
realizing that their hold upon the exchequer was the
chief source of their power, were most careful never
to relinquish it. From time to time the Governors
sought to evade this restraint by levying taxes under
the guise of fees. But this expedient invariably
excited intense irritation, and yielded a revenue
so small that most Governors thought it best to avoid
it entirely. Of more importance were the quit-rents,
a tax on land, paid to the King by all freeholders.
But this was frequently avoided, and, except at rare
intervals, the funds raised by it were left in Virginia
to be expended for local purposes. The greatest
blow to the power of the Burgesses was struck by the
King in 1680, when he forced through the Assembly
a law granting to the government a perpetual income
from the export duty on tobacco. This revenue,
although not large, was usually sufficient to pay
the Governor’s salary, and thus to render him
less dependent upon the Assembly. Finally, it
must not be forgotten that the English government,
although it refrained from taxing the colony directly,
imposed an enormous indirect tax by means of a tariff
upon tobacco brought into England. These duties
were collected in England, but there can be no doubt
that the incidence of the tax rested partly upon the
Virginia planters. Despite these various duties,
all levied without its consent, the Assembly exercised
a very real control over taxation in Virginia, and
used it as an effective weapon against the encroachments
of the Governors.
From the very first the General Assembly
showed itself an energetic and determined champion
of the rights of the people. Time and again it
braved the anger of the Governor and of the King himself,
rather than yield the slightest part of its privileges.
During the decade preceding the English Revolution
only the heroic resistance of this body saved the
liberal institutions of the colony from destruction
at the hands of Charles II and James II.
The General Assembly was not only
a legislative body, it was also a court of justice,
and for many years served as the highest tribunal of
the colony. The judicial function was entrusted
to a joint committee from the two houses, whose recommendations
were usually accepted without question. Since
this committee invariably contained more Burgesses
than Councillors, the supreme court was practically
controlled by the representatives of the people.
During the reign of Charles II, however, the Assembly
was deprived of this function by royal proclamation,
and the judiciary fell almost entirely into the hands
of the Governor and Council.
The General Assembly consisted of
two chambers the House of Burgesses and
the Council. In the early sessions the houses
sat together and probably voted as one body.
Later, however, they were divided and voted separately.
The Burgesses, as time went on, gradually increased
in numbers until they became a large body, but the
Council was always small.
The Councillors were royal appointees.
But since the King could not always know personally
the prominent men of the colony, he habitually confirmed
without question the nominations of the Governor.
The members of the Council were usually persons of
wealth, influence and ability. As they were subject
to removal by the King and invariably held one or more
lucrative governmental offices, it was customary for
them to display great servility to the wishes of his
Majesty or of the Governor. It was very unusual
for them to oppose in the Assembly any measure recommended
by the King, or in accord with his expressed wishes.
Although the Councillors were, with rare exceptions,
natives of Virginia, they were in no sense representative
of the people of the colony.
As the upper house of the Assembly,
the Council exercised a powerful influence upon legislation.
After the separation of the chambers their consent
became necessary for the passage of all bills, even
money bills. Their legislative influence declined
during the eighteenth century, however, because of
the growing spirit of liberalism in Virginia, and
the increasing size of the House of Burgesses.
The executive powers entrusted to
the Council were also of very great importance.
The Governor was compelled by his instructions to secure
its assistance and consent in the most important matters.
And since the chief executive was always a native
of England, and often entirely ignorant of conditions
in the colony, he was constantly forced to rely upon
the advice of his Council. This tendency was made
more pronounced by the frequent changes of Governors
that marked the last quarter of the seventeenth century.
So habitually did the Council exercise certain functions,
not legally within their jurisdiction, that they began
to claim them as theirs by right. And the Governor
was compelled to respect these claims as scrupulously
as the King of England respects the conventions that
hedge in and limit his authority.
Before the end of the seventeenth
century the Council had acquired extraordinary influence
in the government. With the right to initiate
and to block legislation, with almost complete control
over the judiciary, with great influence in administrative
matters, it threatened to become an oligarchy of almost
unlimited power.
But it must not be supposed that the
influence of the Council rendered impotent the King’s
Governor. Great powers were lodged in the hands
of this officer by his various instructions and commissions.
