Source:  Philip L. Barbour, ed., The Complete Works of John Smith (1580-1631) in Three Volumes.  Published for The Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia by the University of North Carolina Press (1986), Vol. 1, pp. 137-130.

Chronology of Events in Virginia, 1608-1612*

     

1608

June 2. Smith sent his True Relation to England, and
with it probably the Smith/Zúñiga map.
Sept. 10. Smith elected president of the Virginia
Council, after virtually completing his geographical
and ethnological investigations.
Shortly thereafter Captain Newport returned
to Virginia with the second supply of colonists
and brought a letter from the London Council
that berated the colonists for their factiousness
and "idle conceits."
c. Dec. 1. Newport left on a return voyage to England,
taking along Smith's "rude answer" to the
London Council, as well as a "Mappe of the
Bay and Rivers, with an annexed Relation of
the Countries and Nations that inhabit them."

     

1609



Jan. 16. Sometime before this date Newport reached
England.
Feb. 18. Robert Johnson's Nova Britannia, a promotional
pamphlet inspired by King James's grant of a new charter, was entered for publication.
May 5. Capt. Samuel Argall sent out to test a shorter
route to Virginia, under a company commission.
May 23. Second charter signed; Sir Thomas Smythe
appointed treasurer. Also in May, the new
council issued instructions to Sir Thomas
Gates, as governor of Virginia, naming Sir
George Somers admiral of Virginia, Capt. John
Smith and others to the local council, and
assigning Smith to the command of a fort to be
built at Cape Comfort.
June 8. Gates's fleet got out to sea from Falmouth.
July 13. Argall arrived in Jamestown, after 69 days at
sea (the 1606 voyage had taken 128 days).
July 24. Gates and Somers's flagship caught by a hurricane
and driven on the Bermuda reefs.
Aug. 11-18. The surviving ships reached Jamestown.
Archer, Ratcliffe, and other old enemies of
Smith's stirred up trouble over the new charter
(though nobody had a copy of it) but let Smith
finish his term as president. Not long after,
Smith was incapacitated by a severe burn, and
the rebellious clique gained the upper hand.
George Percy, youngest brother of the earl of
Northumberland, reluctantly agreed to serve
as president, apparently even before Sept. 10.
Aug. 18. Henry Hudson, a friend of Smith's, explored
Delaware Bay, after picking up from where
Smith's explorations had left off (approximately
37° 30' N lat.). From there he sailed
N to explore the river now named after him.
Oct. 4. Captain Ratcliffe wrote to Lord Salisbury that
Smith "is sent home."
Nov. 9. Sometime before this date, Argall arrived back
in England. Meanwhile, in Virginia the
"starving time" had set in.
Nov. 27. In Bermuda, Gates and Somers determined to
build boats to transport themselves to Virginia.
Nov. 30. Sometime before this date, Smith arrived in
England.
Dec. 14. Lord De La Warr, Sir Thomas Smythe, and
others entered for publication A True and
Sincere Declaration of the Purpose of the Plantation
Begun in Virginia to calm investors concerned
over the loss of the flagship and to announce
the immediate departure of a relief fleet commanded
by De La Warr, now named lord
governor and captain general for Virginia.

     

1610

Feb. 21. The Reverend William Crashaw, a Puritan,
preached a farewell sermon before De La
Warr, and on Apr. 1 the latter's fleet sailed
from the Solent (Isle of Wight).
May 10. Gates set sail from Bermuda for Virginia in
two pinnaces built on the island. At about the
same time, George Percy undertook for the
first time to sail from Jamestown down to Old
Point Comfort to see if the colonists there were
still alive.
May 21. Gates arrived with his men just in time to meet
Percy, who was at Old Point Comfort, and two
days later they were all reunited in Jamestown.
June 7. Finding "not past sixtie" colonists alive, out of
500, Gates abandoned Jamestown and put the
survivors and his own men aboard three
pinnaces. A few miles downstream, however,
they met De La Warr, who had entered the
bay the day before, and in short order all went
back to Jamestown.
June 10. Sunday afternoon. De La Warr came ashore to
take formal charge of the colony. Two days
later he nominated his council, with William
Strachey secretary and recorder.
c. Sept. 1. De La Warr's ships returned to England,
bearing Gates, Newport, and others, along
with Strachey's account of the Bermuda misadventure,
"A True Reportory of the Wracke,
and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates."
Important for John Smith was the highly
probable return then of Richard Pots, an old
Virginia colonist who had apparently acted as
clerk of the council when Smith was president,
and who was to take an important part in
Smith's immediate plans, for the news of the
colony's survival could not but give Smith a
new purpose in life.
Nov. 8. Sir Thomas Smythe, Richard Martin, secretary
of the Virginia Company, and others entered
for publication A True Declaration of the Estate of
the Colony in Virginia, a vindication based
largely on Strachey's "Reportory." It is probable
that the publication of this pamphlet was
an immediate cause in Smith's completing
plans for his own work, since Richard Pots, a
knowledgeable acquaintance from Virginia
now in England, and probably others, could
help.
Nov. 9. Sir George Somers died in Bermuda.
Dec. 14. Richard Martin, secretary of the Virginia
Company, apparently assailed by misgivings
about Virginia, wrote privately to Strachey
asking for an honest report of the colony.

