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					| Document Number: | AJ-136 |  
					| Author: | Spelman, Henry, 1595-1623 |  
					| Title: | Relation of Virginia |  
					| Source: | Spelman, Henry. Relation of Virginia. (London: Printed for Jas. F. Hunnewell at the Chiswick Press, 1872). |  
					| Pages/Illustrations: | 62 / 2 |  
					| Citable URL: | www.americanjourneys.org/aj-136/ |  Author Note Fourteen-year-old Henry Spelman (1595-1623) ran away from his
                home in Norfolk, England, in 1609 and left for Virginia. He
                was assigned by Jamestown's leaders to live with the nearby
                Powhatan Indians in order to learn their language. After about a
                year and a half he returned to the English colony in December
                1610 to work as an interpreter. This brought him into a unique
                relationship with the leaders of the Indian and white
                communities, and he was said to be well-liked by both. He was
                recognized as the most accomplished linguist in the colony and
                also made a captain of the Virginia militia. When the Indians attempted to drive the English out of their
                territories in 1622, Spelman survived the massacre at Jamestown.
                In the spring of 1623, with the settlement short of food, he
                volunteered to take an expedition north to the Potomac River to
                barter with Indians further from the scene of hostilities. On
                March 23, 1623, at the site of present-day Washington, D.C.,
                Spelman�s party was attacked by Anacostan Indians who were
                avenging previous English mistreatment; he was killed. Jamestown Settlement The London Company sponsored the expedition to establish a
                profitable colony. The expedition started with 144 men but only
                104 survived the trip. No women were a part of the initial
                expedition. In 1609, about six hundred people, including women and
                children, joined the colony in the hopes of making it more like
                a settlement. Other voyages brought more settlers in the years
                between 1606 and 1624 expanding the population and goals of the
                Jamestown colony.  The document contains information about Jamestown�s
                establishment and early years. The 1606 charter that allowed the
                settlement of Jamestown gave the King of England and an English
                council complete control over the colony. A revised charter of
                1609 gave authority over the colony to a governor who resided in
                England and cooperated with a treasurer and council. The 1612
                charter gave the Virginia Company, based in England, control
                over the activities in the colony. These changes in government
                created tensions in the ruling parties that could not be
                resolved and eventually led to the end of the Virginia Company
                and its involvement with the Jamestown Colony.  Document Note Spelman left behind a manuscript �Relation of Virginia� that
                remained in private hands until the nineteenth century. Henry Stevens,
                an American book dealer living in London, bought it for a
                Massachusetts collector who had a small edition printed
                privately in London. We reproduce here one of those one hundred copies
                printed at the Chiswick Press in 1872. Other Internet and Reference Sources A version of Spelman�s text in modern English is available,
                along with many other primary materials, at the Virtual
                Jamestown project�s �First Hand Accounts of Virginia,
                1575-1705�:
                
                http://www.iath.virginia.edu/vcdh/jamestown/fhaccounts_date.html More background information on the settlement can also be
                found there. |  |