He was commander of the militia, was the head of the
colonial church, he appointed most of the officers,
attended to foreign affairs, and put the laws into
execution. His influence, however, resulted chiefly
from the fact that he was the representative of the
King. In the days of Charles I, in the Restoration
Period and under James II, when the Stuarts were combating
liberal institutions, both in England and in the colonies,
the Governor exercised a powerful and dangerous control
over affairs in Virginia. But after the English
Revolution his power declined. As the people
of England no longer dreaded a monarch whose authority
now rested solely upon acts of Parliament, so the
Virginians ceased to fear his viceroy.
The powers officially vested in the
Governor were by no means solely executive. He
frequently made recommendations to the Assembly, either
in his own name or the name of the King, and these
recommendations at times assumed the nature of commands.
If the Burgesses were reluctant to obey, he had numerous
weapons at hand with which to intimidate them and whip
them into line. Unscrupulous use of the patronage
and threats of the King’s dire displeasure were
frequently resorted to. The Governor presided
over the upper house, and voted there as any other
member. Moreover, he could veto all bills, even
those upon which he had voted in the affirmative in
the Council. Thus he had a large influence in
shaping the laws of the colony, and an absolute power
to block all legislation.
Such, in outline, was the government
originated for Virginia by the liberal leaders of
the London Company, and put into operation by Sir
George Yeardley. It lasted, with the short intermission
of the Commonwealth Period, for more than one hundred
and fifty years, and under it Virginia became the
most populous and wealthy of the English colonies
in America.
The successful cultivation of tobacco
in Virginia, as we have seen, put new life into the
discouraged London Company. The shareholders,
feeling that now at last the colony would grow and
prosper, exerted themselves to the utmost to secure
desirable settlers and to equip them properly.
Soon fleets of considerable size were leaving the English
ports for America, their decks and cabins crowded
with emigrants and their holds laden with clothing,
arms and farming implements. During the months
from March 1620 to March 1621 ten ships sailed, carrying
no less than 1051 persons. In the year ending
March, 1622, seventeen ships reached Virginia, bringing
over fifteen hundred new settlers. And this stream
continued without abatement until 1624, when disasters
in Virginia, quarrels among the shareholders and the
hostility of the King brought discouragement to the
Company. In all, there reached the colony from
November, 1619, to February, 1625, nearly five thousand
men, women and children.
Although tobacco culture was the only
enterprise of the colony which had yielded a profit,
it was not the design of Sandys and his friends that
that plant should monopolize the energies of the settlers.
They hoped to make Virginia an industrial community,
capable of furnishing the mother country with various
manufactured articles, then imported from foreign
countries. Especially anxious were they to render
England independent in their supply of pig iron.
Ore having been discovered a few miles above Henrico
on the James, a furnace was erected there and more
than a hundred skilled workmen brought over from England
to put it into operation. Before the works could
be completed, however, they were utterly demolished
by the savages, the machinery thrown into the river,
all the workmen slaughtered, and the only return
the Company obtained for an outlay of thousands of
pounds was a shovel, a pair of tongs and one bar of
iron. Efforts were made later to repair the havoc
wrought by the Indians and to reestablish the works,
but they came to nothing. Not until the time
of Governor Spotswood were iron furnaces operated
in Virginia, and even then the industry met with a
scant measure of success.
The Company also made an earnest effort
to promote the manufacture of glass in Virginia.
This industry was threatened with extinction in England
as a result of the great inroads that had been made
upon the timber available for fuel, and it was thought
that Virginia, with its inexhaustible forests, offered
an excellent opportunity for its rehabilitation.
But here too they were disappointed. The sand
of Virginia proved unsuitable for the manufacture
of glass. The skilled Italian artisans sent over
to put the works into operation were intractable and
mutinous. After trying in various ways to discourage
the enterprise, so that they could return to Europe,
these men brought matters to a close by cracking the
furnace with a crowbar. George Sandys, in anger,
declared “that a more damned crew hell never
vomited".
