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'''Jamestown''' holds a foundational place in the history of [[Virginia Beach]] and the entire [[United States]], as the 1607 journey that established America's first permanent English colony began with a landfall on the shores of present-day Virginia Beach. In 1607, 105 men and boys set sail from England aboard three ships: the ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'', funded and sent by the [[Virginia Company]] with instructions to build a secure settlement, find gold, and seek a water route to the Pacific Ocean. Although the settlement of Jamestown itself lies along the [[James River]] in what is now James City County, its deep connection to the Virginia Beach region begins at [[Cape Henry]], where the colonists first stepped ashore on April 26, 1607.<ref name="preservationva-capehenry"/> Today, the story of Jamestown is preserved and interpreted through two major institutions accessible to visitors traveling from Virginia Beach: [[Historic Jamestowne]] and [[Jamestown Settlement]].
'''Jamestown''' holds a foundational place in the history of [[Virginia Beach]] and the entire [[United States]], as the 1607 journey that established America's first permanent English colony began with a landfall on the shores of present-day Virginia Beach. In 1607, 104 men and boys set sail from England aboard three ships: the ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'', funded and sent by the [[Virginia Company]] — a joint-stock company chartered by King James I on April 10, 1606, and divided into two branches, the London Company and the Plymouth Company — with instructions to build a secure settlement, find gold, and seek a water route to the Pacific Ocean. Although the settlement of Jamestown itself lies along the [[James River]] in what is now James City County, its deep connection to the Virginia Beach region begins at [[Cape Henry]], where the colonists first stepped ashore on April 26, 1607.<ref name="preservationva-capehenry"/> Today, the story of Jamestown is preserved and interpreted through two major institutions accessible to visitors traveling from Virginia Beach: [[Historic Jamestowne]], the actual archaeological site on Jamestown Island managed jointly by Preservation Virginia and the [[National Park Service]] as part of Colonial National Historical Park, and [[Jamestown Settlement]], a living-history museum operated by the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation approximately 1.25 miles away. The two are commonly confused by first-time visitors but differ substantially in what they offer.
 
The drive from Virginia Beach to Jamestown takes roughly one hour via I-64 West. Visitors heading to the Jamestown area have an additional option: the Jamestown-Scotland Ferry, which crosses the James River near the settlement and operates free of charge, offering a scenic approach from the south bank. Because Jamestown, [[Colonial Williamsburg]], and the Yorktown Battlefield are geographically close to one another, many visitors choose to combine all three stops over one or two days, with each destination representing a distinct era of American colonial and revolutionary history.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


== The First Landing at Cape Henry ==
== The First Landing at Cape Henry ==


These 105 English men and boys first caught sight of the land they would name Cape Henry at 4 o'clock in the morning on April 26, 1607, after a voyage of approximately 144 days from England.<ref name="preservationva-capehenry"/> Captain [[Christopher Newport]], in command of the fleet, came ashore with approximately 20–30 men to scout the area. Cape Henry was named in honor of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, the eldest son of King James I of England, by the expedition of the London Company branch of the Virginia Company.<ref name="visitvb-capehenrycross"/>
The English colonists first caught sight of the land they would name Cape Henry at four o'clock in the morning on April 26, 1607, after a voyage of approximately 144 days — the fleet had departed England on December 20, 1606.<ref name="preservationva-capehenry"/> Captain [[Christopher Newport]], in command of the fleet, came ashore with approximately 20 to 30 men to scout the area. Cape Henry was named in honor of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, the eldest son of King James I, by the expedition's London Company branch of the Virginia Company.<ref name="visitvb-capehenrycross"/>


Upon touching the shore of the New World on April 26, 1607 — thirteen years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock — the first permanent English settlers from the London Company set up a cross on the Cape Henry shore in gratitude to God and to affirm England's claim to the site. The colonists then continued sailing, heading north and farther upriver in search of a more sheltered location to build a fort that would protect them from a surprise Spanish attack.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
Upon reaching North American soil — thirteen years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth — the colonists set up a cross on the Cape Henry shore in gratitude and to affirm England's claim to the site. It was the first formal English act of possession on the North American continent that led directly to a permanent settlement. The colonists then continued sailing up the river in search of a more sheltered location that would protect them from a Spanish naval attack.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


Fearing rival Spanish vessels, the newcomers headed up the James River to seek a more defensible settlement site. They chose Jamestown Island, as it was easy to defend and offered deep mooring areas for their ships. They established their permanent settlement at Jamestown two weeks later in May 1607.<ref name="nps-jame"/> Today, a granite cross commemorating this first landing stands at [[Cape Henry Memorial]] within the boundaries of Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story in Virginia Beach. The present-day granite cross was erected in 1935 and is administered by Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities). Because the memorial sits on an active military installation, visitors are required to obtain access through the base's visitor entry procedures.<ref name="visitvb-capehenrycross"/>
Fearing rival Spanish vessels, the newcomers headed up the James River to find a more defensible site. They chose Jamestown Island because it was easy to defend and offered deep mooring areas for their ships, establishing their permanent settlement there on May 14, 1607.<ref name="nps-jame"/> Today, a granite cross commemorating this first landing stands at [[Cape Henry Memorial]] within the boundaries of Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story in Virginia Beach. The present-day granite cross was erected in 1935 and is administered by Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities). Because the memorial sits on an active military installation, visitors are required to obtain base access through the visitor entry procedures at the gate.<ref name="visitvb-capehenrycross"/>


