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==''Archaeological Evidence Links Roanoke to the Croatan.''==
==Archaeological Evidence ''Links Roanoke to the Croatan.''==


In 1998 "The Croatoan Project" an Archaeological Dig sponsored by East Carolina University discovered the first material Connection between Roanoke and the Croatan. The archaeological exploration uncovered a 10 carat gold 16th century english signet ring. The ring was discovered along with a flint lock for an 16th centry english musket, and two 16th century copper farthings inside an excavated pit with in the bounds of the ancient captial of the Croatoan chiefdom, 50 miles from Roanoke.
In 1998 "The Croatoan Project" an Archaeological Dig sponsored by East Carolina University discovered the first material Connection between Roanoke and the Croatan. The archaeological exploration uncovered a 10 carat gold 16th century english signet ring. The ring was discovered along with a flint lock for an 16th centry english musket, and two 16th century copper farthings inside an excavated pit with in the bounds of the ancient captial of the Croatoan chiefdom, 50 miles from Roanoke.

Revision as of 01:32, 25 June 2006

A map of the Roanoke area, by John White

Roanoke Island is an island in the Outer Banks of North Carolina, United States. About twelve miles long and three miles wide, the island lies between the mainland and the barrier islands, with Albemarle Sound on its north, Roanoke Sound on its east, Pamlico Sound on its south, and Croatan Sound on its west. The island contains the towns of Manteo at the northern end and Wanchese at the southern end. Fort Raleigh National Historic Site is on the island.

The Lost Colony

The Roanoke Colony was the first English colony in the New World (St. John's in Newfoundland was claimed in 1583 by Humphrey Gilbert but no settlement was attempted). It was founded at Roanoke Island in what was then Virginia (now North Carolina).

An enterprise organized in 1584 by Sir Walter Raleigh

The enterprise was financed and organized by Sir Walter Raleigh, who had received a charter for the colonization of Virginia from Queen Elizabeth I of England, specifying that Raleigh had ten years in which to establish a settlement in North America or lose his colonization rights. Raleigh and Elizabeth intended that the venture should both provide New World riches, and a privateering base from which to steal from the treasure fleets of Spain (with whom the English were perennially at war). With that in mind, an expedition was sent in 1584 to explore the eastern coast of North America for an appropriate location. The expedition was led by Captains Phillip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe, who chose the Outer Banks of modern North Carolina as an ideal location from which to raid the Spanish, and proceeded to make contact with the natives. They returned to England with a report of their find, samples of the local flora and fauna, and two natives: Manteo and Wanchese.

The following spring, a colonizing expedition composed solely of men, many of them veteran soldiers who had fought to establish English rule in Ireland, was sent to establish the colony. The leader of the settlement effort, Sir Richard Grenville, was assigned to further explore the area, establish the colony, and return to England with news of the venture's success. Two occurrences could have led to his deciding to postpone the effort:

  1. upon arrival at the Outer Banks the lead ship struck a shoal and flooded, ruining most of the colony's food stores
  2. after the initial exploration of the mainland coast and native towns there, a silver cup was noticed to be missing. The chief in the last native town visited was burned to death in retaliation.

Despite a lack of food and this rocky start to relations with a potential neighbor, Grenville decided to leave Ralph Lane and approximately 100 men to establish the English colony at the north end of Roanoke Island, promising to return in April 1586 with more men and fresh supplies.

A period of drought and the abandonment of the colony

Unknown to the English, the Outer Banks area was at the beginning of one of the worst periods of drought in 400 years. Although the natives were willing to barter some food for trinkets in the colony's early days, as the year progressed into winter, the natives became more and more reluctant to trade. Lane's reaction was to procure food through threats. When threats did not work, military action was taken. Among other things, he took a local weroance's (chief's) son, Skikko, hostage and demanded food in recompense.

By April 1586, relations with the neighboring tribe had degraded to such a degree that they attacked an expedition led by Lane to explore the Roanoke River. His response was to attack the natives in their capital, where he killed their weroance, Wingina.

April passed, and there was no sign of Grenville's relief fleet. When Sir Francis Drake arrived in June, on his way home from a successful raid in the Caribbean, he offered to take the colonists back to England, which they accepted. Shortly after Drake's fleet left, Grenville and the resupply arrived. Finding the colony abandoned, Grenville decided to return to England with the bulk of his force. Fifteen men were left behind to maintain both an English presence and Raleigh's claim to Virginia.

Second group of colonists and the "Croatoan"

In 1587, Raleigh dispatched another group of colonists. These 91 men, 17 women, and 9 children were led by John White, an artist and friend of Raleigh's who had accompanied the previous expeditions to Roanoke. The new colonists were tasked with picking up the fifteen men left at Roanoake and settling farther north, in the Chesapeake Bay area. Upon arrival at Roanoke, however, the fleet's navigator, Simon Fernandez, refused to transport the colony further than the Outer Banks, claiming that continuing to the bay would delay his return to England into the North Atlantic storm season, thereby risking the fleet.