In order to show that they were sincere
in their professions of interest in the spiritual
welfare of the Indians, the Company determined to erect
a college at Henrico “for the training up of
the children of those Infidels in true Religion, moral
virtue and civility". The clergy of England were
enthusiastic in their support of this good design,
and their efforts resulted in liberal contributions
from various parts of the kingdom. Unfortunately,
however, the money thus secured was expended in sending
to the college lands a number of “tenants”
the income from whose labor was to be utilized in
establishing and supporting the institution.
As some of these settlers fell victims to disease
and many others were destroyed in the massacre of 1622,
the undertaking had to be abandoned, and of course
all thought of converting and civilizing the savages
was given up during the long and relentless war that
ensued.
Even more discouraging than these
failures was the hostility of the King to the cultivation
of tobacco in Virginia, and his restrictions upon its
importation into England. Appeals were made to
him to prohibit the sale of Spanish tobacco, in order
that the Virginia planters might dispose of their
product at a greater profit. This, it was argued,
would be the most effective way of rendering the colony
prosperous and self sustaining. But James, who
was still bent upon maintaining his Spanish policy,
would not offend Philip by excluding his tobacco from
England. Moreover, in 1621, he issued a proclamation
restricting the importation of the leaf from Virginia
and the Somers Isles to fifty-five thousand pounds
annually. This measure created consternation in
Virginia and in the London Company. The great
damage it would cause to the colony and the diminution
in the royal revenue that would result were pointed
out to James, but for the time he was obdurate.
Indeed, he caused additional distress by granting
the customs upon tobacco to a small association of
farmers of the revenue, who greatly damaged the interests
of the colony. In 1622, James, realizing that
his policy in regard to tobacco was injuring the exchequer,
made a compromise with the Company. The King
agreed to restrict the importation of Spanish tobacco
to 60,000 pounds a year, and after two years to exclude
it entirely. All the Virginia leaf was to be
admitted, but the Crown was to receive one third of
the crop, while the other two thirds was subjected
to a duty of six pence a pound. This agreement
proved most injurious to the Company, and it was soon
abandoned, but the heavy exactions of the King continued.
Undoubtedly this unwise policy was most detrimental
to Virginia. Not only did it diminish the returns
of the Company and make it impossible for Sandys to
perfect all his wise plans for the colony, but it
put a decided check upon immigration. Many that
would have gone to Virginia to share in the profits
of the planters, remained at home when they saw that
these profits were being confiscated by the King.
Yet the strenuous efforts of the London
Company would surely have brought something like prosperity
to the colony had not an old enemy returned to cause
the destruction of hundreds of the settlers. This
was the sickness. For some years the mortality
had been very low, because the old planters were acclimated,
and few new immigrants were coming to Virginia.
But with the stream of laborers and artisans that the
Sandys regime now sent over, the scourge appeared
again with redoubled fury. As early as January,
1620, Governor Yeardley wrote “of the great
mortallitie which hath been in Virginia, about 300
of ye inhabitants having dyed this year". The
sickness was most deadly in the newly settled parts
of the colony, “to the consumption of divers
Hundreds, and almost the utter destruction of some
particular Plantations". The London Company,
distressed at the loss of so many men, saw in their
misfortunes the hand of God, and wrote urging “the
more carefull observations of his holy laws to work
a reconciliation". They also sent directions
for the construction, in different parts of the colony,
of four guest houses, or hospitals, for the lodging
and entertaining of fifty persons each, upon their
first arrival. But all efforts to check the scourge
proved fruitless. In the year ending March, 1621
over a thousand persons died upon the immigrant vessels
and in Virginia. Despite the fact that hundreds
of settlers came to the colony during this year, the
population actually declined. In 1621 the percentage
of mortality was not so large, but the actual number
of deaths increased. During the months from March,
1621, to March, 1622, nearly twelve hundred persons
perished. It was like condemning a man to death
to send him to the colony. Seventy-five or eighty
per cent. of the laborers that left England in search
of new homes across the Atlantic died before the expiration
of their first year. The exact number of deaths
in 1622 is not known, but there is reason to believe
that it approximated thirteen hundred. Mr. George
Sandys, brother of the Secretary of the London Company,
wrote, “Such a pestilent fever rageth this winter
amongst us: never knowne before in Virginia,
by the infected people that came over in ye Abigall,
who were poisoned with ... beer and all falling sick
& many dying, every where dispersed the contagion,
and the forerunning Summer hath been also deadly upon
us." Not until 1624 did the mortality decline.