The deep maritime legacy of this event endures throughout the region. From the very first English port at Jamestown in 1607 through modern-day naval installations, the history of Virginia's ports is deeply intertwined with the nation's history. Jamestown and its port were at the heart of the early American maritime world, facilitating trade, navigation, and the growth of the colonies.<ref name="atlanticshores-maritime"/>
The Cape Henry Memorial is one of the smallest units administered in partnership with the National Park Service, and its location on an active military base makes it less visited than the colonial sites farther west — though no less historically significant. Virginia Beach visitors with an interest in this first chapter of English settlement in America can also visit [[First Landing State Park]], located at the northern tip of the city near Cape Henry, which takes its name directly from the 1607 event and preserves the coastal landscape the colonists would have first seen from the water.<ref name="preservationva-capehenry"/>
 
The maritime legacy of this arrival endures across the region. From the first English port at Jamestown in 1607 through the modern naval installations that define Hampton Roads today, the history of Virginia's ports has remained bound up with the nation's own. Jamestown's deepwater anchorage along the James River made it the commercial and administrative center of early English America, a role that shaped every port city that followed.<ref name="atlanticshores-maritime"/>


== Founding and Early Struggles ==
== Founding and Early Struggles ==


The Jamestown settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas. It was located on the northeast bank of the James River, about 2.5 miles southwest of present-day [[Williamsburg, Virginia|Williamsburg]]. It was established by the [[London Company]] as "James Fort" on May 4, 1607 (Old Style), and considered permanent after a brief abandonment in 1610.<ref name="nps-jame"/>
The Jamestown settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas. It was located on the northeast bank of the James River, about 2.5 miles southwest of present-day [[Williamsburg, Virginia|Williamsburg]], established by the [[London Company]] as "James Fort" on May 14, 1607 (New Style), and considered permanent after a brief abandonment in 1610.<ref name="nps-jame"/>


The first charter of the Virginia Company, signed by King James I on April 10, 1606, planted the first seeds of constitutional governance in the New World. The venture was an enterprise planned by the newly established Virginia Company of London to settle Virginia with people from England, initially under the direction of Captain Christopher Newport, and eventually by the experienced English soldier Captain [[John Smith]]. They called the new settlement Jamestown, in honor of the King.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
The first charter of the Virginia Company, signed by King James I on April 10, 1606, planted the first seeds of constitutional governance in the New World. The venture was planned by the newly established Virginia Company of London to settle Virginia with people from England, initially under the direction of Captain Christopher Newport and eventually by the experienced English soldier Captain [[John Smith]]. They called the new settlement Jamestown in honor of the king.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


Life at the new settlement proved extraordinarily difficult. Serious problems soon emerged in the small English outpost, which was located in the midst of a chiefdom of about 14,000 Algonquian-speaking Indians ruled by the powerful leader [[Powhatan]]. The colonists arrived in the territory of the Paspahegh people, one of roughly thirty constituent tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy, and their presence immediately introduced tensions over land, trade, and resources. Relations with the Powhatan Indians were tenuous, although trading opportunities were established. An unfamiliar climate, as well as a brackish water supply and lack of food — conditions possibly aggravated by a prolonged drought — led to widespread disease and death. Many of the original colonists were upper-class Englishmen, and the colony lacked sufficient laborers and skilled farmers.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
Life at the new settlement proved extraordinarily difficult. Serious problems emerged quickly in the small English outpost, which sat in the midst of a chiefdom of about 14,000 Algonquian-speaking people ruled by the powerful leader [[Powhatan]]. The colonists arrived in the territory of the Paspahegh people, one of roughly thirty constituent tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy, and their presence immediately introduced tensions over land, trade, and resources. Relations were tenuous, though trading opportunities were established. An unfamiliar climate, a brackish water supply, and a lack of food — conditions possibly worsened by a prolonged drought — led to widespread disease and death. Many of the original colonists were upper-class Englishmen, and the settlement lacked sufficient laborers and skilled farmers.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


Captain John Smith became the colony's leader in September 1608 — the fourth in a succession of council presidents — and established a strict "no work, no food" policy. Smith had been instrumental in trading with the Powhatan Indians for food, and his leadership is credited with helping stabilize the struggling settlement. However, in the fall of 1609 he was injured by burning gunpowder and returned to England. Smith never came back to Virginia, but he promoted colonization of North America until his death in 1631 and published numerous accounts of the Virginia colony.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
Captain John Smith became the colony's leader in September 1608 — the fourth in a succession of council presidents — and established a strict "no work, no food" policy. Smith had been instrumental in trading with the Powhatan people for food, and his leadership helped stabilize the struggling settlement. In the fall of 1609 he was injured by burning gunpowder and returned to England, never to come back to Virginia. He promoted colonization of North America until his death in 1631 and published numerous accounts of the Virginia colony, including his 1612 map of the region that remained the most accurate available for half a century.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


