“The Lost Colony”
Chapter Two of American Slavery,
American Freedom (1975) by Edmund
S. Morgan
Walter
Raleigh was Humphrey Gilbert's half brother. Though Raleigh was the younger by about fifteen
years, the two men had been close. Like Gilbert, Raleigh
had served an apprenticeship with the queen's forces in Ireland and had then become interested in America.
He had invested in Gilbert's proposed colony and might have gone along on the
exploratory expedition had he not been tied to England by a queen who liked to
have her favorites close at hand. Raleigh,
for the moment at least, was one of her favorites. She had endowed him with
sinecures, monopolies, and pensions that transformed him rapidly from a poor
young gentleman into a rich young courtier. Tall and handsome, looking like a
costume actor ready for the stage, he had at the same time the vision, the
brilliance of mind, and the daring that England nourished in such
abundance during those years. When Gilbert vanished at sea Raleigh had no
difficulty in getting the queen to issue him a patent like Gilberts, conveying
dominion over any part of the American coast where he could establish a
colony (and every-thing six hundred miles north and south of it) within the
ensuing six years. (1)
Raleigh may have toyed
with the idea of fixing his settlement in the northern area that Gilbert had
investigated, but by the time he received his patent, on March 25, 1584, he
had his eye on territory farther south, closer to the Spanish. He had already
begun to fit out two small ships to reconnoiter the region; and on April 27
they were off, commanded by two young men from the large household he had
gathered around him, Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe. With them as pilot
went Simon Fernandez, a naturalized Portuguese who had sailed with Gilbert.
Raleigh himself was not aboard. The queen would let him found a colony, but
she was not likely to let him go to it himself.
Amadas
and Barlowe took the southern route to America,
the one initiated by Columbus.
Leaving Plymouth on April 27, they picked up
the trade winds at the Canaries, and raised the Windward
Islands by June l0. By July 13 they had passed up the east coast
of Florida and made their way along the
Carolina Outer Banks to an inlet just above Hatarask Island.
After passing into Pamlico Sound, they went ashore first at Hatarask and
later at nearby Roanoke Island, the home of
the Roanoke Indians. How long they stayed is not clear, but they were back in
England by mid-September
with two Indians, a bag of pearls, and stories to assure their sponsors that
this part of America was
the way America was
supposed to be, worthy indeed to be distinguished by the name that Raleigh now gave it, Virginia,
after England's
virgin queen.
Arthur
Barlowe wrote up the episode, emphasizing what was evidently expected of him.
(2) The Roanoke Indians were Peter
Martyr's Indians: “most gentle, loving, and faithfull, void of all guile, and
treason, and such as lived after the manner of the golden age. ... a more
kinde and loving people, there can not be found in the world, as farre as we
have hitherto had triall." (3) Seemingly belying this judgment was his
report that in trading deerskins to the English they were most eager for
hatchets, axes, and knives, “and would have given any thing for swords.” (4)
Moreover, the wars they waged with one another were “very cruell, and
bloodie, by reason whereof, and of their civill dissentions, which have
happened of late yeeres amongest them, the people are marvelously wasted, and
in some places, the Countrey left desolate.” (5) But this contradiction was
inherent in the expectation. Good Indians were supposed to live in terror of
bad Indians, against whom they would welcome the assistance of the English.
The good Indians of Roanoke were governed by a king who would, no doubt,
become the willing ally, not to say the vassal, of so great a friend as Raleigh would be to
them. Amadas and Barlowe had not met the king, Wingina, because he was recovering
from wounds suffered in war. But they had met his brother, Granginemeo, whose
friendliness and hospitality were a sufficient sign that Wingina would behave
in the proper manner.
The land,
too, came up to expectations: "The earth bringeth foorth all things in
aboundance, as in the first creation, without toile or labour." (6) With
labor added, of course, it would bring much more. The soil was "the most
plentifull, sweete, fruitfull, and wholsome of all the world." (7) The
expedition had sown English peas that were fourteen inches high in ten days'
time. Wildfowl, deer, and other game were everywhere. Cedars grew higher than
in the Azores, and grapevines flourished so
profusely that "in all the world the like abundance is not to be
founde." (8) The new Eden
would not lack for wine.
Even the
location that the explorers had happened on seemed to be ideal. Roanoke Island was inside the barrier beaches of the
Carolina Outer Banks and thus appeared to offer a snug harbor, safe from
Atlantic gales. And nearby was seemingly the great river Hakluyt had
prescribed for access to interior kingdoms in case the coastal kings should
prove recalcitrant: "Beyond this Islande there is the maine lande, and over against this Islande
falleth into this spatious water, the great river called Occam." (9)
The only
apparent drawback to the site was at the same time one of its advantages: its
close proximity to Spanish outposts Florida
that San Agustin (St. Augustine) and Santa
Elena (St. Helena, South Carolina). Although the Spanish had
little interest in the Atlantic coast of North America,
they did not care to have any other European country plant a colony on it.
