Jamestown: Why Did So Many Die? You may be asking why did some many Jamestown colonist die? Well I am here to answer that for you. So many colonist died because of disease/ warship, lack of crops/ starvation, and non-cleaned water. As the English Colonist went to Jamestown there were many things that came along as they were settling at Jamestown and caused death to take place. The English Colonists went to Jamestown around 1607,1608,1609, and 1610. The people that went to Jamestown is a bunch of the English Colonists. In Jamestown the conflicts they had were a salt water intrusion, lack of crops/ starvation, Spanish warship and disease. To begin, so many colonists died from disease and warship. In the text in (Document D) it states, “Some harshe and crewell dealings by cutting off towe (two) of the salvages heads and other extremities.” It contributes to why so many people die because this caused death. They were being murdered and that is two people that are dead and many more have died from the other ways they decided to kill them. Indians killed 50 Powhatan’s siege of …show more content…
In the article “Early Jamestown” it states, “The arrival in January of a resupply ship saved the colony from total collapse but in the next two years, hard time continues.” This contributes to some of their deaths because by now the supply ship wasn’t to get there on time to save a little more people and that is how some of the colonists died. When the colonist got grain they doubted that it was going to work for them to last through the Winter until the supply ship returned after Winter. Soon the “ Starvation time” would take place after they ran out of grain and that means that there will be no more food until the supply ship gets there but until then they had to survive on what they had so that means some of them died because they were starved to death. There are more reasons they died so let’s talk about
The Jamestown colonists had many risks to get to where they were. There wasn’t enough food/water supply for the abundance of people. The food/water they did have was mostly spoiled. Another reason, is sickness throughout the ships. Since it wasn’t hygienic or safe, many did get diseases.
Many colonists died in Jamestown because the Indians attacked the settlers coming to their land. Doc B is a timeline adapted by J. Frederick Fausz in 1990. The timeline is from a magazine article entitled,” An Abundance of Blood Shed on Both Sides: England’s First Indian War, 1609 - 1614.” This is showing us how many and how people died in Jamestown between the years of 1607 and 1610.
There seem to be a consistency as to why colonists settled Jamestown, Plymouth and Rhode Island. Many set out to avoided religious prosecution with the mindset, thinking the church of England was unfixable (Tindall, 2013) also there was other driving forces for settlement riches and land ownership (Tindall, 2013) Many of the settlers that set out for wealth or land seem more likely to exploit the indigenes people. Whether it be for their hunting and tracking, for the settlers seeking wealth in fur trade.
Well many colonists died because of their water supply, their relationship with the natives, and because of their knowledge of survival. These factor lead to early death for most of the colonist. The water supply for Jamestown was brackish, or filthy, and lead to disease.
Many of the Jamestown colonist died in the New World but the question is what caused it to happen. Some events and things that contributed to killing them may be shocking because we don't expect it to affect them like this. There could be many reasons why. Though, the real reasons we think the colonist died is because there was bacteria and sickness, even huge drought and winter came by, and because they we not careful about what they did. These events and things affected the Colonist greatly.
Only sixty of the colonist had survived the harsh winter that will forever be known as the starving times. Sir Thomas Gates and Sir George Summers arrived in May 1610 with 150 people and some supplies from the Bermudas only to find the walking anomalies of Jamestown. Sir Thomas Gates took over as the new governor and order the immediate abandonment of Jamestown. They labored into June to build 4 ships to carry them all back to England. Once all were boarded and sailing down the James river, they spotted another ship headed their way.
At least a half-dozen accounts, by people who lived through the period or spoke to colonists who did, describe occasional acts of cannibalism that winter. They include reports of corpses being exhumed and eaten, a husband killing his wife and salting her flesh (for which he was executed), and the mysterious disappearance of foraging colonists. The Starving Time at Jamestown in the Colony of Virginia was a period of starvation during the winter of 1609–1610 in which all but 60 of 214 colonists died. The colonists, the first group of whom had originally arrived at Jamestown on May 14, 1607, had never planned to grow all of their own food.
In “Of Plymouth Plantation” by William Bradford, Bradford stated, “. . . that in two or three months time half of their company died, especially in January and February.” This had impacted the colonists because half of the colonists died by diseases brought with them, being infected by scurvy, and from having no type of shelter or other comforts. The colonists barely made it through winter as they had assistance with all necessary aid by the six or seven people who were immune of diseases. Only fifty out of one hundred colonists have survived the time of suffering.
The lack of food is the reason so many colonists died of hunger. The second reason to why so many colonists died was because of occupations. There were too many gentleman in May 1607 and January 1608 that did not want to do any work at all. One surgeon in 1607 and 1608 was not good.
Some people tried to starve, but the crew forced them to take food, beating them, tormenting them with hot coal or forcing them to open their mouths with special tools or break their teeth. The mortality caused by various diseases was very high. More than 20 percent have died from various epidemics or committed suicide. Venture Smith, describing his test, wrote: "After the usual passage, except for the great death from pox that erupted on board, we arrived on the island of Barbados, but when we reached it, out of two hundred and sixty that sailed from Africa, not more than two hundred alive.
Colonist are going to live in a new place that they have never lived before, will they survive? It is the year of 1607, 100 or more passengers were on a ship and they were sailing to Chesapeake Bay. Many colonists are dying and they don’t know the reason why. Many colonists died because of the water, they didn’t have any skills, and because of their relationships.
With their new environments all of the colonists were introduced to new diseases. Poor living conditions, malnutrition, and native diseases caused many fatalities throughout the colonies. Illness ran rampant through each colony, which took out many workers. Jamestown and Plymouth were able to overcome each struggle and become the foundation of the New World.
Some of the deaths of these colonists were caused by freezing to death, some of the deaths were caused by starvation because the animals that they ate where scarce and hibernating and some of the nuts and berries that they gathered were covered in snow. Also many colonists died because of diseases from europe and diseases from the lack of sanitation in the New World. One substantially important difference between Plymouth
The british kept victimizing the colonist and they finally provoked them and the tension bubbled into violence. The boston massacre had a result of five deaths which were all colonist. The reason
First, the Native Americans were decimated by the diseases brought by the Europeans. The many disease that caused the most death was smallpox. Lastly, the colonist and African Americans had relatively small amount of deaths from diseases. This was because Europeans and Africans were exposed to each other’s diseases. Overall, diseases had cause death throughout the Native Americans, African Americans and European