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Powhatan People and the English at Jamestown
A 1617 illustration of John Smith, the first leader of Jamestown.

A 1617 illustration of John Smith, the first leader of Jamestown.

John Smith was a soldier who became the primary leader of the Jamestown colony of Virginia in September 1608. He oversaw some of the worst years of in the colony’s history, including the deaths of almost half the colonists during the severe winter of 1608. Smith left Virginia in 1609 after he was badly injured in a gunpowder accident.

Transcription:

These are the lines that shew thy face but those

that shew thy Grace and Glory, brighter bee

Thy Faire-Discoveries and Fowle-Overthrowes

Of Salvages much Civililz’d by thee

Best shew thy spirit and to it Glory wyns

So thou art Brasse without-but Gold within

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Citation Information
“John Smith,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/3e7d2ed78002a923b52fc3a4ac9d554d.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of National Portrait Gallery via Smithsonian Institution.

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Item 5 of 10 in the Primary Source Set Powhatan People and the English at Jamestown

Previous ItemNext Item
A “New Map of Virginia” (with images of Powhatan), 1633 or 1636.
The town of Pomeiock, reproduced by Spencer Nichols from a 1585 watercolor by John White.
Secoton, an American Indian community in North Carolina, engraved by Theodor de Bry in 1590, based on John White’s watercolor of 1585.
Theodor de Bry’s engraving of John White’s illustration of the first Englishmen arriving in Virginia in 1585.
A 1617 illustration of John Smith, the first leader of Jamestown.
An illustration of Pocahontas created in England in 1618.
Excerpts from a pamphlet published in 1609 in favor of English settlement in Virginia.
A nineteenth-century artist imagines what the early days of Jamestown might have looked like.
An excerpt from A True Relation by Captain John Smith, 1608.
An excerpt from John Smith’s second account of being captured and released by Powhatan, published in 1624.

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