They feared, rightly, that the purpose of such a colony would be to
facilitate raids on the Spanish treasure fleets, which followed the same
route out of the Caribbean that Amadas and Barlowe had taken, up the east
coast of Florida.
Because of prevailing winds and currents, this was the only effective route,
and the Spanish had always kept a jealous eye on Florida in order to protect it. When the
French tried a colony there, they wiped it out and planted one of their own.
The French in turn wiped out the Spanish colony, but the Spanish returned. If
only to keep others out, they needed a foothold in Florida. An English colony at Roanoke, so close by,
would be in grave danger of Spanish attack.
That Raleigh intended his colony as a base for action against
Spain
is scarcely to be doubted. The queen had surely known of the intention when
she granted him the patent. The only question was how far she would let him
go, for in 1584 she was still wary of any move that would provoke a
full-scale Spanish attack on England.
Raleigh, on the other hand, like Drake and
Hawkins, preferred to take the initiative; and he hoped to persuade the queen
to follow up the patent with direct assistance in planting the colony and in
mounting an assault from it on Spain's American empire. To this
end, while Amadas and Barlowe were reconnoitering, he had summoned the
younger Richard Hakluyt, who was then serving as a minor functionary in the
English embassy in Paris.
Hakluyt hurried home and prepared a paper, for the queen's eyes, that
detailed the advantages of colonizing the southern part of North
America, advantages so compelling that the queen should not
merely allow the enterprise but should also contribute to the large initial
outlay it would entail. (10)
Hakluyt’s
argument centered on the need and opportunity to deal a crippling blow to Spain The need was urgent, for Spain threatened not only England but all Europe,
"afflictinge and oppressinge of moste of the greatest estates of
Christendome." (11) How had Spain become so powerful and so
dangerous? Hakluyt was certain that the danger lay in its immense wealth.
"Riches," he told the queen, "are the fittest instrumentes of
conqueste." (12) With its riches Spain
would subvert the whole of Europe. And the
riches of Spain, he was
equally sure, came from its New World
empire. The colony that Raleigh
proposed would, at the very least, enable English seamen to cut off the flow
of gold and silver by intercepting the annual treasure fleets. "Touching
the fleete," he pointed out, "no man (that knoweth the course
thereof comyinge oute betwene Cuba,
and the Cape of
Florida along the gulfe
or straite of Bahama) can denye that it is caried by the currant northe and
northeaste towardes the coaste which wee purpose God willing to
inhabite." (13)
But
Hakluyt (and presumably Raleigh) had more in mind than raids on Spanish
shipping. Hakluyt had not forgotten Francis Drake and the Cimarrons, and he
had since learned of other rebels against Spanish tyranny. Miles Phillips, an
Englishman who had been stranded in Mexico with David Ingram after
the battle at San Juan de Ulua, had stayed there fourteen years and only
recently returned. Phillips was full of tales of the Chichimici, a nation of Indians
in the north of Mexico.
They had disrupted Spanish rule there, led by a Negro who had "fledd from
his cruel spanishe Master." Hakluyt had assurance that the Spanish were
much more thinly planted in America
than anyone realized, and everywhere the natives and the imported slaves were
ready to revolt against them. Now was the time for England to strike. If the Chichimici, with the aid of one Negro, could force the Spaniards to abandon
their mines in northern Mexico,
as Phillips said, think what damage they might do with the help of
"divers hundreds of englishe men ... being growen once into familiaritie
with the valiaunte nation." (15)
The
Cimarrons and the Chichimicis would be only a beginning. Hakluyt wanted
nothing less for the king of Spain
than to see "the people revolte in every forrein territorie of his, and
cuff the throates of the proude hatefull Spaniardes their governours."
(16) That the subjects of Spain
had every reason to revolt Hakluyt demonstrated by reciting the atrocities
recounted by Las Casas. That Spain
had no right to rule the New World he demonstrated by refuting the right of
the Pope (who had divided the New World between Spain
and Portugal
in 1493) to assign dominion over any land." (He even tried to cast doubt
on the validity of the Spanish claim that derived from the discoveries of Columbus: Columbus had
sought the sup-port of Henry VII of England before turning to
Ferdinand and Isabella, and had dealt falsely with Henry by not waiting long
enough for Henry's answer.)
What Hakluyt
and Raleigh were affirming was not quite a right of self-determination for
the nations held in Spanish bondage. They were clearly bent on substituting
English rule for Spanish. It had seemed obvious to the Spanish in Panama that Drake and Oxenham were trying to
take over part of Spain's
empire by promoting the revolt of her subjects. It seemed equally obvious to
Hakluyt and Raleigh that this was precisely what England ought to do. Raleigh's colony could furnish not only a base from
which to prey on Spanish shipping, but a rallying point for the oppressed
natives of New Spain. Hakluyt assured
Elizabeth that "whensoever the Queene of England, a prince of such
clemencie, shall seate upon that firme mainland, continent of America, and
shalbe reported throughoute all that tracte to use the naturall people there
with all humanitie, curtesie, and freedome, they will yelde themselves to her
governement and revoke cleane from the Spaniarde." (18)
While the
colony would thus enable the queen to win the oppressed peoples of the New World, it would also enable her to rescue those
Englishmen at home who suffered want and oppression. Like Thomas More,
Hakluyt was troubled by the growing number of men and women for whom England
could afford neither food nor shelter nor even the opportunity to work for
their bread. They drifted from place to place by the hundred, begging and
thieving until the gallows claimed them. The prisons of the land were “daily
pestered and stuffed full of them.” (19)
Hakluyt
was not exaggerating. England's
population, for reasons that still mystify demographers, had begun to rise
rapidly in the early sixteenth century and continued to do so until the
middle of the seventeenth century, so that the island's numbers rose from
under three million in 1500 to more than five million by the middle of the
next century. (20) England's
economy did not expand correspondingly, to furnish work for the new millions.
