The Planters of Colonial Virginia
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Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker. The Planters of Colonial Virginia
The Planters of Colonial Virginia
Table of Contents
PREFACE
CHAPTER I
England in the New World
CHAPTER II
The Indian Weed
CHAPTER III
The Virginia Yeomanry
CHAPTER IV
Freemen and Freedmen
CHAPTER V
The Restoration Period
CHAPTER VI
The Yeoman in Virginia History
CHAPTER VII
World Trade
CHAPTER VIII
Beneath the Black Tide
NOTES TO CHAPTERS
APPENDIX
RENT ROLL OF VIRGINIA
1704–1705
INDEX
INDEX
Отрывок из книги
Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker
Published by Good Press, 2019
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At first things seem to have gone well with this ambitious venture. Soon the Virginia forests were resounding to the whir of the axe and the crash of falling trees, to the exclamations of scores of busy men as they extracted the ore, built their furnace and began the work of smelting. Operations had progressed so far that it was confidently predicted that soon large quantities of pig iron would be leaving the James for England, when an unexpected disaster put an abrupt end to the enterprise. In the terrible massacre of 1622, when the implacable Opechancanough attempted at one stroke to rid the country of its white invaders, the little industrial settlement at Falling Creek was completely destroyed. The furnace was ruined, the machinery thrown into the river, the workmen butchered. This project, which had absorbed so much of the attention and resources of the Company, is said to have yielded only a shovel, a pair of tongs and one bar of iron.[1–16]
The history of the attempts to establish glass works in Virginia is also a story of wasted energy and money, of final failure. The Dutch and Polish workers who came in 1608 set up a furnace at Jamestown,[1–17] but nothing more is heard of them, and it is clear that they met with no success. Nor did Captain William Norton, who arrived in 1621 with a number of skilled Italian glass workers fare any better.[1–18] In 1623 George Sandys wrote: "Capt. Norton dyed with all save one of his servants, the Italians fell extremely sick yet recovered; but I conceave they would gladly make the work to appear unfeasable, that they might by that means be dismissed for England. The fier hath now been for six weeks in ye furnace and yet nothing effected. They claim that the sand will not run." Shortly after this the workmen brought matters to an end by cracking the furnace with a crowbar.[1–19]
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