Forced to accept this reasoning, which was unveiled by Fernandez only after forty of the colony's men had already been shipped to Roanoke Island to search for the fifteen men stationed there, the Roanoke settlement was re-established. Of the fifteen men left the year before, only the bones of a single man were found. The one local tribe still friendly towards the English, the Croatans on present-day Hatteras Island, reported that the men had been attacked, and the nine survivors had taken their boat and sailed up the coast.

The settlers landed on Roanoke Island on July 22, 1587. On August 18, Governor White's daughter had the first English child born in the Americas: Virginia Dare. Before her birth, White reestablished relations with the neighboring Croatans and tried to reestablish relations with the tribes that Ralph Lane had attacked a year previously. The aggrieved tribes refused to meet with the new colonists. Shortly thereafter, George Howe was killed by natives as he crabbed alone in Albemarle Sound. Knowing what had happened during Ralph Lane's tenure in the area and fearing for their lives, the colonists convinced Governor White to return to England to explain the colony's situation and ask for help. There were approximately 117 colonists—115 men and women who made the trans-Atlantic passage and 2 new-born babies (including Virginia Dare)—when White returned to England.

Ships leaving Roanoke as late as White's did were in danger from the Atlantic, confirming Fernandez's claim; White's vessel barely made it back to England. Plans for a relief fleet were put off, at first, by the captains' refusal to sail back during the winter. Then, the coming of the Spanish Armada led to every able ship in England being commandeered to fight, which left White with no sound vessels with which to return to Roanoke. He did manage, however, to hire two smaller vessels deemed unnecessary for the Armada defense, and set out for Roanoke in the spring of 1588. This time, White's attempt to return to Roanoke was foiled by human nature. The vessels released from defense duty were small, and the captains willing to sail them were greedy. They attempted to capture several vessels on the outward-bound voyage to improve the profitability of their venture, until they were captured themselves and their cargo taken. With nothing left to deliver to the colonists, the ships returned to England.

Due to the continuing war with Spain, White was not able to raise another resupply attempt for two more years. He finally gained passage on a privateering expedition that agreed to stop off at Roanoke on the way back from the Caribbean. White returned on his granddaughter's third birthday, and found the settlement deserted. He organized a search, but his men could not find any trace of the colonists. Some ninety men, seventeen women, and nine children had disappeared; there was no sign of a struggle or battle of any kind. The only clue was the word "Croatoan" carved into a post of the fort, and "Cro" carved into a nearby tree. White took this to mean that they had moved to Croatoan Island, but he was unable to conduct a search; a hurricane hit the Outer Banks and blew his fleet far out to sea. By the time the storm abated, the fleet was closer to England than Virginia. The fleet, running low on provisions, returned to England.

Gone to Croatoan? Controversy over the lost colony

The end of the 1587 colony is unrecorded (leading to its being known as the "Lost Colony"), and there are multiple theories on the fate of the colonists. The principal theory is that they dispersed and were absorbed by either the local Croatan or Hatteras Indians, or still another Algonquian people; it has yet to be established if they did assimilate with one or other of the native populations.

The Lumbee, an indigenous people living to the southwest of Roanoke Island in present-day Robeson, Scotland, Hoke, and Cumberland counties, North Carolina, were purported to be the descendants of some of the "Lost Colony" settlers. Members of the "Lost Colony", had carved a single word into a tree: "Croatoan" (also spelled Croatan) [1]. Despite John White's difficulty in locating the settlers, about fifty years later, the Croatan people were reportedly found to be practicing Christianity.

Writing in 1891, Stephen B. Weeks opined that "their language is the English of 300 years ago, and their names are in many cases the same as those borne by the original colonists." Weeks, however based his report on a theory that was then being widely disseminated by Hamilton McMillan, a conservative Democrat who represented Robeson County, North Carolina in the late-nineteenth century. McMillan wanted to split the Post-Reconstruction pro-Republican Indian/Black vote in his county. The Native Americans of Robeson County had suffered egregiously at the hands of white Robesonians both before and after the American Civil War. During Reconstruction, the Indians of Robeson County were politically allied with the county's Black population. By championing Indian interests, McMillan hoped to draw them into his party's fold and establish a Democratic majority in the county. In all probability, McMillan also confused the oral traditions of some ancestral Lumbee families who spoke of migrating from the Roanoke River and Neuse River basin during the mid-18th century where groups of Saponi and Tuscarora had settlements. However, contemporary anthropologists and historians posit that these particular oral traditions belong to families whose ancestors were Yeopin, Potoskite, Nansemond, Saponi, and Tuscarora--peoples who had incurred devastating loss of life and land in the wake of the Tuscarora War in the early eighteenth century. Anthropologists and historians contend that they may have joined with the migrating Hatteras of Roanoke Island as well as with Cheraw families on Drowning Creek, now known as the Lumbee, or Lumber River.