Then it was that the Governor wrote, “This summer,
God be thanked, the Colony hath very well stood to
health". The dread sickness had spent itself
for lack of new victims, for the immigration had declined
and the old planters had become “seasoned”.
History does not record an epidemic
more deadly than that which swept over Virginia during
these years. It is estimated that the number of
those that lost their lives from the diseases native
to the colony and to those brought in from the infected
ships amounts to no less than four thousand.
When the tide of immigration was started by Sir Edwin
Sandys in 1619, there were living in Virginia about
nine hundred persons; when it slackened in 1624 the
population was but eleven hundred. The sending
of nearly five thousand settlers to Virginia had resulted
in a gain of but two hundred. It is true that
the tomahawk and starvation accounts for a part of
this mortality, but by far the larger number of deaths
was due to disease.
Yet hardly less horrible than the
sickness was the Indian massacre of 1622. This
disaster, which cost the lives of several hundred persons,
struck terror into the hearts of every Englishman in
Virginia. The colonists had not the least intimation
that the savages meditated harm to them, for peace
had existed between the races ever since the marriage
of Rolfe and Pocahontas. Considering the protection
of their palisades no longer necessary after that
event, they had spread out over the colony in search
of the most fertile lands. Their plantations extended
at intervals for many miles along both banks of the
James, and in the case of a sudden attack by the Indians
it would obviously be difficult for the settlers to
defend themselves or to offer assistance to their
neighbors.
The apparent friendship of the Indians
had created such great intimacy between the two races,
that the savages were received into the homes of the
white men and at times were fed at their tables.
At the command of the London Company itself some of
the Indian youths had been adopted by the settlers
and were being educated in the Christian faith.
So unsuspecting were the people that they loaned the
savages their boats, as they passed backward and forward,
to formulate their plans for the massacre.
The plot seems to have originated
in the cunning brain of Opechancanough. This
chief, always hostile to the white men, must have
viewed with apprehension their encroachment upon the
lands of his people. He could but realize that
some day the swarms of foreigners that were arriving
each year would exclude the Indians from the country
of their forefathers. Perceiving his opportunity
in the foolish security of the English and in their
exposed situation, he determined to annihilate them
in one general butchery.
His plans were laid with great cunning.
Although thousands of natives knew of the design,
no warning reached the white men until the very eve
of the massacre. While Opechancanough was preparing
this tremendous blow, he protested in the strongest
terms his perpetual good will and love, declaring
that the sky would fall before he would bring an end
to the peace. In order to lull the suspicions
of the planters, “even but two daies before
the massacre”, he guided some of them “with
much kindnesse through the woods, and one Browne that
lived among them to learne the language”, he
sent home to his master. The evening before the
attack the Indians came as usual to the plantations
with deer, turkeys, fish, fruits and other provisions
to sell.
That night, however, a warning was
received, which although too late to save the most
remote settlements, preserved many hundreds from the
tomahawk. Chanco, an Indian boy who had been adopted
by an Englishman named Race, revealed the entire plot
to his master. The man secured his house, and
rowed away before dawn in desperate haste to Jamestown,
to give warning to the Governor. “Whereby
they were prevented, and at such other plantations
as possibly intelligence could be given."
The assault of the savages was swift
and deadly. In all parts of the colony they fell
upon the settlers, and those that had received no
warning were, in most cases, butchered before they
could suspect that harm was intended. Sometimes
the Indians sat down to breakfast with their victims,
“whom immediately with their owne tooles they
slew most barbarously, not sparing either age or sex,
man woman or childe". Many were slain while working
in the fields; others were trapped in their houses
and butchered before they could seize their weapons.
The savages, “not being content with their lives,...
fell againe upon the dead bodies, making as well as
they could a fresh murder, defacing, dragging, and
mangling their dead carkases into many peeces".
