Pocahontas

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University of Oklahoma Press, 1969 - Social Science - 227 pages

Dispelling the clouds of romance and legend that have surrounded Pocahontas throughout the more than two centuries since her death, Grace Steele Woodward here re-creates the life of the Powhatan Indian princess. Indeed, the true story, as it emerges from these pages, is probably more dramatic and certainly more significant for American history than the legend.

The story of Pocahontas coincides with the founding of Jamestown, the first permanent English colony in the New World. Her story begins with her first visit to the colony as a child of ten and ends with her journey to England with her English husband, John Rolfe, and their young son.

The event which catapulted her to fame was, of course, her rescue of Captain John Smith from murder at the hands of her father, Chief Powhatan, and his warriors. But the more significant contribution she made was her almost singlehanded deliverance of the Jamestown colonists from starvation and massacre. Without her compassionate gifts of food and warnings about her father's plots against them, the Jamestown settlers would probably have met the same fate as that of the Roanoke settlers.

Pocahontas' visit to London was arranged by the Virginia Company, which established the Jamestown colony, not only as a gesture of appreciation to the young princess but also as a means of stimulating further interest in New World colonization. It was Pocahontas' final act of devotion to the colonists. She was never to see her homeland again.

In preparation for writing this biography, Mrs. Woodward searched out the Virginia settings where Pocahontas lived as a child and those in England which she visited in adulthood. The author studied every pertinent document of the period, from official records of the Virginia Company to letters of highborn Londoners telling about Pocahontas' visit to England and its sorrowful aftermath.

 

Contents

An Introduction
3
The Powhatans
8
The Invaders
41
The Beginning of Jamestown
51
The Rescue
63
Negotiations
74
Powhatans Coronation
84
The Contest Quickens
92
Frontispiece and title page of John Smiths
139
Interior new St Georges Church Gravesend
146
The Abduction and Conversion
151
The Marriage
160
A Matter of Money
168
The Visit to England
174
Gravesend
184
An Epilogue
187

The Lyte Jewel seventeenthcentury pendant
106
The Starving Time
111
A Second Chance
118
Signs of Success
128
Bibliography
196
Index
215
Copyright

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About the author (1969)

Grace Steel Woodward (1899-1987) was the author of numerous books, including The Cherokees and Pocahontas.

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