Despite the dispatch of more supplies, only 60 of the original 214 settlers survived the 1609–1610 Starving Time. In mid-1610, the survivors abandoned Jamestown, though they returned after meeting a resupply convoy in the James River.<ref name="nps-jame"/>
Despite the dispatch of more supplies, only 60 of the original 214 settlers survived the winter of 1609–1610, a period known as the Starving Time. In mid-1610, the survivors abandoned Jamestown entirely, though they returned after meeting a resupply convoy in the James River.<ref name="nps-jame"/>


== Tobacco, Pocahontas, and Colonial Growth ==
== Tobacco, Pocahontas, and Colonial Growth ==


The colony's fortunes turned with the introduction of tobacco as a commercial crop. In order to make a profit for the Virginia Company, settlers tried a number of small industries, including glassmaking, wood production, and the manufacture of pitch, tar, and potash. However, until the introduction of tobacco as a cash crop around 1613 by colonist [[John Rolfe]], who later married Powhatan's daughter [[Pocahontas]], none of the colonists' efforts to establish profitable enterprises succeeded.<ref name="encyclopediavirginia-tobacco"/>
The colony's fortunes turned with the introduction of tobacco as a commercial crop. Settlers tried a number of small industries to generate profit for the Virginia Company, including glassmaking, wood production, and the manufacture of pitch, tar, and potash. None of those efforts succeeded until colonist [[John Rolfe]] introduced tobacco as a cash crop around 1612–1613. The tobacco the first English settlers encountered in Virginia — the Virginia Indians' ''Nicotiana rustica'' — tasted dark and bitter to the English palate. Rolfe obtained seeds of the milder Spanish variety ''Nicotiana tabacum'' from the Orinoco River valley, and when planted in the rich bottomland of the James River, those seeds produced a leaf that quickly became the European standard.<ref name="encyclopediavirginia-tobacco"/>


Tobacco became colonial Virginia's most successful cash crop. The tobacco that the first English settlers encountered in Virginia — the Virginia Indians' ''Nicotiana rustica'' — tasted dark and bitter to the English palate. It was John Rolfe who in 1612 obtained Spanish seeds of ''Nicotiana tabacum'' from the Orinoco River valley — seeds that, when planted in the relatively rich bottomland of the James River, produced a milder leaf that soon became the European standard.<ref name="encyclopediavirginia-tobacco"/>
Rolfe married [[Pocahontas]], the daughter of Powhatan, in 1614 a union that forged a period of relative peace between the colonists and the Powhatan Confederacy. The couple had one son and traveled to England in 1616 on a promotional tour intended to encourage further investment in Jamestown. Pocahontas died in England in 1617 before the voyage home. Tobacco cultivation required large amounts of land and labor, driving the rapid expansion of the Virginia colony. Settlers moved onto Powhatan lands, and increasing numbers of indentured servants came to Virginia to meet the demand for agricultural labor.<ref name="encyclopediavirginia-tobacco"/>


Rolfe married Pocahontas in 1614, a union which forged a period of peace between the colonists and the Native Americans of the Powhatan Confederacy. The couple had one son and traveled to England on a promotional tour to encourage further investment in Jamestown in 1616. Tobacco cultivation required large amounts of land and labor and stimulated the rapid growth of the Virginia colony. Settlers moved onto the lands occupied by the Powhatan Indians, and increasing numbers of indentured servants came to Virginia to meet the demand for agricultural labor.<ref name="encyclopediavirginia-tobacco"/>
The year 1619 brought several watershed events in quick succession. The first representative legislative body in British America — the General Assembly — convened at Jamestown at the request of settlers who wanted input into the laws governing them. That same year, the first documented Africans arrived in Virginia. They were from the kingdom of Ndongo in Angola, West Central Africa, captured during war with the Portuguese, and their arrival marked the beginning of a history of enslaved labor that would define Virginia's economy for the next two and a half centuries.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


The year 1619 brought several watershed events. The first representative government in British America began at Jamestown with the convening of a General Assembly, at the request of settlers who wanted input in the laws governing them. The first documented Africans in Virginia also arrived in 1619. They were from the kingdom of Ndongo in Angola, West Central Africa, and had been captured during war with the Portuguese.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
In 1676, Jamestown was deliberately burned during [[Bacon's Rebellion]], an armed uprising of Virginia colonists led by Nathaniel Bacon against the rule of Governor William Berkeley, though the town was subsequently rebuilt. Jamestown continued as the center of Virginia's political and social life until 1699, when the seat of government moved to present-day Williamsburg. Although Jamestown ceased to function as a town by the mid-1700s, its legacies are embedded in the democratic institutions that followed.<ref name="nps-jame"/>