Prices rose steadily, followed at some distance by a rise in rents and a much
smaller rise in wages. The price of provisions used by a laborer's family
rose twice as fast as wages. From a quarter to a half of the population lived
below the level recognized at the time to constitute poverty. Few of them
could count on regular meals at home, and more and more were forced to the
road, where, as Hakluyt said, they fell “to pilferinge and thevinge and other
lewdnes.” (21)
To plant
a colony in America;
Hakluyt argued, would furnish a twofold remedy to the problem of the
unemployed poor. Not only the colonists but their Indian friends would need
English goods, especially English cloth. In order to supply them, shuttles
would fly in England's
looms and the poor would be able to earn a decent living. Those not employed
in supplying the colonies would themselves become colonists and enjoy the
manifold opportunities of the New World.
Hakluyt
was a compassionate man. He wanted to save those who “for trifles may otherwise
be devoured by the gallowes.” (22) The idleness, poverty, and corruption of
the English poor did not seem to him to be the result of any unworthiness of
character. Desperation, not depravity, drove them to crime. The problem was
that England
had more people than jobs. The cure was to find more jobs, whether in England or in America. Hakluyt's feeling for
the English poor was of a piece with his feeling for the oppressed Indians
and blacks in America.
Both were good people, suffering through no fault of their own. As England was “swarminge at this day with
valiant youths rusting and hurtfull by lacke of employement,” (23) so New Spain was filled with “valiant” people like the
Cimarrons and the Chichimici, suffering by Spanish oppression. The two must
be brought together, under England's
benevolent rule, in a new English empire on American soil.
The
argument was persuasive, and the queen was persuaded, but only to the extent
of lending a ship of the royal navy, the Tyger,
as the flagship of the expedition that Raleigh
gathered during the next year to start his colony. She was also persuaded,
either by Hakluyt's argument or by others, once more to unleash Sir Francis
Drake. As Raleigh was gathering the ships and
men for his colony, Drake was gathering ships and men for a raid on the Caribbean, a raid that was designed to be more than a
raid. For obvious reasons, neither Drake nor Raleigh sought publicity for
what he was doing. Hakluyt's discourse was not published, and the
coordination of plans for the raid and for the colonizing expedition can only
be surmised from events and, once again, from the testimony offered by
Drake's Spanish victims. (24) But given Raleigh’s
objectives, as expounded in Hakluyt's discourse, the two enterprises had to
be connected. While Raleigh was establishing a
permanent base just north of Florida, Drake
would be harassing the Spanish in the Caribbean,
and perhaps, with the aid of. the Cimarron,
liberating a portion of the Spanish empire. Drake knew from past experience
in the Caribbean that the Spanish defended
their coastal cities only with galleys, vessels rowed by "galley slaves,"
another emblem of Spanish tyranny. Galleys had once been effective in
Mediterranean warfare, but they were no match in the ocean for the swift sailing
ships that Drake and Hawkins had developed for the English. (25) By September, 1585, when he set off, Drake
had a fleet of twenty-five of them, including two lent by-the queen. Martin
Frobisher was his vice admiral, and Christopher Carleill, who had backed
Gilbert, was his general, in command of 2,300 soldiers.(26)
Drake's
expedition was naval and military, and unfortunately Raleigh allowed his also to take on a
strong military character. Part of the reason was that the queen had not been
sufficiently generous and probably could not have been. Neither Raleigh nor
his backers had the money to risk for a long-term investment in getting the
colony going. They all, including the queen, wanted every voyage to pay, and
the only way to make it pay was to pick up Spanish prizes en route. But by
giving the expedition a military organization, as Raleigh did, he was placing the government
of his colony, which was supposed to win the natives by its gentleness and
courtesy, in the hands of men whose business was war. The hot-tempered Sir
Richard Grenville was the general in charge; below him Thomas Cavendish (who
later sailed round the world) was marshal; and Ralph Lane, on whom the command at Roanoke finally
devolved, was lieutenant. Little is known about Lane other than the fact that
he had been serving in Ireland,
where he had distinguished himself for rapacity, and that he was released
especially for the voyage. (27) These
men were in charge of about six hundred others, of whom probably half were sailors
to man the five ships. Most of the rest must have been soldiers. Only 108
were designated as colonists, and even they may have been expected to serve
as soldiers if necessary. (28)
Probably
a large percentage of the soldiers and settlers as well as the seamen had
been impressed for the voyage. Impressment was England's way of recruiting for
military expeditions across the Channel or overseas. The casualty rate on
such expeditions was notorious, and the communities that furnished men for
them deliberately selected their most undesirable inhabitants. (29) Those who
returned were likely to be found among the beggars who wandered England's
roads. Hakluyt had, in fact, included these veterans among the persons whom England
might send to the colony. If any of the Roanoke colonists were obtained in
this way, they fulfilled Hakluyt's plan for snatching men from the gallows,
but they were scarcely the most promising material for starting a new
biracial community in combination with the "kind and loving people"
of Roanoke. The thought apparently occurred to someone else who was in on
planning the colony. An anonymous document spells out the need for strict
discipline and includes a brief set of proposed regulations with specific
