He feared appearing weak and saw an opportunity for her to gather intelligence.
He cultivated a new type of tobacco that became a profitable export.
He was drawn to her and believed it would benefit the colony and his faith.
It ended years of warfare and led to a temporary peace with the Powhatan.
They introduced private land ownership and self-governance through a General Assembly.
The first representative assembly convened and the first enslaved Africans arrived.
They were resentful of English encroachment and wanted to drive them out.
They launched retaliatory raids and increased settlement efforts.
The company was bankrupt and mismanaged, leading to high death rates and failed economic diversification.
It established English colonization in America, leading to the spread of English language, laws, and customs.
In April 1613, years of bloody warfare culminated in the kidnapping of the paramount chief Powhatan’s daughter Pocahontas. The English colonists in Jamestown offered to return her in exchange for stolen weapons, English prisoners, and corn, but their proposal was met with silence.
In the meantime, Pocahontas befriended English colonist John Rolfe. Rolfe poured his energy into cultivating a tobacco crop suitable for export, starting a tobacco revolution that would change Virginia forever.
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