In 1676, Jamestown was deliberately burned during [[Bacon's Rebellion]], though it was subsequently rebuilt. Jamestown continued as the center of Virginia's political and social life until 1699, when the seat of government moved to present-day Williamsburg. Although Jamestown ceased to exist as a functioning town by the mid-1700s, its legacies are embodied in the institutions and democratic traditions of today's United States.<ref name="nps-jame"/>
== Historic Jamestowne and the Jamestown Rediscovery Project ==


== Historic Jamestowne and the Jamestown Rediscovery Project ==
Today the original site of the settlement is preserved as [[Historic Jamestowne]], a cooperative archaeological and interpretive destination jointly administered by Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service as part of Colonial National Historical Park. Preservation Virginia acquired 22.5 acres of Jamestown Island in 1893, and in 1994 began the Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological project, which remains ongoing under the auspices of the Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation.<ref name="jrf-foundation"/>


Today, the original site of the settlement is preserved as [[Historic Jamestowne]], a cooperative archaeological and interpretive destination. Preservation Virginia acquired 22.5 acres of Jamestown Island in 1893, and in 1994 began the Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological project, which remains ongoing. The Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation, under the auspices of Preservation Virginia, jointly administers Historic Jamestowne through a public–private partnership with the [[National Park Service]].<ref name="jrf-foundation"/>
The Jamestown Rediscovery Project began in 1994 with the goal of locating the site of the original James Fort, long assumed to have eroded into the James River. Excavations revealed that most of the fort — except for one of the bastions — remained on dry land. To date, archaeologists have excavated approximately 80% of the original 1607 triangular fort and 50% of the expanded five-sided 1608 fort, yielding roughly three million artifacts from the settlement's early years.<ref name="historicjamestowne-excavations"/>


The Jamestown Rediscovery Project began in 1994 with the goal of uncovering the site of the original James Fort, long considered lost to erosion in the James River. Excavations subsequently revealed that most of the fort except for one of the bastions — remained on dry land. To date, archaeologists have excavated approximately 80% of the original 1607 triangular fort and 50% of the expanded five-sided 1608 fort, yielding some three million artifacts from the settlement's early years.<ref name="historicjamestowne-excavations"/>
Among the notable discoveries made since excavations began: in 2010, archaeologists uncovered the remains of the original church built inside James Fort; in 2013, forensic analysis of a human skull and bones provided physical evidence that the colonists had resorted to cannibalism during the Starving Time; and in 2013, the grave of Captain Gabriel Archer — one of the original 1607 colonists — was discovered inside the fort, along with a reliquary containing bone fragments believed to be Catholic holy relics, suggesting a hidden Catholic presence in the early Protestant colony. These finds have repeatedly reshaped scholarly understanding of what life in the fort was actually like.<ref name="historicjamestowne-rediscovery"/>


Preservation Virginia's acreage on the western end of the island includes the James Fort site and current Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological digs, the 17th-century brick church tower and cemetery, the 1907 brick Memorial Church, the riverside Dale House Café, the Archaearium archaeology museum, and the Rediscovery Center research and collections facilities. The National Park Service maintains the main Visitor Center, education facilities, and exhibits. The NPS property includes the former townsite of "New Towne" that developed into James City; the Island Drive with its three- and five-mile loops through the forests and wetlands of Jamestown; and the NPS Glasshouse, the site of the archaeological ruins of a 17th-century glassworks.<ref name="nps-jame"/>
Preservation Virginia's acreage on the western end of the island includes the James Fort site and current Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological digs, the 17th-century brick church tower and cemetery, the 1907 brick Memorial Church, the Dale House Café, the Archaearium archaeology museum built directly over a portion of the excavation, and the Rediscovery Center research and collections facilities. The National Park Service maintains the main Visitor Center, education facilities, and exhibits, along with the former townsite of "New Towne" that developed into James City, the Island Drive with its three- and five-mile loops through the forests and wetlands of Jamestown, and the NPS Glasshouse at the site of an archaeological 17th-century glassworks.<ref name="nps-jame"/>


Among the notable discoveries made since 1994, in 2013 archaeologists found evidence that the colonists had likely resorted to cannibalism during the Starving Time, and in 2010 discovered the remains of the original church built inside James Fort.<ref name="historicjamestowne-rediscovery"/> In 2007, Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service rebranded Jamestown Island as "Historic Jamestowne," where both organizations provide tours, programs, and events year-round. The site differs meaningfully from the nearby Jamestown Settlement museum: Historic Jamestowne is the actual ground where the original colony stood, with active archaeological work still underway, while Jamestown Settlement is a separately operated living-history park with reconstructed structures and replica vessels located approximately 1.25 miles away.<ref name="visitvb-historicjamestowne"/>
Visitors can walk through the active archaeological site, examine the 17th-century church tower — the oldest standing English brick structure in North America — and explore the Archaearium, where thousands of recovered artifacts are displayed in context over the actual excavation. Entrance to Historic Jamestowne is covered by the America the Beautiful pass, and the site is open year-round except Christmas Day. Locals who know the area well tend to recommend visiting in spring or fall; the site's outdoor character makes summer visits uncomfortable in Virginia's heat and humidity, and the crowds are considerably thinner in the shoulder seasons.<ref name="nps-jame"/>