That the plot was so successful was
due to the completeness of the surprise, for where
the English made the least resistance the savages
were usually beaten off. A planter named Causie,
when attacked and wounded and surrounded by the Indians,
“with an axe did cleave one of their heads,
whereby the rest fled and he escaped; for they hurt
not any that did either fight or stand upon their
guard. In one place where they had warning of
it, (they) defended the house against sixty or more
that assaulted it."
At the plantation of a Mr. Harrison,
where there were gathered seven men and eighteen or
nineteen women and children, the savages set fire to
a tobacco house and then came in to tell the men to
quench it. Six of the English, not suspecting
treachery, rushed out, and were shot full of arrows.
Mr. Thomas Hamor, the seventh man, “having finished
a letter he was writing, followed after to see what
was the matter, but quickly they shot an arrow in
his back, which caused him to returne and barricade
up the dores, whereupon the Salvages set fire to the
house. But a boy, seizing a gun which he found
loaded, discharged it at random. At the bare
report the enemy fled and Mr. Hamor with the women
and children escaped." In a nearby house, a party
of English under Mr. Hamor’s brother, were caught
by the Indians without arms, but they defended themselves
successfully with spades, axes and brickbats.
One of the first to fall was Reverend
George Thorpe, a member of the Virginia Council, and
a man of prominence in England. Leaving a life
of honor and ease, he had come to Virginia to work
for the conversion of the Indians. He had apparently
won the favor of Opechancanough, with whom he often
discoursed upon the Christian religion. At the
moment of his murder, his servant, perceiving the
deadly intent of the savages, gave him warning, but
his gentle nature would not permit him to believe
harm of those whom he had always befriended, and he
was cut down without resistance.
The barbarous king failed in his design
to destroy the English race in Virginia, but the massacre
was a deadly blow to the colony. No less than
three hundred and fifty-seven persons were slaughtered,
including six Councillors. The news of the disaster
brought dismay to the London Company. For a while
they attempted to keep the matter a secret, but in
a few weeks it was known all over England. Although
the massacre could not have been foreseen or prevented,
it served as a pretext for numerous attacks upon Sandys
and the party which supported him. It discouraged
many shareholders and made it harder to secure settlers
for the colony. Even worse was the effect in
Virginia. The system of farming in unprotected
plantations, which had prevailed for some years, had
now to be abandoned and many settlements that were
exposed to the Indians were deserted. “We
have not,” wrote the Assembly, “the safe
range of the Country for the increase of Cattle, Swyne,
etc; nor for the game and fowle which the country
affords in great plentye; besides our duties to watch
and warde to secure ourselves and labor are as hard
and chargeable as if the enemy were at all times present."
The massacre was followed by a venomous
war with the Indians, which lasted many years.
The English, feeling that their families and their
homes would never be safe so long as the savages shared
the country with them, deliberately planned the extermination
of all hostile tribes in Virginia. Their conversion
was given no further consideration. “The
terms betwixt us and them,” they declared, “are
irreconcilable." Governor Wyatt wrote, “All
trade with them must be forbidden, and without doubt
either we must cleere them or they us out of the Country."
But it soon became apparent that neither
people would be able to win an immediate or decisive
victory. The Indians could not hope to destroy
the English, now that their deeply laid plot had failed.
In open battle their light arrows made no impression
upon the coats of plate and of mail in which the white
men were incased, while their own bodies were without
protection against the superior weapons of their foes.
On the other hand, it was very difficult for the colonists
to strike the savages, because of the “advantages
of the wood and the nimbleness of their heels".
Even though they “chased them to and fro”,
following them to their villages and burning their
huts, they found it very difficult to do them serious
harm.
Finally the English hit upon the plan
of bringing distress upon the savages by destroying
their corn. Although the Virginia tribes subsisted
partly upon game, their chief support was from their
fields of maize, and the entire failure of their crop
would have reduced hundreds of them to the verge of
starvation. Each year the white men, in small
companies, in various parts of the country, brought
ruin to the corn fields. Sometimes the savages,
in despair at the prospect of famine, made valiant
efforts to defend their fields, but were invariably
beaten off until the work of destruction was done.