injunctions against any soldier striking an Indian or entering an Indian's
house without leave. The same document also contains the provision, in keeping
with the colony's purpose, "That no Indian be forced to labor unwillyngly." (30)
The
author of this document, like the Hakluyts, advised Raleigh to bring his own labor, at least
skilled labor, to assure that the community would be economically viable and
productive from the start. But it is not clear that Raleigh succeeded in securing skilled
artisans. He would almost certainly not have been able to impress than, and
the men he did send certainly showed no great capacity for work. Raleigh did, however,
persuade John White, a painter, to go along and make a visual record of the
new land; and Thomas Harriot, a mathematician of no small competence,
accompanied the expedition to make scientific observations that might reveal
the country's natural resources. Harriot had spent the winter with Manteo and Wanchese, the two Indians brought back by Barlowe. He had taught them English
and they had taught him their language and filled him with anticipation of
the good things he would find. They returned with the expedition, so that
there were at least three members who could serve as interpreters.
Grenville
got the expedition off in April 1585, proceeding by way of the West Indies. At Puerto Rico
he landed, built a fort, and cut trees for the construction of a pinnace (to
replace one lost in a storm). There and at Hispaniola he also gathered
livestock and tropical plants, including bananas and sugar cane, so that the
colonists could try growing these profitable Spanish commodities in Virginia. In the last
two weeks of June the vessels straggled into various inlets of the Carolina
Banks. Simon Fernandez, piloting the Tyger,
ran her aground crossing the bar. For two hours she lay there, and by the
time they got her, off, many of the provisions intended to sustain the colony
during its first year were awash in the hold and ruined. Grenville
established headquarters on Roanoke Island, from which he explored the
mainland below the island, while another party examined the country bordering
Albemarle Sound. But Grenville apparently
did not intend to stay permanently with the colony. He, and presumably
Cavendish too, departed at the end of August, leaving Lane in command. (31)
As
Grenville sailed toward England,
picking up a valuable prize off Bermuda, Drake was on his way to the West Indies with his armada. Failing to intercept the
treasure fleets, which got out just before-he-arrived, he pounced on Santo Domingo, the oldest bastion of Spain's New World
empire. Almost before the Spaniards knew what was happening, their city was
in flames, the slaves rowing the galleys that were supposed to defend it were
freed, and the churches were desecrated in the manner the Spanish had learned
to expect from this "Lutheran." After a month of occupation Drake
returned the shell of the city to its Spanish inhabitants for 25,000 ducats, raised
from the personal belongings of those who had managed to hide in the bushes.
Taking along four or five Spanish ships from the harbor and hundreds of
liberated slaves, he sailed away on February 9. Two weeks later the audiencia
of the city reported to the king, “we have understood both from these evil
people and also from others that this and other fleets which cleared from
England will meet at Cape Canavaral, where they have made a settlement"
(32)
But Drake
was not ready to move north yet. On Ash Wednesday, February 19, he appeared
off Cartagena
and by Friday had captured it, burned its defending galleys, and again
liberated the slaves. Negro slaves from surrounding plantations also joined
him, and in negotiating with the city fathers to ransom the city, he made it
clear that he would return no slaves, "except when the slaves themselves
desired to go." (33) It was said at Cartagena
that Drake's next stop would be Panama, that he carried clothing
and other gifts for the Cimarrons there and "pinnaces made in sections
so that the soldiers can carry them on their backs and so enter the
Pacific." (34) If Drake did intend to stop at Panama, he changed his mind. On
April 10, when he left Cartagena (much of it in
ashes) with a ransom of 107,000 ducats, he headed for the Florida channel, taking with him three
hundred Indians ("mostly women") and two hundred Negroes, Turks,
and Moors. (35)
When he
showed up off San Agustin,
Florida, he demonstrated once
again the vulnerability of Spanish dominion. As soon as the English attacked
the fort, the local Indians began to burn the town. The Spanish women and
children, who had been evacuated to the interior to escape the English, were
now more in danger of an Indian attack. So the Spanish commander abandoned
his fort and hastened inland to protect them. "If our people escape from
the English," the commander reported to his superiors in Spain,
"the Indians will fall upon them or both will attack together. “For the
future, he advised, it would be necessary to have sufficient strength to
resist both the Indians and outside enemies, "for when the crisis arrives
both are foes to the death.” (36)
Drake
apparently raided San Agustin not for the sake of plunder, for Florida was no source
of treasure, but as part of the larger strategy of the expedition. In one stroke he reduced the threat that the
garrison at the same time promoted Anglo-Indian solidarity against the
Spaniard. The authorities at San Agustin wrote home that “although he had
burned this city and fort he did no damage at all to an Indian village which
is a cannon's shot from here.” They also reported that Drake sent a party
ashore at Santa Elena and “greatly flattered the Indians of that district,
assuring them that in the spring the English would return and that they had a
settlement on the coast near.” (37)
The
existence of the Roanoke settlement seems to
have been widely known among Spanish officials in the Caribbean, probably as
a result of Grenville's call at Puerto Rico.