Visitors to Historic Jamestowne can walk through the active archaeological site, view the 17th-century church tower — the oldest standing English brick structure in North America — and explore the Archaearium, a museum built directly over a portion of the excavation that displays thousands of artifacts recovered from the fort site. Local residents and experienced visitors often recommend visiting during spring or fall, as the site's outdoor nature makes summer visits uncomfortable in Virginia's heat and humidity.
In 2007, Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service rebranded the island site as "Historic Jamestowne" to help distinguish it from the nearby Jamestown Settlement museum. The distinction matters. Historic Jamestowne is the actual ground where the original colony stood, with active digs still underway and archaeologists sometimes visible at work. Jamestown Settlement, about 1.25 miles away, is a separately operated state-funded living-history park with reconstructed structures, replica vessels, and costumed interpreters. First-time visitors often book one expecting the other. Experienced visitors and locals generally describe Historic Jamestowne as the more authentic and scholarly of the two, while Jamestown Settlement is better suited to families or visitors who want hands-on engagement with colonial life rather than archaeology.<ref name="visitvb-historicjamestowne"/>


== Jamestown Settlement Museum ==
== Jamestown Settlement Museum ==


Jamestown Settlement is a living-history park and museum located 1.25 miles from the original location of the colony and adjacent to Jamestown Island. Initially created for the celebration of the 350th anniversary in 1957, Jamestown Settlement is operated by the [[Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation]] and largely sponsored by the Commonwealth of Virginia.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
Jamestown Settlement is a living-history park and museum located 1.25 miles from the original colony site, adjacent to Jamestown Island on State Route 31 near the Colonial Parkway in James City County. It was initially created for the celebration of the 350th anniversary in 1957 and is operated by the [[Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation]], largely sponsored by the Commonwealth of Virginia.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


Near the site of the original colony, Jamestown Settlement tells the story of 17th-century Virginia, from the arrival of English colonists in Jamestown in 1607 to the cultural encounters and events that shaped the early American nation. The world of Jamestown comes to life through film, gallery exhibits, and outdoor living history. Expansive gallery exhibits and an introductory film describe the cultures of the Powhatan Indians, English colonists, and West Central Africans who converged in 17th-century Virginia, and trace Jamestown's beginnings in England through the first century of the Virginia colony.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>
The museum tells the story of 17th-century Virginia from the arrival of the English colonists in 1607 through the cultural encounters and events that shaped the early American nation. The story comes through film, gallery exhibits, and outdoor living history. Expansive gallery exhibits and an introductory film cover the cultures of the Powhatan Indians, English colonists, and West Central Africans who converged in 17th-century Virginia, tracing Jamestown's origins in England through the first century of the Virginia colony.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>


The outdoor living-history areas allow visitors to explore the Powhatan way of life in a re-creation of Paspahegh Town, board full-scale re-creations of the three ships that brought colonists to Jamestown — the ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'' — and visit the re-created 1610–14 English fort, church, storehouse, and armory. Costumed historical interpreters staff each area and demonstrate period crafts and trades, including blacksmithing and glassblowing. A typical visit to Jamestown Settlement takes approximately two hours, making it practical to combine with nearby Historic Jamestowne on the same day. The Jamestown-Scotland Ferry, which crosses the James River near the settlement and operates free of charge, provides an additional scenic option for visitors exploring the region.<ref name="jyf-history"/>
The outdoor areas give visitors the chance to explore a re-creation of Paspahegh Town, board full-scale replica versions of the three ships that brought colonists to Jamestown — the ''Susan Constant'', the ''Godspeed'', and the ''Discovery'' — and walk through a re-created 1610–14 English fort complete with church, storehouse, and armory. Costumed historical interpreters staff each area and demonstrate period trades, including blacksmithing and glassblowing. Handmade glassware produced during demonstrations is available for purchase in the museum shop. A typical visit runs about two hours, making it practical to pair with Historic Jamestowne on the same day.<ref name="jyf-history"/>


As part of a large-scale $10.6 million phased renovation to the 30,000-square-foot exhibition space completed in 2019, Jamestown Settlement features a 4-D experiential theater with multi-sensory special effects that tells the story of Bacon's Rebellion, a 1676 armed uprising of Virginia colonists led by Nathaniel Bacon against the rule of Governor William Berkeley.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>
As part of a $10.6 million phased renovation completed in 2019, Jamestown Settlement added a 4-D experiential theater with multi-sensory special effects. The theater's primary presentation covers Bacon's Rebellion, the 1676 armed uprising led by Nathaniel Bacon against Governor William Berkeley that ended with the burning of Jamestown itself.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>


Over 500 artifacts are currently on exhibit in the Jamestown Settlement galleries, including both rare and everyday objects: a wooden bellows used to craft iron by the blacksmiths of West Central Africa, a 1612 map of Virginia by Captain John Smith that provided the most accurate picture of the region for half a century, and a ritual stone face bead carved by Indigenous hands centuries ago.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>
Over 500 artifacts are currently on exhibit in the galleries, including a wooden bellows used in West Central African ironworking, a 1612 map of Virginia by Captain John Smith, and a ritual stone face bead carved by Indigenous hands. The galleries trace connections between Powhatan material culture, English colonial objects, and West Central African craftsmanship in ways that reflect the three distinct peoples who defined early Virginia's history.<ref name="jyf-galleries"/>