The natives retaliated with many sudden
raids upon the more exposed parts of the colony, where
they burned, pillaged and murdered. The planter
at work in his fields might expect to find them lurking
in the high grass, while their ambushes in the woods
made communication from plantation to plantation very
dangerous. “The harmes that they do us,”
wrote the Assembly, “is by ambushes and sudden
incursions, where they see their advantages."
In 1625 Captain John Harvey declared that the two
races were “ingaged in a mortall warre and fleshed
in each others bloud, of which the Causes have been
the late massacre on the Salvages parte....
I conceive that by the dispersion of the Plantations
the Salvages hath the advantage in this warre, and
that by their suddaine assaults they do us more harme
than we do them by our set voyages".
When the English had recovered from
the first shock of the massacre, they planned four
expeditions against the tribes living on the river
above Jamestown. Mr. George Sandys attacked the
Tappahatomaks, Sir George Yeardley the Wyanokes, Captain
William Powell the Chickahominies and the Appomatocks,
and Captain John West the Tanx-Powhatans. The
savages, without attempting to make a stand, deserted
their villages and their crops and fled at the approach
of the English. Few were killed, for they were
“so light and swift” that the white men,
laden with their heavy armor, could not overtake them.
In the fall Sir George Yeardley led three hundred
men down the river against the Nansemonds and against
Opechancanough. The natives “set fire to
their own houses, and spoiled what they could, and
then fled with what they could carry; so that the
English did make no slaughter amongst them for revenge.
Their Corne fields being newly gathered, they surprised
all they found, burnt the houses (that) remained unburnt,
and so departed."
It is remarkable that the colonists
could continue this war while the sickness was raging
among them. At the very time that Yeardley was
fighting Opechancanough, hundreds of his comrades were
dying “like cats and dogs”. “With
our small and sicklie forces,” wrote Mr. George
Sandys, “we have discomforted the Indians round
about us, burnt their houses, gathered their corn
and slain not a few; though they are as swift as Roebucks,
like the violent lightening they are gone as soon as
perceived, and not to be destroyed but by surprise
or famine."
How bitter was the war is shown by
an act of treachery by the English that would have
shamed the savages themselves. In 1623, the Indians,
discouraged by the destruction of their crops, sent
messengers to Jamestown, asking for peace. The
colonists determined to take advantage of this overture
to recover their prisoners and at the same time to
strike a sudden blow at their enemy. Early in
June, Captain William Tucker with twelve well armed
men was sent “in a shalope under colour to make
peace with them”. On the arrival of this
party at the chief town of Opechancanough, the savages
thronged down to the riverside to parley with them,
but the English refused to consider any terms until
all prisoners had been restored. Assenting to
this, the savages brought forth seven whites and they
were placed aboard the vessel. Having thus accomplished
their purpose, the soldiers, at a given signal, let
fly a volley into the midst of the crowd, killing
“some 40 Indians including 3 of the chiefest".
In 1624 the English won a great victory
over the most troublesome of the Indian tribes, the
Pamunkeys. Governor Wyatt, in leading an expedition
against this people had evidently expected little resistance,
for he brought with him but sixty fighting men.
The Pamunkeys, however, had planted that year a very
large crop of corn, which they needed for the support
of themselves and their confederates, and they determined
to protect it at all hazards. So Wyatt and his
little band were surprised, on approaching their village
to find before them more than eight hundred warriors
prepared for battle. The English did not falter
in the face of this army, and a fierce contest ensued.
“Fightinge not only for safeguards of their
houses and such a huge quantity of corn”, but
for their reputation with the other nations, the Pamunkeys
displayed unusual bravery. For two days the battle
went on. Whenever the young warriors wavered
before the volleys of musketry, they were driven back
into the fight by the older men. Twenty-four
of the English were detached from the firing line
and were employed in destroying the maize. In
this they were so successful that enough corn was
cut down “as by Estimation of men of good judgment
was sufficient to have sustained fower thousand men
for a twelvemonth”. At last the savages
in despair gave up the fight and stood nearby “rufully
lookinge on whilst their Corne was cutt down”.