One report even had it that Grenville was operating under Drake's orders.
(38) And it seems to have been common knowledge, after Drake left Cartagena, that he was
headed for the English colony. Otherwise, it was pointed our, “there would be
no sense in his taking the pains he took to carry off launches and frigates,
implements, locks and all sorts of hardware and negro labourers who in his
country are free.” (39) Three Negroes left behind at San Agustin confirmed
this reasoning, saying, "He meant to leave all the negroes he had in a
fort and settlement established at Jacan by the English who went there a year
ago." (40)
The
various reports of Drake's activities in the Caribbean
suggest that liberating victims of Spanish oppression was part of the plan.
With Drake's help, it seems, the vision of Hakluyt and Raleigh
was beginning to materialize: England
was bringing freedom to the New World. To be
sure, it was coming as a means to an end; Drake and Raleigh were both
interested in power, profit, and plunder. But freedom has frequently had to
make its way in the world by serving as a means to an end, and it has often
proved a powerful means. At Roanoke
we look for it now to show its power. But by the time Drake arrived there in
triumph, in June, 1586, something had gone awry.
The
colony had begun auspiciously, with the leaders as confident as Barlowe had
been. On August 12 Lane had written to Sir Francis Walsingham that even the
barrenest regions yielded “sum-what that ether for knowen Venue ys of pryce in
Chrystendom, or sumwhat at leeste to the smelle pleasing.” They had not, he
said, found "one stynckinge weede growynge in thys lande.” (42) Three
weeks later he wrote to the elder Hakluyt in even more extravagant terms: Virginia not only smelled good, it was “the goodliest
and most pleasing territorie of the world,” and once inhabited by English-men
it would yield every commodity of Spain,
France, Italy, and the East. It was
already “very wel peopled and towned, though savagelie,” but these savages
were “naturally most curreous, and very desirous to have clothes.”
Lane was
perhaps telling Hakluyt what he knew Hakluyt wanted to hear and what he
himself wanted to believe. But Thomas Hariot, who spent the ensuing months in
a careful investigation of Virginia's
native commodities, was also optimistic about the future productivity of the
country. By 1587, when Hariot wrote his sober and detailed appraisal of Virginia, (43) he knew
that the Indians were not as numerous or as courteous or as fond of clothes
as Lane supposed in 1585. But he still thought that “in respect of troubling
our inhabiting and planting, [they] are not to be feared, but that they shall
have cause both to feare and love us, that shall inhabite with them.” (44) A
few years later, he wrote of them, “to confesse a truthe I cannot remember,
that ever I saw better or quietter people than they.” (45)
Hariot
wrote sympathetically of the Indians. He probably knew them better than the
other settlers did, because of his months of teaching and being taught by
Manteo and Wanchese. John White, the artist of the expedition, also knew them
and recorded his respect for them in the way he painted them. White enjoys a
distinction among artists of his time because of the spontaneous naturalism
of
his drawings, a quality not to be found in other English painters for
another half century. John White's Indians are his own not Peter Martyr's
paragons, and yet there is a dignity in them that conforms to what civil men
have liked to call the myth of the noble savage. (46) That myth has been
expressed as often by men who knew the Indian at first hand as by those who
idealized him from the distance. It has survived massacre, murder, and war,
perhaps because the Indian himself believed it. Although he probably did not
share the European's dream of a primitive but perfect golden age, the
Indian's view of himself evidently included an element of pride that gave
him, especially in relations with other men, an extraordinary dignity. It is
impossible to read the first-hand accounts of Indians, from widely separated
regions and of widely divergent cultures, without being impressed by this
quality, as Arthur Barlowe and John White and Thomas Hariot were impressed by
it at Roanoke.
Unfortunately, there as in Hispaniola, it
led the white man to expect more of the Indian than the Indian expected of
himself.
