Because of concerns for the upcoming summer hurricane season, the colonists were forced to stop their journey earlier than planned and they settled on an island off the northeast coast of what is now North Carolina, at the southern edge of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
This colony on Roanoke Island was the first English settlement in the New World. In 1587, shortly after the arrival of the colonists, John White's daughter gave birth to the first child of European parents to be born on American soil; the name of the baby was Virginia Dare.
Life, however, wasn't easy for the early colonists, and on August 27, 1587 John White, now the new governor of the colony, left the settlement and returned to England to get more supplies.
Because of England's war with Spain, there were no ships to spare, and it took John White three years before he could return to Roanoke Island with the supplies. When he finally returned to the colony in 1590 he found the island deserted. The only trace left by the colonists was a mysterious 'cro' carved in a tree, and 'croatan' carved in a fence post.
Trees provide an explanation
Where did the colony go, and why did they leave the island? Where they went or what happened to them is still a mystery (see the 'further reading' section for more information), but a study by researchers Dennis Blanton from the College of William and Mary and climatologist David Stahle of the tree ring laboratory of the University of Arkansas sheds some light on the mysterious circumstances under which the colonists disappeared.
The researchers looked at the tree rings of centuries-old bald cypress trees in swamps along the Blackwater and Nottoway rivers on the Virginia-North Carolina border. Every year in the growth season, trees grow by adding a layer of wood cells, usually consisting of thin-walled cells formed early in the growing season (called earlywood) and thicker-walled cells produced later in the growing season (called latewood). Trees usually stop growing at the end of fall and the difference between the earlywood and latewood is visible as the tree ring, usually extending around the entire circumference of the tree.
The width of the tree ring indicates how much the tree has grown in a particular growth season. The wider the ring, the better the conditions for growth. By measuring the width of the rings from the trunks of the trees, the research team learned that the rings were smaller than average during the years 1587 and 1589 and during the years 1606 and 1612.
What a time to create a settlement!
As it turns out, the tree rings indicate that the settlement of Roanoke Island coincided with the worst three-year drought of the past 800 years. What a time to create a settlement! And even worse, when the Jamestown colonists arrived years later to set up their colony in Virginia, another major drought occurred, this time the driest seven-year episode in the entire period between 1215 and 1984.
Jamestown was founded in 1607 but nearly failed in 1609 and 1610 when the colony suffered an appallingly high death rate. The droughts would have affected the colony's supply of food and clean water. The colonists were expected to live off the land and of trade and tribute from the Indian. But because of the drought neither the colonists nor the Indians had much food to share.
What exactly happened to the colonists at Roanoke Island is still a mystery, but the research indicates that the colonists at both Roanoke and Jamestown established a settlement in the worst possible times.
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