EDMOND — Four hundred candles make a mighty blaze — only fitting for a birthday celebration for the founding settlement of our country. Are there older cities? Yes, for example, St. Augustine, Fla., and Santa Fe, N.M., were both settled earlier. But the taproot of our society is English and the 104 men who sailed into Chesapeake Bay and landed on the banks of the James River in 1607 established the first permanent English settlement in the New World.
That wasn’t really their intent. It was a business venture. The men were sponsored by the Virginia Company of London whose investors hoped to reap a profit from the natural resources of the area.
They were hoping to find gold. Instead, they found brackish water, an unfamiliar climate, lack of food and an iffy relationship with the American Indians. It would take six hard years before the adventurers would find gold in the form of a broad-leafed plant — tobacco — and several more years before the colony achieved relative stability.
The marriage of Pocahontas, daughter of tribal leader Powhatan, to John Rolfe, who is given credit for growing and sending the first samples of tobacco to England, brought an era of relative peace to the settlement, which served as the capitol of the Virginia Colony until 1699.
Years of planning have gone into preparing an outstanding experience for visitors coming to Jamestown this year. When I visited in 2005, many elements already were in place.
It’s initially confusing to find there are two main Jamestown venues — Historic Jamestowne, which is a National Park Service/Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities site and Jamestown Settlement, a living history museum. My time was limited and I was looking for the “real thing” so I chose Historic Jamestowne and planned to skip Jamestown Settlement.
I actually wound up visiting both and here’s my best advice — start with Jamestown Settlement. With an introductory film, a comprehensive museum and outdoor re-creations, this place is a fabulous example of historic interpretation based on the latest scholarship available. The background I learned there would have made my Historic Jamestowne experience much richer.
Outdoor exhibits include a Powhatan Indian Village, James Fort, the riverfront discovery area and the replica ships Susan Constant, Godspeed and Discovery. In each area, interpreters in period dress re-create daily life in Jamestown’s early years. I watched men working in the garden, talked to a sail maker, visited with ship builders and boarded the ships, marveling at how anything as tiny as the Discovery could have made the four-and-a-half months voyage across the ocean.
Since 2005, extensive indoor museum exhibits have been added and both the re-created Powhatan Indian Village and Fort have been modified based on recent discoveries. Two of the ships have been replaced with more accurate replicas based on information on documented cargo capacities and current maritime research. The third ship, the Susan Constant, was built more recently and did not need to be replaced.
Inside the fort, the Anglican church, the cape merchant’s office, the governor’s house and other buildings house various activities of the early colony. As the original buildings would have been, these structures are built with wattle and daub — which is a matrix of branches or lath covered with a mixture of dirt and straw — with thatched roofs. Chickens scurried around my feet as I watched two women preparing loaves for the outdoor baking oven.
These exhibits make the minimal ruins left at the original site more understandable. When I visited, Historic Jamestowne was notable more for what was not there than what was. Nothing from the 17th century remains standing, except the remains of the church tower, which dates back to the mid-1600s.
The first church in Jamestown consisted of a ship sail hung between trees. The tower belongs to the fourth church on the site. The memorial church there today was built in 1907 by the Colonial Dames.
The most exciting things going on at Historic Jamestowne were archaeological. We watched workers with tiny trowels and brushes poring over minute bits of soil inside the perimeter of the fort.
We strolled by statues of John Smith and Pocahontas and bricks marking building foundations and took a drive around the island where a series of interpretive paintings point out spots where activities like brick making and potash production took place.
This week, a talk with Mike Litterst, public affairs officer, brought me up to date. “There’s a lot more here today than when you visited,” he told me. “We just opened the new Visitor Center in January. The 18,000-square-foot space features museum exhibits and an orientation program. We’ve built the Archaearium, a building dedicated to the archaeological excavations — how we found the fort and what we learned about the settlers. There are over 1,000 artifacts on display. We’ve also re-erected the fort palisade walls, making it a lot easier to visualize what was here. We’ve spent about $65 million in the last eight years. I hope you’ll come back and see what we’ve done.”
I hope so, too.
(Elaine Warner is an Edmond resident.)
Features
Historic Jamestowne offers glimpse of past
- Features
-
-
Is this home improvement hell? Or the redecorating promised land?
Regarding this redecorating thing I’ve been telling you about ... don’t ask. After pretty much gutting FB (front bedroom) and GB (guest bathroom), I closed their doors hoping for out-of-sight-out-of-mind to set in, but it’s not working.
-
Behavior 'rehab' can be a tricky proposition
Q: My 5-year-old daughter is in “rehab” for some listening issues at school. When she comes home with a note from her teacher indicating one or more of these incidents at school, she is confined to her room for the rest of the day. What should I do if she is constantly calling me, wanting to ask me something, wanting me to get something for her, and so on? She isn’t coming out of the room, but she is constantly trying to engage me. It’s driving me nuts.
-
Special care needed for senior pets
Q: I have a black Labrador mix that is starting to get gray hair around her muzzle. Baby is only 6 years old and we have taken very good care of her. She has always had her shots, she was spayed as a puppy, is on monthly heartworm preventative and is a good weight for her body size at 66 pounds. Is she really already a senior citizen, and what should we watch for? We love her very much and want to keep her healthy and happy as long as possible.
-
High self-esteem, reward system can backfire
The media recently reported “new” research findings to the effect that rewards often backfire and self-esteem is not the wonderful, uplifting personal attribute once thought. As a result, schools are rethinking their teaching and classroom management philosophies.
-
When rooms talk, it’s time to remodel
I think I might need a keeper. Every room in this house is screaming at me (some more loudly than others), and the cacophony is driving me nuts. You know how it goes. You spruce up one room (in my case the kitchen), and every other room in the house clambers for its share of TLC too.
-
Seminar focuses on pet allergies
Paul DeMars, DVM, Community Practice at Oklahoma State University’s Boren Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, will present a Pet Care Seminar at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the McElroy Hall Auditorium at the corner of Farm Road and McFarland on the Stillwater OSU campus.
-
Canadian Carnaval is cool carousing
Yes, I have the coolest job in the world — and I visit some really cool places. But the spot that takes the Popsicle is Québec with the Carnaval de Québec and the Hôtel de Glace.
-
Wobblers syndrome is chronic, progressive
Q: I have an 8-year-old dog that is three-quarters Doberman Pinscher. He always has been quite active and healthy until about a month ago when he began showing slight signs of weakness and stiffness in his hind legs, but didn’t exhibit pain. He’s worse now.
-
Today’s children are being mis-educated about their feelings
Margaret Thatcher, former prime minister of England, once said, “One of the great problems of our age is that we’re governed by people who care more about feelings than they do about thoughts and ideas.”
-
Purging of high heels brings despair
If you recall, last week I promised that you had heard the last of my New Year’s purging of closets and cabinets.
- More Features Headlines
-
Is this home improvement hell? Or the redecorating promised land?