At the
same time, both Indians and Englishmen expected more of Englishmen than
Englishmen were able to fulfill. The myth of the noble savage was matched by
the equally tenacious myth of the godlike white man. Harriot, after describing
the Indians' admiration for English weapons, books, clocks, and deadly
diseases (which seemed like magic weapons the English could direct at will), explained that "some people could not tel whether to thinke us gods or
men, and the rather because that all the space of their sicknesse, there was
no man of ours knowne to die." (47) The fact that there were no women in
the expedition and that the men showed no interest in Indian women (if we may
believe Hariot) led some Indians to the opinion "that wee were not borne
of women, and therefore not mortall, but that wee were men of an old
generation many yeeres past then risen againe to immoralitie." (48)
The
English could not quite accept this view of themselves and explained to the
Indians about the Almighty God whom they worshiped. But the Indians whom they
persuaded of this being's existence were not slow to recognize his special
favors to the English. If the invaders did not have superhuman power at their
command, they had something close to it, Harriot admitted, in “the speciall
woorke of God for our sakes, as wee our selves have cause in some sorte to
thinke no lesse, whatsoever some doe or may imagine to the contrarie…” (49)
The humility enjoined on men by the Christian God has seldom prevented the assimilation
of a share of divinity by the successful, and especially by those in a
position to command others. English technical superiority—together with the
vulnerability of Indians to English diseases—encouraged the settlers at Roanoke to assume
something of the stature that the Indians were all too ready at first to
assign them. They had come with the expectation sooner or later of ruling the
land, and it was easy to attach the sanction of divine right to their
expectations. The attitude toward the English that Hariot evidently sought
from the Indians was “that they shall have cause both to feare and love us,”
the proper attitude of man toward God and of subjects toward godlike rulers.
What went
wrong at Roanoke
was that the Indians did not show the nobility or the English the divinity
that was expected of them. The trouble began even before Grenville departed.
In July, during his exploration of the mainland, at the Indian village of Aquascogoc
on a branch of the Pamlico
River, an Indian
allegedly stole a silver cup. Three days later, as the party was returning
down the Pamlico, Grenville sent Philip Amadas to recover it. When he failed
to get it, the record says, "we burnt, and spoyled their come, and Towne,
all the people beeing fledde." (50) If the theft was ignoble, the
English reaction was scarcely godlike,
At Roanoke itself things
went smoothly for a time. Wingina, recovered from his wounds, welcomed the
visitors, and the Indians gave freely of their supplies to the English, who
had lose most of their own when the Tyger
grounded. By the time the colonists were settled, it was too late to plant
corn, and they seem to have been helpless when it came to living off the
land. They did not know the herbs and roots and berries of the country. They
could not or would not catch fish in any quantity, because they did not know
how to make weirs. And when the Indians showed them, they were slow learners:
they were unable even to repair those that the Indians made for them. Nor did
they show any disposition for agriculture. Harriot admired the yields that the
Indians got in growing maize; but the English, for lack of seed, lack of
skill, or lack of will, grew nothing for themselves, even when the new
planting season came round again. Superior English technology appeared, for
the moment at least, to be no technology at all, as far as food production
was concerned.
The
English refusal or inability to help themselves live from the land is a
little surprising in the light of the sponsors' interest in making their
colony yield marketable commodities. In England there had been talk of
getting ten times as much from the land as the Indians did. Grenville had
taken pains to collect plants from the West Indies to try our at Roanoke; and Harriot
occupied himself almost entirely in ascertaining what grew and what might be
made to grow. The difficulty may have lain in the military character of the
settlers. Soldiers expected to go hungry often, but they did not expect to
grow their own food. It was tip to their commanders to see that they were
fed; and on overseas expeditions commanders usually bought or seized supplies
from the people of the country. Lane may, in fact, have considered it more
practicable to get food from the Indians than to turn his troops into
farmers. He evidently had his hands full maintaining discipline without
putting the men to unexpected tasks. He had, he complained to his friend Sir
Philip Sidney, “emungst savages, the chardege of wylde menu of myne owene nacione,
Whose unrulynes ys suche as not to gyve leasure to the goovernour to bee all
most at any tyme from them." (51)
Unfortunately,
the Indians, though hospitable, were not prepared for company that came to
stay. They had no great stores to draw upon when faced with the English
demands for corn. Whatever the English may have offered in exchange, the
extra labor of feeding so many extra mouths must have imposed a severe strain
on them, for sustained work was not a normal part of Indian life. The Roanokes, like most other North American Indians, grew corn (maize) in
quantities barely adequate to their survival from harvest to harvest, relying
on roots and berries and on hunting and fishing to get them through when the
corn ran out. They had no extra fields or seed prepared for guests. If the
English continued to demand food from them, the Indians, in order to supply
it, would have to clear more land, plant more corn, and beg, borrow, or steal
seed from other Indians.
The
situation was hardly conducive to good relations between the newcomers and
the natives. No records tell us how the two groups got along during the
winter, but it seems unlikely that the wild men of England displayed the attributes
that the lndians expected of gods. And it seems certain that everybody was on
short rations. By the time spring came, Wingina had had enough of his
grasshopper guests.