Jamestown Settlement and the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. Jamestown Settlement is located on State Route 31 near the Colonial Parkway in James City County, just southwest of Williamsburg and adjacent to Historic Jamestowne. Because Jamestown, Colonial Williamsburg, and the Yorktown Battlefield are geographically close, many visitors choose to visit all three sites over one or two days, with each destination representing a distinct era of American colonial and revolutionary history.<ref name="visitvb-settlement"/>
Jamestown Settlement and the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day. Jamestown Settlement is generally suited to a half-day visit, whereas Colonial Williamsburg a working reconstruction of an


== References ==
== References ==
 
<references />
<references>
<ref name="nps-jame">{{cite web |title=Historic Jamestowne Part of Colonial National Historical Park |url=https://www.nps.gov/jame/ |work=U.S. National Park Service |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="preservationva-capehenry">{{cite web |title=Moored in History: The English Colonists' First Landing at Cape Henry – April 26, 1607 |url=https://preservationvirginia.org/moored-in-history-the-english-colonists-first-landing-at-cape-henry-april-26-1607/ |work=Preservation Virginia |date=April 25, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="visitvb-historicjamestowne">{{cite web |title=Historic Jamestown |url=https://www.visitvirginiabeach.com/listing/historic-jamestown/434/ |work=Visit Virginia Beach |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="visitvb-settlement">{{cite web |title=Jamestown Settlement |url=https://www.visitvirginiabeach.com/listing/jamestown-settlement/641/ |work=Visit Virginia Beach |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="jyf-history">{{cite web |title=History of Jamestown |url=https://www.jyfmuseums.org/visit/jamestown-settlement/history-of-jamestown |work=Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
<ref name="jyf-galleries">{{cite web |

Latest revision as of 12:48, 12 May 2026


Jamestown holds a foundational place in the history of Virginia Beach and the entire United States, as the 1607 journey that established America's first permanent English colony began with a landfall on the shores of present-day Virginia Beach. In 1607, 104 men and boys set sail from England aboard three ships: the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery, funded and sent by the Virginia Company — a joint-stock company chartered by King James I on April 10, 1606, and divided into two branches, the London Company and the Plymouth Company — with instructions to build a secure settlement, find gold, and seek a water route to the Pacific Ocean. Although the settlement of Jamestown itself lies along the James River in what is now James City County, its deep connection to the Virginia Beach region begins at Cape Henry, where the colonists first stepped ashore on April 26, 1607.[1] Today, the story of Jamestown is preserved and interpreted through two major institutions accessible to visitors traveling from Virginia Beach: Historic Jamestowne, the actual archaeological site on Jamestown Island managed jointly by Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service as part of Colonial National Historical Park, and Jamestown Settlement, a living-history museum operated by the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation approximately 1.25 miles away. The two are commonly confused by first-time visitors but differ substantially in what they offer.

The drive from Virginia Beach to Jamestown takes roughly one hour via I-64 West. Visitors heading to the Jamestown area have an additional option: the Jamestown-Scotland Ferry, which crosses the James River near the settlement and operates free of charge, offering a scenic approach from the south bank. Because Jamestown, Colonial Williamsburg, and the Yorktown Battlefield are geographically close to one another, many visitors choose to combine all three stops over one or two days, with each destination representing a distinct era of American colonial and revolutionary history.[2]

The First Landing at Cape Henry

The English colonists first caught sight of the land they would name Cape Henry at four o'clock in the morning on April 26, 1607, after a voyage of approximately 144 days — the fleet had departed England on December 20, 1606.[1] Captain Christopher Newport, in command of the fleet, came ashore with approximately 20 to 30 men to scout the area. Cape Henry was named in honor of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, the eldest son of King James I, by the expedition's London Company branch of the Virginia Company.[3]

Upon reaching North American soil — thirteen years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth — the colonists set up a cross on the Cape Henry shore in gratitude and to affirm England's claim to the site. It was the first formal English act of possession on the North American continent that led directly to a permanent settlement. The colonists then continued sailing up the river in search of a more sheltered location that would protect them from a Spanish naval attack.[2]

Fearing rival Spanish vessels, the newcomers headed up the James River to find a more defensible site. They chose Jamestown Island because it was easy to defend and offered deep mooring areas for their ships, establishing their permanent settlement there on May 14, 1607.[4] Today, a granite cross commemorating this first landing stands at Cape Henry Memorial within the boundaries of Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story in Virginia Beach. The present-day granite cross was erected in 1935 and is administered by Preservation Virginia (formerly the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities). Because the memorial sits on an active military installation, visitors are required to obtain base access through the visitor entry procedures at the gate.[3]