A similar legend claims that the Indians of Person County, North Carolina are descended from the British colonists of Roanoke Island. Indeed, when these Indians were first encountered by subsequent settlers, they noted that these Native Americans already spoke English and were of the Christian religion. The historical surnames of this group also correspond with those of the Roanoke Island settlers, and many exhibit Caucasian racial features along with Native American features. Others discount these remarkable coincidences and classify the Indians of Person County as an offshoot of the Saponi tribe.

On the other hand, American anthropologist Lee Miller, in Roanoke: Solving the Mystery of the Lost Colony proposed that the expedition was sabotaged from the beginning by Sir Walter Raleigh's rival at court, Elizabeth's "spymaster," Francis Walsingham, while other theorists contend that the colony moved wholesale, and was later destroyed. When Captain John Smith and the Jamestown colonists settled in Virginia in 1607, one of their assigned tasks was to locate the Roanoke colonists. Native peoples told Captain Smith of people within fifty miles of Jamestown who dressed and lived as the English. Captain Smith was also told by Powhatan, weroance of the Powhatan Tribe, that he had wiped out the Roanoke colonists just prior to the arrival of the Jamestown settlers, as they were living with the Chesapeake Tribe, a tribe that refused to join Powhatan's confederacy. Powhatan reportedly produced several English-made iron implements to back his claim.

Still others speculate that the colonists simply gave up waiting, tried to return to England on their own, and perished in the attempt. When Governor White left in 1587, he left the colonists with a pinnace and a number of small ships, for exploration of the coast or removal of the colony to the mainland. Another claim suggests that, with the region in drought, the colony must have suffered a massive food shortage. With the villagers starving and nothing to eat, they may have been forced to resort to cannibalism.

Finally, there are those who theorize that the Spanish destroyed the colony. Earlier in the century, the Spanish had eliminated Fort Caroline in Florida as well as a French colony near present-day Jacksonville. This last theory however is the least likely since the Spanish were still looking for the location of England's failed colony as late as 1600, ten years after White discovered that the colony was missing.

[1] [2] [3] [4]

Archaeological Evidence Links Roanoke to the Croatan.

In 1998 "The Croatoan Project" an Archaeological Dig sponsored by East Carolina University discovered the first material Connection between Roanoke and the Croatan. The archaeological exploration uncovered a 10 carat gold 16th century english signet ring. The ring was discovered along with a flint lock for an 16th centry english musket, and two 16th century copper farthings inside an excavated pit with in the bounds of the ancient captial of the Croatoan chiefdom, 50 miles from Roanoke.

File:Http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/inc/1061.jpg

The gold signet ring with the crest of a walking lion has been traced to the Kendall family, and its presence at Croatan probably links it to a "Master" Kendall who was a member of the Ralph Lane colony on Roanoke Island in 1585 to 1586.

The discovery of the ring in 1998 marks the first material connection between the English colonists and the Native Americans on Hatteras Island. Its face depicts a lion, a symbol of English authority that would typically be worn by a nobleman. Sifted from sand taken from 4 feet down in an archaeological excavation pit, the ring was discovered by David Phelps director of the East Carolina University Coastal Archaeology Office.

--205.158.160.209 01:20, 25 June 2006 (UTC) Britton Wesley LaRoche

[5] [6]

The Lost Colony symphonic drama

Written by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Paul Green in 1937 to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the birth of Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the New World, The Lost Colony is an epic outdoor drama combining music, dance, and acting to tell a fictional recounting of the ill-fated Roanoke Colony. It has played at Waterside Theater at Fort Raleigh National Historic Site on Roanoke Island during the summer months near-continuously since that time with the only interruption being World War II. Alumni of the cast who have gone on to fame include Andy Griffith, who played Sir Walter Raleigh, Chris Elliot, Terrence Mann, and Daily Show correspondent Dan Bakkedahl.

Battle of Roanoke Island

During the American Civil War, the island was first fortified by the Confederacy. The Battle of Roanoke Island (February 78, 1862) was an incident in the North Carolina Expedition of January to July 1862, when Brig. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside landed an amphibious force and took Confederate forts on the island. Afterwards, the three Confederate forts on the island were renamed for the Union generals who had commanded the winning forces: Fort Huger became Fort Reno; Fort Blanchard became Fort Parke; and Fort Bartow became Fort Foster. Roanoke Island remained under Union occupation for the duration of the war.

Slaves from the island and the mainland of North Carolina fled to the occupied area with hopes of gaining freedom. By 1863, a substantial number of these former slaves, known as "contrabands," were living on the fringe of the Union camp. They had built churches and opened what was most likely the first free school for blacks in North Carolina. Fearing that this freedmen's camp might lead to problems related to sanitation and soldiers' discipline, the Union Army established an official freedmen's colony on the island. In addition to its original residents, it was to serve as a refuge for the families of black soldiers who enlisted in the Union Army. The superintendent of the colony, Horace James, had great hopes for the colony, viewing it as a grand social experiment. Northern missionary teachers, mostly women, journeyed to the island to help with the experiment. By the end of the war, the population in the colony was approaching 3,500.

Endnotes

  1. ^ See the eponymous chapter in Temporary Autonomous Zones by Hakim Bey.

External links

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