During a
recent family mini vacation we visited Historic Jamestowne and
Colonial Williamsburg, in Virginia. The best part of this recent
trip was being with my family. We toured the area briefly and
went to Busch Gardens. We had visited both places almost twenty years
ago, with our son and oldest daughter, who were small children, at that time. Then, we did
the normal things that tourists do there, like touring the
Governor's Palace and watching an actor demonstrate milking a cow.
Yet, for me, the
best part of our recent visit to that area, was the Historic Jamestowne
Visitor Center; it's like a museum. History interests me, so I
was pleased to see that there was a lot of historical information,
including the exhibits in the center. The historical information
provided a little more in depth information on the most popular historical
people of that area, such as Captain John Smith, Pocahontas,
Wahunsenacawh, Pocahontas' father (also known as Chief Powhatan), John
Rolfe, and the history of that area in Virginia, four centuries
ago.
The early presence of
Africans in this English settlement was acknowledged and depicted in the
museum, their arrival in 1619, as slaves and/or indentured
servants. This was noted by John Rolfe, the Englishman who married
Pocahontas. Wahunsenacawh, Pocahontas' father, was a paramount chief of the
Powhatan Native American people of Virginia during that time.
The interesting thing about
this was actually being in the area where Pocahontas was born and
lived within her Native American nation, until she was kidnapped by the
English settlers. (She was later renamed and known as Rebecca Rolfe.) I reminded myself that these
historical figures that we read about in school, Pocahontas, her father the
Powhatan the paramount chief, Captain John Smith, and John Rolfe were all
there in that scenic waterfront area. Wahunsenacawh (chief of the
Powhatan Native Americans) was a head of state, so to speak.
They had a culture and lived and walked on this land, as we do now.
Four centuries
later, things have changed, but that does not change that Pocahontas and
Wahunsenacawh were real people who lived in
Virginia four centuries ago, long before the English
settlers came. Captain John Smith and John Rolfe were real,
too. The impact of their arrival (Captain John Smith arrived in 1607.)
would reveal itself four centuries after their arrival. The indigenous
population of the Powhatan people, Pocahontas' native nation, has
almost disappeared. This is not to emphasize what's known already: there
was a nation of people here before the English settlers
arrived. It's just to acknowledge the reality of this part of the
history our country, how we converged there four hundred years ago, the
indigenous population of native people, the English settlers and other
European immigrants seeking religious freedom and economic opportunity, and the
Africans as a forced labor force.
So, as I stood there in Jamestown,
Virginia, I pondered how Pocahontas and her father stood on that land, too, as a
once powerful paramount chief and his daughter, who would travel to Great Britain
to represent her native people to English royalty, though she died and never
made it back to her homeland in Virginia. That thought made me ponder the
visceral reality of them, in spite of being four centuries a part from them.
By Angeline Bandon-Bibum
For more information about the Historic Jamestowne Visitor Center see http://historicjamestowne.org/. |
Literary Dreaming with Angeline contains information about Angeline and her projects, which include her first novel, Sojourner's Dream, and the development of the sequel. Literary Dreaming with Angeline goes beyond dreaming and invites you to consider the wonders of the world and the blessings that unfold in everyday life.
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Reflections at Historic Jamestowne
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