The Cape Henry Memorial is one of the smallest units administered in partnership with the National Park Service, and its location on an active military base makes it less visited than the colonial sites farther west — though no less historically significant. Virginia Beach visitors with an interest in this first chapter of English settlement in America can also visit First Landing State Park, located at the northern tip of the city near Cape Henry, which takes its name directly from the 1607 event and preserves the coastal landscape the colonists would have first seen from the water.[1]

The maritime legacy of this arrival endures across the region. From the first English port at Jamestown in 1607 through the modern naval installations that define Hampton Roads today, the history of Virginia's ports has remained bound up with the nation's own. Jamestown's deepwater anchorage along the James River made it the commercial and administrative center of early English America, a role that shaped every port city that followed.[5]

Founding and Early Struggles

The Jamestown settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas. It was located on the northeast bank of the James River, about 2.5 miles southwest of present-day Williamsburg, established by the London Company as "James Fort" on May 14, 1607 (New Style), and considered permanent after a brief abandonment in 1610.[4]

The first charter of the Virginia Company, signed by King James I on April 10, 1606, planted the first seeds of constitutional governance in the New World. The venture was planned by the newly established Virginia Company of London to settle Virginia with people from England, initially under the direction of Captain Christopher Newport and eventually by the experienced English soldier Captain John Smith. They called the new settlement Jamestown in honor of the king.[2]

Life at the new settlement proved extraordinarily difficult. Serious problems emerged quickly in the small English outpost, which sat in the midst of a chiefdom of about 14,000 Algonquian-speaking people ruled by the powerful leader Powhatan. The colonists arrived in the territory of the Paspahegh people, one of roughly thirty constituent tribes of the Powhatan Confederacy, and their presence immediately introduced tensions over land, trade, and resources. Relations were tenuous, though trading opportunities were established. An unfamiliar climate, a brackish water supply, and a lack of food — conditions possibly worsened by a prolonged drought — led to widespread disease and death. Many of the original colonists were upper-class Englishmen, and the settlement lacked sufficient laborers and skilled farmers.[2]

Captain John Smith became the colony's leader in September 1608 — the fourth in a succession of council presidents — and established a strict "no work, no food" policy. Smith had been instrumental in trading with the Powhatan people for food, and his leadership helped stabilize the struggling settlement. In the fall of 1609 he was injured by burning gunpowder and returned to England, never to come back to Virginia. He promoted colonization of North America until his death in 1631 and published numerous accounts of the Virginia colony, including his 1612 map of the region that remained the most accurate available for half a century.[2]

Despite the dispatch of more supplies, only 60 of the original 214 settlers survived the winter of 1609–1610, a period known as the Starving Time. In mid-1610, the survivors abandoned Jamestown entirely, though they returned after meeting a resupply convoy in the James River.[4]

Tobacco, Pocahontas, and Colonial Growth

The colony's fortunes turned with the introduction of tobacco as a commercial crop. Settlers tried a number of small industries to generate profit for the Virginia Company, including glassmaking, wood production, and the manufacture of pitch, tar, and potash. None of those efforts succeeded until colonist John Rolfe introduced tobacco as a cash crop around 1612–1613. The tobacco the first English settlers encountered in Virginia — the Virginia Indians' Nicotiana rustica — tasted dark and bitter to the English palate. Rolfe obtained seeds of the milder Spanish variety Nicotiana tabacum from the Orinoco River valley, and when planted in the rich bottomland of the James River, those seeds produced a leaf that quickly became the European standard.[6]

Rolfe married Pocahontas, the daughter of Powhatan, in 1614 — a union that forged a period of relative peace between the colonists and the Powhatan Confederacy. The couple had one son and traveled to England in 1616 on a promotional tour intended to encourage further investment in Jamestown. Pocahontas died in England in 1617 before the voyage home. Tobacco cultivation required large amounts of land and labor, driving the rapid expansion of the Virginia colony. Settlers moved onto Powhatan lands, and increasing numbers of indentured servants came to Virginia to meet the demand for agricultural labor.[6]

The year 1619 brought several watershed events in quick succession. The first representative legislative body in British America — the General Assembly — convened at Jamestown at the request of settlers who wanted input into the laws governing them. That same year, the first documented Africans arrived in Virginia. They were from the kingdom of Ndongo in Angola, West Central Africa, captured during war with the Portuguese, and their arrival marked the beginning of a history of enslaved labor that would define Virginia's economy for the next two and a half centuries.[2]

In 1676, Jamestown was deliberately burned during Bacon's Rebellion, an armed uprising of Virginia colonists led by Nathaniel Bacon against the rule of Governor William Berkeley, though the town was subsequently rebuilt. Jamestown continued as the center of Virginia's political and social life until 1699, when the seat of government moved to present-day Williamsburg. Although Jamestown ceased to function as a town by the mid-1700s, its legacies are embedded in the democratic institutions that followed.[4]

Historic Jamestowne and the Jamestown Rediscovery Project

Today the original site of the settlement is preserved as Historic Jamestowne, a cooperative archaeological and interpretive destination jointly administered by Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service as part of Colonial National Historical Park. Preservation Virginia acquired 22.5 acres of Jamestown Island in 1893, and in 1994 began the Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological project, which remains ongoing under the auspices of the Jamestown Rediscovery Foundation.[7]

