Jamestown, England\'s first real foothold in the New World, was fraught with danger -- from starvation and disease to violent skirmishes between colonists and the native populations.
In telling the Story of these Maids for Virginia Potter sheds light on life for women in early modern England and in the New World..
A few never married at all.
Some were killed in an attack by the native population only months after their arrival.
Some were married before the ships left harbor.
In The Jamestown Brides , she spins a fascinating tale of courage and survival, exploring the women\'s lives in England before their departure and their experiences in Jamestown.
Without letters or journals (young women from middling classes had not generally been taught to write), Jennifer Potter turned to the Virginia Company\'s merchant lists -- which were used as a kind of sales catalog for prospective husbands -- as well as censuses, court records, the minutes of Virginia\'s General Assemblies, letters to England from their male counterparts, and other such accounts of the everyday life of the early colonists.
Though the women had all gone of their own free will, they were to be sold into marriage, generating a profit for investors and helping ensure the colony\'s long-term viability.
Each had a bride price of 150 pounds of tobacco set by the Virginia Company, which funded their voyage.
Their ages ranged from sixteen to twenty-eight, and they were deemed young and uncorrupt.
But we do know who they were.
How clear these and other perils were made to the fifty-six young women who left their homes and boarded ships in England in 1621, nearly fifteen years after Jamestown\'s founding, is not known.
Mortality rates were impossibly high: Six out of seven settlers died within the first few years.
Jamestown, England\'s first real foothold in the New World, was fraught with danger -- from starvation and disease to violent skirmishes between colonists and the native populations