“In this Expedition,” wrote the colonists,
“sixteene of the English were hurte our first
and seconde day, whereby nyne of the best shott
were made unserviceable for that tyme, yett never
a man slayne, nor none miscarried of those hurtes,
Since when they have not greatly troubled us, nor
interrupted our labours."
The series of misfortunes which befel
the London Company during the administration of Sir
Edwin Sandys culminated in the loss of their charter.
For some time King James had been growing more and
more hostile to the party that had assumed control
of the colony. It is highly probable that he
had had no intimation, when the charter of 1612 was
granted, that popular institutions would be established
in Virginia, and the extension of the English parliamentary
system to America must have been distasteful to him.
The enemies of Sandys had been whispering to the King
that he “aymed at nothing more than to make a
free popular state there, and himselfe and his assured
friends to be the leaders of them". James knew
that Sandys was not friendly to the prerogative of
the Crown. It had been stated “that there
was not any man in the world that carried a more malitious
heart to the Government of a Monarchie".
In 1621 the controlling party in the
London Company was preparing a new charter for Virginia.
The contents of this document are not known, but it
is exceedingly probable that it was intended as the
preface to the establishment of a government in the
colony far more liberal than that of England itself.
It was proposed to have the charter confirmed by act
of Parliament, and to this James had consented, provided
it proved satisfactory to the Privy Council.
But it is evident that when the Councillors had examined
it, they advised the King not to assent to it or to
allow it to appear in Parliament. Indeed the document
must have stirred James’ anger, for not only
did he end all hopes of its passage, but he “struck
some terrour into most undertakers for Virginia”,
by imprisoning Sir Edwin Sandys.
Even more distasteful to the King
than the establishment of popular institutions in
the little colony was the spreading of liberal doctrines
throughout England by the Sandys faction of the Company.
James could no longer tolerate their meetings, if
once he began to look upon them as the nursery of
discontent and sedition. The party that was so
determined in its purpose to plant a republican government
in Virginia might stop at nothing to accomplish the
same end in England. James knew that national
politics were often discussed in the assemblies of
the Company and that the parties there were sometimes
as “animated one against the other” as
had been the “Guelfs and Gebillines” of
Italy. He decided that the best way to end these
controversies and frustrate the designs of his enemies
was to annul the charter of the Company and make Virginia
a royal colony.
The first unmistakable sign of his
hostility came in June 1622, when he interfered with
the election of their treasurer. It was not, he
told them, his intention “to infringe their
liberty of free election”, but he sent a list
of names that would be acceptable to him, and asked
them to put one of these in nomination. To this
the Company assented readily enough, even nominating
two from the list, but when the election was held,
the King’s candidates were overwhelmingly defeated.
When James heard this, he “flung himself away
in a furious passion”, being “not well
satisfied that out of so large a number by him recommended
they had not made any choice". The incident meant
that James had given the Company an unmistakable intimation
that it would be well for them to place the management
of affairs in the hands of men more in harmony with
himself, and that they had scornfully refused.
The Company was now doomed, for the
King decided that the charter must be revoked.
He could not, of course, annul a grant that had passed
under the Great Seal, without some presence of legal
proceedings, but when once he had determined on the
ruin of the Company, means to accomplish his end were
not lacking. John Ferrar wrote, “The King,
notwithstanding his royal word and honor pledged to
the contrary ... was now determined with all his force
to make the last assault, and give the death blow to
this ... Company."
James began by hunting evidence of
mismanagement and incapacity by the Sandys party.
He gave orders to Captain Nathaniel Butler, who had
spent some months in Virginia, to write a pamphlet
describing the condition of the colony. The Unmasking
of Virginia, as Butler’s work is called was
nothing less than a bitter assault upon the conduct
of affairs since the beginning of the Sandys administration.
Unfortunately, it was not necessary for the author
to exaggerate much in his description of the frightful
conditions in the colony; but it was unfair to place
the blame upon the Company. The misfortunes of
the settlers were due to disease and the Indians and
did not result from incapacity or negligence on the
part of Sandys. The Company drew up “A True
answer to a writing of Information presented to his
Majesty by Captain Nathaniel Butler”, denying
most of the charges and explaining others, but they
could not efface the bad impression caused by the
Unmasking.