The Jamestown Rediscovery Project began in 1994 with the goal of locating the site of the original James Fort, long assumed to have eroded into the James River. Excavations revealed that most of the fort — except for one of the bastions — remained on dry land. To date, archaeologists have excavated approximately 80% of the original 1607 triangular fort and 50% of the expanded five-sided 1608 fort, yielding roughly three million artifacts from the settlement's early years.[8]

Among the notable discoveries made since excavations began: in 2010, archaeologists uncovered the remains of the original church built inside James Fort; in 2013, forensic analysis of a human skull and bones provided physical evidence that the colonists had resorted to cannibalism during the Starving Time; and in 2013, the grave of Captain Gabriel Archer — one of the original 1607 colonists — was discovered inside the fort, along with a reliquary containing bone fragments believed to be Catholic holy relics, suggesting a hidden Catholic presence in the early Protestant colony. These finds have repeatedly reshaped scholarly understanding of what life in the fort was actually like.[9]

Preservation Virginia's acreage on the western end of the island includes the James Fort site and current Jamestown Rediscovery archaeological digs, the 17th-century brick church tower and cemetery, the 1907 brick Memorial Church, the Dale House Café, the Archaearium archaeology museum built directly over a portion of the excavation, and the Rediscovery Center research and collections facilities. The National Park Service maintains the main Visitor Center, education facilities, and exhibits, along with the former townsite of "New Towne" that developed into James City, the Island Drive with its three- and five-mile loops through the forests and wetlands of Jamestown, and the NPS Glasshouse at the site of an archaeological 17th-century glassworks.[4]

Visitors can walk through the active archaeological site, examine the 17th-century church tower — the oldest standing English brick structure in North America — and explore the Archaearium, where thousands of recovered artifacts are displayed in context over the actual excavation. Entrance to Historic Jamestowne is covered by the America the Beautiful pass, and the site is open year-round except Christmas Day. Locals who know the area well tend to recommend visiting in spring or fall; the site's outdoor character makes summer visits uncomfortable in Virginia's heat and humidity, and the crowds are considerably thinner in the shoulder seasons.[4]

In 2007, Preservation Virginia and the National Park Service rebranded the island site as "Historic Jamestowne" to help distinguish it from the nearby Jamestown Settlement museum. The distinction matters. Historic Jamestowne is the actual ground where the original colony stood, with active digs still underway and archaeologists sometimes visible at work. Jamestown Settlement, about 1.25 miles away, is a separately operated state-funded living-history park with reconstructed structures, replica vessels, and costumed interpreters. First-time visitors often book one expecting the other. Experienced visitors and locals generally describe Historic Jamestowne as the more authentic and scholarly of the two, while Jamestown Settlement is better suited to families or visitors who want hands-on engagement with colonial life rather than archaeology.[10]

Jamestown Settlement Museum

Jamestown Settlement is a living-history park and museum located 1.25 miles from the original colony site, adjacent to Jamestown Island on State Route 31 near the Colonial Parkway in James City County. It was initially created for the celebration of the 350th anniversary in 1957 and is operated by the Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation, largely sponsored by the Commonwealth of Virginia.[2]

The museum tells the story of 17th-century Virginia from the arrival of the English colonists in 1607 through the cultural encounters and events that shaped the early American nation. The story comes through film, gallery exhibits, and outdoor living history. Expansive gallery exhibits and an introductory film cover the cultures of the Powhatan Indians, English colonists, and West Central Africans who converged in 17th-century Virginia, tracing Jamestown's origins in England through the first century of the Virginia colony.[11]

The outdoor areas give visitors the chance to explore a re-creation of Paspahegh Town, board full-scale replica versions of the three ships that brought colonists to Jamestown — the Susan Constant, the Godspeed, and the Discovery — and walk through a re-created 1610–14 English fort complete with church, storehouse, and armory. Costumed historical interpreters staff each area and demonstrate period trades, including blacksmithing and glassblowing. Handmade glassware produced during demonstrations is available for purchase in the museum shop. A typical visit runs about two hours, making it practical to pair with Historic Jamestowne on the same day.[2]

As part of a $10.6 million phased renovation completed in 2019, Jamestown Settlement added a 4-D experiential theater with multi-sensory special effects. The theater's primary presentation covers Bacon's Rebellion, the 1676 armed uprising led by Nathaniel Bacon against Governor William Berkeley that ended with the burning of Jamestown itself.[11]

Over 500 artifacts are currently on exhibit in the galleries, including a wooden bellows used in West Central African ironworking, a 1612 map of Virginia by Captain John Smith, and a ritual stone face bead carved by Indigenous hands. The galleries trace connections between Powhatan material culture, English colonial objects, and West Central African craftsmanship in ways that reflect the three distinct peoples who defined early Virginia's history.[11]

Jamestown Settlement and the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown are open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day. Jamestown Settlement is generally suited to a half-day visit, whereas Colonial Williamsburg — a working reconstruction of an

References

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