Beyond Jamestown
After the colony was founded, 400 years ago this month, Capt. John Smith set out to explore the riches of Chesapeake Bay. With Smith's journals to guide him, a modern-day sailor retraces that historic voyage
- By Terence Smith
- Photographs by Richard Olsenius
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 10)
After this first hostile encounter, the Nanticoke eventually made peace with the strangers and welcomed them by trading fresh water and food for trinkets.
Today, Sewell Fitzhugh is not sure that was such a good idea. "We should have burned the boat and killed them all," he says, mildly.
Fitzhugh is chief of the Nause-Waiwash tribe, which combines the remnants of the Nanticoke and three other tribes that are still struggling for official recognition as Native Americans from the state of Maryland. The tribe will help celebrate Jamestown's 400th anniversary and Smith's voyages this year and next, but Fitzhugh says it will do so only to make a point: "John Smith did not bring civilization here. There was already civilization here."
The Nanticoke story is all too painfully familiar. When John Smith arrived, the Nanticoke could put 5,000 warriors in the field; today there are a mere 300 registered tribal members in the area. As English settlers moved in, they pushed the Natives downriver into the marshes and all but wiped them out. "This land was our land; it was taken from us illegally," Fitzhugh tells me after we dock in Vienna, Maryland, 20 miles up the Nanticoke. "We are Maryland's forgotten people, and we are becoming strangers in our own land."
At Vienna, a pretty little town of 300 souls, we were joined by John Page Williams, who carried his whaler on a trailer and introduced us to the mayor, Russ Brinsfield, another passionate advocate for the bay who is also a farmer and an agronomist at the University of Maryland.
In a patchy drizzle, we motored up the Nanticoke and across the Delaware state line to Broad Creek, which is marked on Smith's map as the apogee of his Nanticoke exploration. It's one of many sites where his journal says he planted a brass cross to claim the land for King James. But not one of the crosses has ever been found, or at least acknowledged. Historians suspect that the Indians promptly melted them down and put the metal to other uses.
Brinsfield is campaigning for a single idea—that farmers and environmentalists need not be at cross-purposes. Agricultural runoff contributes about 40 percent of the nitrogen and phosphorus that pollute the bay; he is working with farmers to limit that runoff by planting winter cover crops and creating buffer strips between their fields and the water. Tests show that the river's water quality is improving as a result, but he remains skeptical about the bay's future.
"I worry about the marginal progress we are making in agriculture being offset by the pressure of human development," he says. "Frankly, we'll be lucky to maintain the status quo against development for the next 20 years." Vienna is already feeling the pressure: its master plan assumes that the current population will triple over the next decade.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (5)
it says in the fourth paragraph that he wrote a detailed journal...anyone able to find this for me online?
Posted by nathan on April 20,2012 | 12:16 PM
When settlers left England what port did they leave from and if they were going to Virginia where would they land?
Posted by Kendra Brady on December 12,2009 | 02:40 PM
how long was the journey from london to jamestown?
Posted by madison on March 29,2009 | 06:54 PM
what is the exact day they set out for jamestown (day, month,year)
Posted by shanea on September 23,2008 | 11:11 AM
Can anyone tell me from what port in England did the first re-supply ships sail to Jamestown?
Posted by Callie J. Stallings on May 13,2008 | 04:25 PM
omg i just need 2 now how they got fresh water and food at jamestown
Posted by ramon on March 12,2008 | 08:20 PM