In April, 1623, James appointed a
commission to make enquiry into the “true estate
of ... Virginia". This body was directed
to investigate “all abuses and grievances ...
all wrongs and injuryes done to any adventurers or
planters and the grounds and causes thereof, and to
propound after what sort the same may be better managed".
It seems quite clear that the commissioners understood
that they were expected to give the King “some
true ground to work upon”, in his attack on
the Company’s charter. In a few weeks they
were busy receiving testimony from both sides, examining
records and searching for evidence. They commanded
the Company to deliver to them all “Charters,
Books, Letters, Petitions, Lists of names, of Provisions,
Invoyces of Goods, and all other writing whatsoever”.
They examined the clerk of the Company, the messenger
and the keeper of the house in which they held their
meetings. They intercepted private letters from
Virginia, telling of the horrible suffering there,
and made the King aware of their contents.
In July the commission made its report.
It found that “the people sent to inhabit there
... were most of them by God’s visitation, sicknes
of body, famine, and by massacres ... dead and deceased,
and those that were living of them lived in miserable
and lamentable necessity and want.... That this
neglect they conceived, must fall on the Governors
and Company here, who had power to direct the Plantations
there.... That if his Majesty’s first Grant
of April 10 1606, and his Majesty’s most prudent
and princely Instructions given in the beginning ...
had been pursued, much better effects had been produced,
than had been by the alteration thereof, into so popular
a course." James was much pleased with the report,
and it confirmed his determination to “resume
the government, and to reduce that popular form so
as to make it agree with the monarchial form".
Before taking the matter to the courts,
the King resolved to offer the Company a compromise.
If they would give up the old charter, he said, a
new one would be granted them, preserving all private
interests, but restoring the active control of the
colony to the Crown. The government was to be
modelled upon the old plan of 1606, which had already
given so much trouble. “His Majesty,”
the Company was told, “hath ... resolved by
a new Charter to appoint a Governor and twelve assistants,
resident here in England, unto whom shall be committed
the government.... And his Majesty is pleased
that there shall be resident in Virginia a Governor
and twelve assistants, to be nominated by the Governor
and assistants here ... whereby all matters of importance
may be directed by his Majesty." The Company
was commanded to send its reply immediately, “his
Majesty being determined, in default of such submission,
to proceed for the recalling of the said former charters".
A special meeting of the stockholders
was called, October 30th, 1623, to consider the King’s
proposal. Every man present must have known that
the rejection of the compromise would mean the loss
of all the money he had invested in the colony, and
that if the King’s wishes were acceded to his
interests would be preserved. But the Company
was fighting for something higher than personal gain for
the maintenance of liberal institutions in America,
for the defence of the rights of English citizens.
After a “hot debate” they put the question
to the vote, and the offer was rejected, there being
“only nine hands for the delivering up of the
Charters, and all the rest (being about three score
more) were of a contrary opinion".
As a last hope the Company resolved
to seek the assistance of Parliament. A petition
was drawn up to be presented to the Commons, and the
shareholders that were members of that body were requested
to give it their strenuous support when it came up
for consideration. The petition referred to Virginia
as a “child of the Kingdom, exposed as in the
wilderness to extreme danger and as it were fainting
and labouring for life”, and it prayed the House
to hear “the grievances of the Colony and Company,
and grant them redress". The matter was brought
before the Commons in May, 1624, but before it could
be considered, a message was received from the King
warning them “not to trouble themselves with
this petition as their doing so could produce nothing
but a further increase Schisme and factions in
the Company”. “Ourself,” he
announced, “will make it our own work to settle
the quiet, and wellfare of the plantations."
This was received with some “soft mutterings”
by the Commons, but they thought it best to comply,
and the Company was left to its fate.
In the meanwhile the King had placed
his case in the hands of Attorney-General Coventry,
who had prepared a quo warranto against the
Company. Although all hope of retaining the charter
was gone, the Sandys party were determined to fight
to the end. They voted to employ attorneys and
to plead their case before the King’s Bench.
The quo warranto came up June 26th, 1624, and
“the Virginia Patent was overthrown”,
on a mistake in pleading. With this judgment the
London Company practically ceased to exist, and Virginia
became a royal province.