IIlllliinnooiiss SSttaattee UUnniivveerrssiittyy IISSUU RReeDD:: RReesseeaarrcchh aanndd eeDDaattaa Theses and Dissertations 3-15-2016 TThhee 11662222 PPoowwhhaattaann UUpprriissiinngg aanndd IIttss IImmppaacctt oonn AAnngglloo--IInnddiiaann RReellaattiioonnss Michael Jude Kramer Illinois State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/etd Part of the European History Commons, Indigenous Studies Commons, and the United States History Commons RReeccoommmmeennddeedd CCiittaattiioonn Kramer, Michael Jude, "The 1622 Powhatan Uprising and Its Impact on Anglo-Indian Relations" (2016). Theses and Dissertations. 513. https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/etd/513 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ISU ReD: Research and eData. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ISU ReD: Research and eData. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE 1622 POWHATAN UPRISING AND ITS IMPACT ON ANGLO-INDIAN RELATIONS Michael J. Kramer 112 Pages On March 22, 1622, Native Americans under the Powhatan war-leader Opechancanough launched surprise attacks on English settlements in Virginia. The attacks wiped out between one-quarter and one-third of the colony’s European population and hastened the collapse of the Virginia Company of London, a joint stock company to which England’s King James I had granted the right to establish settlements in the New World. Most significantly, the 1622 Powhatan attacks in Virginia marked a critical turning point in Anglo-Indian relations. Following the famous 1614 marriage of the Native American Pocahontas to Virginia colonist John Rolfe and her conversion to Christianity, English colonists in North America and English policymakers in Europe entertained considerable optimism that other Native Americans could be persuaded to embrace both English culture and the Christian faith. After Opechacanough’s surprise attacks, efforts to assimilate Native Americans into the Virginia colony stopped. The attitude on the part of English colonists in Virginia and policymakers in England became decidedly antagonistic toward Native Americans, and English colonial authorities engaged in callous Indian policies in the wake of the 1622 Uprising. The inimical English attitudes toward Native Americans and the ruthless policies of separation from and extermination of Native Americans spread beyond Virginia during the seventeenth century and lasted throughout England’s colonial presence in North America. Through primary source material including business records, journals, letters, and broadsheets; as well as the work of eighteenth century historians and modern historians and anthropologists, I intend to establish the lasting impact of the 1622 Uprising on Anglo-Indian relations. KEYWORDS: Opechancanough, Powhatans, Virginia THE 1622 POWHATAN UPRISING AND ITS IMPACT ON ANGLO-INDIAN RELATIONS MICHAEL J. KRAMER A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE Department of History ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITY 2016 © 2016 Michael J. Kramer THE 1622 POWHATAN UPRISING AND ITS IMPACT ON ANGLO-INDIAN RELATIONS MICHAEL J. KRAMER COMMITTEE MEMBERS: John Reda, Chair Linda Clemmons ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writer wishes to thank his committee members, Dr. John Reda and Dr. Linda Clemmons for their patience and guidance in every stage of the process that culminates in the completion of this thesis. Thanks also to the various professors in Illinois State University’s History Department, whose mentorship supplied the analytical tools necessary to the pursuit of a graduate degree. The staffs at Henricus Historical Park, Jamestown Settlement Living History Museum, and Historic Jamestowne were unfailingly hospitable and accommodating in suggesting resources that helped make completion of this project possible, as well as in providing a glimpse into early colonial life through their detailed reproductions of seventeenth-century Virginia settlements and their painstakingly researched historical interpretations. Gary, Sharon, Chris, Tim, Vicki, Calvin, Katie, Bobby, and James Kramer, and Sue Guillory Cheek served as supportive and perceptive sounding boards for this project. Finally, prompt and generous funding from the Veteran’s Administration facilitated the academic training required to attain both an undergraduate and a graduate degree. M. J. K. i CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS i CONTENTS ii FIGURES iv CHAPTER I. EARLY SETTLEMENT, EARLY CONFLICTS, AND THE PEACE OF POCAHONTAS 1 Introduction: Why the 1622 Uprising Matters 1 An Inauspicious Beginning 8 The Starving Time and the Peace of Pocahontas 14 Lulling the Tassantassas 22 II. THE 1622 UPRISING AND ITS AFTERMATH 32 Two Sermons in London and News From Virginia 32 The Day the Sky Fell 40 The English Regroup 48 III. SHORT-TERM CONSEQUENCES 56 English Rage Fuels English Policy 56 The Second Anglo-Powhatan War 66 IV. THE FALL OF THE VIRGINIA COMPANY 75 ii V. LONG-TERM CONSEQUENCES 91 Beyond Virginia 91 An Epilogue in Virginia 99 Conclusion 104 REFERENCES 109 iii FIGURES Figure Page 1. C. Smith Taketh the King of Pamaunkee Prisoner, 1608 26 2. The massacre of the settlers in 1622 43 iv
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