If we may
believe Ralph Lane,
Wingina arranged a conspiracy of the nearby mainland tribes to wipe out the
English. Feigning friendship, Wingina warned Lane of the hostile intentions
of the mainland Indians, apparently suggesting the need to chastise them; and
as bait he hinted of mines and of a westward passage up the Chowan or Roanoke rivers. Sometime
in March Lane took the bait; but coming by surprise on the Indians whom
Wingina had alerted to trap him, he succeeded in overawing them, put the principal
chief, Menatonon, in chains, and took his son Skiko as a hostage. From
Menatonon he learned of Wingina's alleged treachery. After exploring the
mainland without finding mines or a westward passage, Lane returned to Roanoke, where he found
the Indians on the point of deserting the island for the purpose of starving
the English. (52)
The fact
that the Indians, by Lane's own account, could have done the English in
simply by deserting them, tenders the story of the conspiracy not altogether
credible. According to Lane, Wingina was so taken aback by his safe return
that he agreed to sow enough corn to feed the English the following year and
to construct weirs for them and also to give them some land for themselves.
(The English still, apparently, recognized Roanoke as belonging to Wingina and his
people.) But as the spring progressed and the winter stores dwindled (the
corn, sown in April, would not ripen for several months), Wingina's people
refused to trade any more supplies. And Wingina himself retired to the
mainland, partly, Lane believed, to evade Lane's daily demand for provisions
and partly to prepare another conspiracy to wipe out the English. Lane learned
of the plot through the hostage, Skiko, and proceeded to nip it in the bud.
Surprising Wingina at his headquarters on the mainland, he killed him and his
principal advisers. (53) This was the first of June, and on the eighth
Francis Drake arrived with his load of Indians and Negroes freed from their
Spanish oppressors.
It was
the age of Shakespeare and Marlowe, the age of Elizabeth, the age of Drake and Raleigh,
when Englishmen were filled with heady visions of their country's glory. Roanoke might have
become the scene of another English triumph. But by the time Drake came
onstage, the supporting cast had long since forgotten their lines and spoiled
the play. Lane, with only six weeks or so to go before corn harvest, had
murdered his host and alienated the people on whom he depended for survival,
and his opinion of the territory that he had described as the “goodliest and
most pleasing” in the world had, not surprisingly, been revised. He now
thought that unless they could find good mineral deposits or passage to the
Pacific, nothing could “bring this country in request to be inhabited by our
nation.” (54) It would also be necessary to find a decent harbor, for it had
become clear that all the sheltered areas around Roanoke were too shallow. Nevertheless,
when Drake offered him a bark of shallow draft, two pinnaces, four boats, and
four months' supply for a hundred men, Lane agreed to stick it out. With the
new vessels he would explore the Chesapeake
region for a suitable harbor and then report back to England. But the next day, June
13, 1586, a storm broke out and scattered Drake's fleet, which was riding
outside the Banks. Lane's bark of 70 tons with provisions aboard headed for
the high seas and did not return. Drake offered him another ship and more provisions,
but the only ship available now was a bark of 170 tons, too large to cross
the shoals, and Lane suddenly gave. Instead of waiting for the supply ships
from England
that had been promised him and that were actually on their way, he put his
whole expedition aboard Drake's fleet, and headed home. (55)
What,
then, of the liberated slaves and Indians? The saddest part of the story and
perhaps the most revealing is that no one bothered to say. None of the
accounts either of Drake's voyage or of the Roanoke colony mentions what became of
them. Thus casually and ignominiously ended the first attempt to join the
planting of English gentle government in North America with the liberation of
the Caribbean and South America from Spanish
tyranny.
Raleigh
himself did not give up and later tried again in Guiana.
But at Roanoke
what followed was anticlimax. Grenville returned there with seven or eight
ships and three or four hundred men a few weeks after Lane's departure.
Finding the place deserted, he left only fifteen or eighteen men to hold the
fort and hurried on to the South Atlantic in
quest of Spanish prizes. The following July, when John White arrived with 110
settlers, Grenville's small force was not to be found. White's party included
his daughter and her husband and again Manteo. They had intended to settle on
the Chesapeake
but never got that far, apparently because their pilot (Simon Fernandez
again) was too eager to get at the business of privateering and refused to
take them. Instead, they settled again at Roanoke,
where they baptized Manteo and declared him, as vassal of Raleigh, the lord of the island, a ceremony
designed to carry out the original strategy of allying with the local
Indians. Having killed the king of the Roanokes, the English were installing
a puppet of their own. Manteo, however, was probably the only Indian prepared
to recognize the authority with which the English invested him. He could not,
at any rate, command from his countrymen the supplies of corn that the colony
still needed for survival. In order to speed the flow of provisions from England,
White decided to go back with the returning ships. He sailed in late August,
1587, leaving behind his daughter and her newborn child. (56) Because of the Spanish Armada and other
difficulties, he did not get back to Roanoke
until 1590, and he found the Island again
deserted. (57)
John
White's colony was lost and what became of the settlers will probably never
be known. (58) But something more had been lost before White's settlers even
landed. At Roanoke in the winter of 1585-86,
English plans and hopes for America
had come up against their first serious encounter with the continent and its
people. In that encounter neither Englishmen nor native Americans lived up to
expectations. Doubtless the expectations had been too high, but it is always
a little sad to watch men lower their sights. And Roanoke was only the beginning.