     

1611

Mar. 12. Don Alonso de Velasco, Spanish ambassador to
James I, sent to Philip III a manuscript map
of NE North America (hereafter called the
" Velasco map"), which was evidently based on
various available maps, "plots," or sketches.
Mar. 26. Smith appears to have employed the engraver
William Hole shortly after this date.
Mar. 28. De La Warr left Virginia, ill. Sir Thomas Dale
had already sailed for Virginia with three ships
bearing men, cattle, and supplies.
Nov. 1. The earliest recorded performance of Shakespeare's
The Tempest, in which he surely drew
on William Strachey's "Reportory."
c. Dec. 18. Shortly before this date Newport returned from
Virginia with word of Gates's safe arrival
there. Gates thereafter was employed by the
East India Company. Argall seems to have
replaced Newport in the Virginia service, and
John Smith may have regarded this development
as a favorable sign for himself. But by
then William Hole presumably was at work on
Smith's map, and William Crashaw and
William Symonds may well have started to
help Smith find a printer.

     

1612

Mar. 12. The third charter, an amplification of the 1609
charter inspired by the knowledge that
Bermuda was accessible and habitable and by
the fear that Spain might now occupy it, was
signed.
May 1. Robert Johnson's The New Life of Virginia was
entered for publication. Containing no map,
no sound information about the Indians, and
no historical details, this appears to have been
the type of promotional literature considered
most appropriate by Smythe's clique.
Aug. 7. Purchas's Pilgrimage was entered for publication.
In it he stated that the Smith/ Hole
map was in print, but implied that the accompanying
text was not.

     

1613

Mar. 24. Smith's Map of Virginia and Proceedings must
have been in print by this date, since the legal
year 1612 ended then. This is corroborated in
the second edition of Purchas's Pilgrimage,
which states in a marginal note that Smith's
manuscript was "since printed at Oxford."



  * This work was printed in two parts, with twin title pages. The present Introduction deals with the first part only.



  1. Edward Arber, ed., Captain John Smith ... Works, 1608-1631, The English Scholar's
Library Edition, No. 16 (Birmingham, 1884), I, 42.



  2. Falconer Madan, Oxford Books: A Bibliography (Oxford, 1895),
I, v, 83-85.



  3. See the Proceedings, 28-36, with its reference to Ralph Lane's account of 1585-1586, from
Richard Hakluyt's The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
(London, 1598-1600), III, 255-260. Smith appropriated two Indian words recorded by Lane:
"werowances" ("kings," as defined by Lane); and "crenepos" ("their women," as explained by
Hakluyt in a marginal note).



  4. Hakluyt, Principal Navigations, III, 266-280.



  5. See caption to the "Map of Ould Virginia," following the first book of the Generall Historie,
in Vol. II.



  6. For Strachey's debt to Smith, see S. G. Culliford, William Strachey, 1572-1621 (Charlottesville,
Va., 1965).



  7. Purchas, Purchas his Pilgrimage. Or Relations Of The World ... (London, 1613), title page.



  8. Strachey's letter about the shipwreck on the reefs of Bermuda, "the Ile of Divels," was
already known to Hakluyt, from whose estate Purchas finally retrieved it years later.



  9. See the Fragments, in Vol. III.



  10. Invoice, dated Mar. 30, 1623, found by the editor among the Ferrar Papers, Magdalene
College, Cambridge. See David B. Quinn's published version, "A List of Books Purchased for the
Virginia Company," Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, LXXVII (1969), 347-360.



  * The Julian calendar, ten days behind the Gregorian, is retained throughout.