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Pocahontas' Father's Villiage Found

MrRING

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From Yahoo:

Pocahontas' Father's Village May Be Found
By SONJA BARISIC, Associated Press Writer

GLOUCESTER, Va. - A woman's habit of finding pottery shards and arrowheads on her farm has led to the discovery of what archaeologists believe was the village of the powerful Indian chief Powhatan, the father of Pocahontas.

Capt. John Smith, leader of the 17th-century English colony at Jamestown, would have met Powhatan on the 50-acre site. It is also where Pocahontas was said to have begged her father to spare Smith's life, though historians question the veracity of Smith's tale.

Preliminary studies of the site on Purton Bay, overlooking the York River, have turned up American Indian and European artifacts from a large early colonial settlement, researchers announced Tuesday at a news conference on the farm.

Those artifacts, plus descriptions by Smith and other Jamestown colonists, led archaeologists to hypothesize that the farm was the site of Werowocomoco, the central village of Powhatan's chiefdom. Powhatan was ruler of about 15,000 people from most of the tribes in coastal Virginia.

"We believe we have sufficient evidence to confirm that the property is indeed the village of Werowocomoco," said Randolph Turner, director of the Virginia Department of Historic Resources' Portsmouth Regional Office.

When Lynn and Bob Ripley bought the 300-acre farm in 1996, they knew there was speculation that the village had been there. But they did not take it seriously because several other spots also were said to have been the site of the village, Lynn Ripley said.

Ripley soon began finding pottery shards, arrowheads and other artifacts while taking walks.

"It was a ritual for me," she said. "Every day I had time, I would go walking and see what I could find. I have collected old bottles, crocks, dishes, buckles, thimbles — just laying on the surface, believe it or not."

She said she did not think they might be valuable. But because they were part of the farm's history, she saved them, first filling one shoebox, then a second. Today, she has thousands of artifacts, which she keeps locked in two gun safes in her garage.

The Ripleys happened to meet two Gloucester-based archaeologists, David Brown and Thane Harpole, who were working on an unrelated project, and Bob Ripley mentioned his wife's collection. The men were excited by what they heard.

The two archaeologists are now part of the Werowocomoco Research Group, a newly formed team that includes researchers from the College of William and Mary and the Department of Historic Resources, and a representative of the Virginia Indian community.

In February, the group presented preliminary findings to representatives of Virginia's eight state-recognized Indian tribes and the Virginia Council of Indians, inviting the organizations to work with the group in efforts to interpret the site.

Virginia Indians were pleased to be consulted about a site that is of enormous historical significance to them, said Deanna Beacham, a member of the Nansemond tribe.

"Frankly, usually we hear about it after something has been done," Beacham said of archaeological finds.

Werowocomoco was about 15 miles from Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in America, founded in 1607.

Smith claimed that in December of that year, Indians kidnapped him and that Powhatan was about to club him to death when Pocahontas threw her body over his to save him. Pocahontas was only 10 or 11 years old at the time, and some historians say Smith may have misunderstood what was an Indian adoption ritual.

Others note that Smith did not even write about the event until 1624, after Pocahontas' death.

This summer, the college and the historic resources department will do more archaeological research on the farm to look for evidence of homes and to find out more about the history of the site.

"To think that someone as important as Powhatan could have lived here is extremely exciting to me," Lynn Ripley said.

Turner said the site is important because Powhatan's chiefdom was one of the most complex political entities in eastern America during the early 1600s.
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And here are three links they provided:

Virginia Department of Historic Resources: http://state.vipnet.org/dhr/

College of William and Mary: http://www.wm.edu/

Gloucester County site with some historical information: http://www.gloucesterva.info/
 
Brilliant research project in the offing there Mr R>I>N>G.
 
Just found this interesting threadlet whilst looking for something else -

any updates?
 
So apparently Mrs. Ripley has found the lost city of Powhatan-believe it or not!! :rofl:

Sorry--just couldn't resist! :p

This is really cool news--funny that I learned it on a British site when I live right here in the US!! :shock:
 
About five years after the footprint of the first Jamestown colony church was discovered, archaeologists and other specialists are busy partially reconstructing the structure. Believed to be the place where Pocahontas married the English tobacco planter John Rolfe, archaeologists hope that the reconstruction will provide the public with a real life, physical replica of the building that made history more than 400 years ago near the banks of the James River in southern Virginia. The church was built by the colonists in 1608 initially as a wood structure, then replaced by a brick structure later.

As stated by Jamestown Rediscovery Project Senior Staff Archaeologist David Givens in the project Dig Updates blog, “our intention here is not to recreate the entire church but give some notion of the space, so that when people are standing inside the church they can understand what the walls would have looked like and the fabric of the building.” ...

http://popular-archaeology.com/issu...uild-1608-church-where-pocahontas-was-married
 
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