(1) David B.
Quinn, The Roanoke
Voyages, 1584-1590, Works issued by the Hakluyt Society, 2nd sec., CIV,
CV (London,
1955), I, 82-89. This chapter is based primarily on the documents contained
in this superb collection.
(2) Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, 1, 91-115.
(3) Ibid.,
I, 108, 110.
(4) Ibid., 1, 101.
(5) Ibid., I, 113.
(6) Ibid., I, 108.
(7) Ibid., I, 106.
(8) Ibid., 1, 95.
(9) Ibid., I, tie. Actually this was not a river
but part of Croatan Sound.
(10) Taylor, Writings
of the Hakluyts,
(11) 211-328 1-3:6.
(12) Ibid., II, 245.
(13) Ibid., II, 240.
(14) Ibid., II, 244
(15) Ibid., II, 241.
(16) Ibid., II, 246.
(17) Ibid., II, 296-313.
(18) Ibid., II, 318.
(19) Ibid., II, 234
(20) F.
A.Wrigley, Population and History (London, 1969), 78-So.
(21) Taylor,
Writings of the Hakluyts, II, 234;
E. H. Phelps Brown and Sheila V. Hopkins, "Seven Centuries of Building
Wages," Economica, and ser., XXII
(1955), 95-2o6; "Seven Centuries of the Prices of Consumables, Compared
with Builders' Wage-Rates," ibid., XXIII (1956), 296-314; "Wage
Rates and Prices: Evidence for Population Pressure in the Sixteenth Century,"
ibid., XXIV (1957), 289-306; II. P. It Finberg, ed., The Agrarian History of England
and Wales,
IV, 1500-1640, Joan Thirsk, ed. (Cambridge. 1967). 435-57, 531,583-695.
(22) Taylor, Writings
of the Hakluyts, II, 319.
(23) Ibid., I1, 315.
(24) The only evidence of coordination in the
English archives consists of the fact that the two ventures were linked in
some of the few surviving documents that mention them, as when Hakluyt wrote
to Sir Francis Walsingham, one of Elizabeth's principal advisers, that the
Spanish were worried by rumors of the two, or when Lord Burghley, in drafting
an authorization for Raleigh to impress men and shipping, added "the
like to Sir Francis Drake." Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, I, 155, 157.
(25) Julian S. Corbett, Drake and the Tudor Navy (New York, 1899); Williamson, Hawkins of
Plymouth, passim. "The voyage can best be followed in Irene A. Wright,
Further English Voyages to Spanish
America, 1583-1594, Works issued by the Hakluyt Society, 2nd ser., XCIX (London, 1951 ).
(27) Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, I, 149-50.
(28) Ibid., I, 123.
(29) The casualties came from disease rather than
battle. The expedition of the Earl of Essex in 1591 to assist Henry IV of France
met with only a few skirmishes, but only 800 men out of 3,400 returned.
Gladys S. Thompson, Lords Lieutenants in the Sixteenth Century (London, 1923), Even
naval forces mustered to meet the Spanish Armada in 588 suffered appalling
losses from disease. In ten of the largest ships, in spite of heavy
replacements, only 2,195 out of the original complement of 3,3,5 men were on
the payroll by September. The total loss was probably equal to the entire
original number. Lawrence
Stone, "The Armada Campaign of 1588”, History, XXIX (1944), 120-43, esp.
137-41.
(30) Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, 1, 38.
(31) Ibid., 1, 178-242.
(32) Wright, Further
Voyages, 34-37.
(33) Ibid., 54, 159.
(34) Ibid., 55, 195.
(35) Ibid., 173;.
(36) Ibid., 180-86.
(37) Ibid., 205.
(38) Ibid., 172
(39) Ibid., 188-89.
(40) Ibid., 204.
(41) Quinn, Roanoake
Voyages, I, 200.
(42) Ibid., I, 208-09.
(43) Briefe
and True Report of the New Found Land
of Virginia (London,
588), in Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, I, 317-87.
(44) Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, I, 368.
(45) Ibid., I, 443.
(46) The best reproductions are in Paul Hulton and
David B. Quinn, The American Drawings
of John White (London and Chapel Hill, N.C., 1964).
(47) Quinn, Roanoke Voyages, I, 379.
(48) Ibid., I, 380
(49) Ibid.
(50) Ibid., I, 191.
(51) Ibid., I, 204.
(52) Ibid., I, 246-48, 275-81.
(53) Ibid., 1, 248–49, 282-.88.
(54) Ibid., 1, 273.
(55) Ibid., 1,253–54, 288-94.
(56) Ibid., II, 515-38
(57) Ibid., II, 598-622
(58) The most informed discussion of the question
is David B. Quinn, England
and the Discovery of America,
1481- 1620 (New York, 1974), 452-81.
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