How Tobacco and Jamestown Colony assembled the USA History of America Part 6 Millionwar
How Tobacco and Jamestown Colony assembled the USA History of America Part 6 Millionwar


How Tobacco and Jamestown Colony assembled the USA History of America Part 6

How was Jamestown settled and destroyed?

How Jamestown laid the foundations of a superpower country.

I am Sadaqat Ali and look at the history of America we are showing you this story. This is the eastern state of East Virginia in the United States of America. Today thousands of tourists roam its white golden sandy beaches. But five centuries ago, this beach was completely deserted. People used to live here, but they lived far away from the beach. Here was the Pohton Empire of the NATO Americans. It was an alliance of more than thirty tribes spread over miles in the form of dozens of villages. This place on the same coast which is surrounded by water from three sides. Here in sixteen hundred and seven one hundred and four British landed in big ships, with weapons and made the first colony here. He named the colony Jamestown after his king, King James I, and the river that flows along it became known as the James River. The British set up a small settlement in Jamestown with small tents



And he built a strong wooden fence around it. Now they call it Jamestown Fort. The fort was built of straw huts, a warehouse and a church. The fort was built in a triangular shape with a tower at each corner and a cannon placed on each tower. All of this was done so that if the Spaniards, who were fierce enemies of the British at the time, or the Native Americans or Native Americans who were mistaken for Indians at the beginning, attacked, the people of Jamestown, despite their small numbers, would Be able to protect Friends, this is how Jamestown was settled, but now a new problem has arisen. The fact that the land around Jamestown was swampy was not conducive to growing crops. As a result, there was a severe shortage of food in Jamestown in a short time.


People began to starve. So at that time a little ten year old girl came to his aid. She was the daughter of a ten-year-old Pohatan tribe. The girl's real name was Mutuka, but she became more famous than her nickname Pokکاmon, which means naughty girl, The Massachusetts One.

How did this girl get to Jamestown?

It so happened that one day in 1677, shortly after the settlement of Jamestown, NATO Americans captured an Englishman, John Smith. He and two of his companions had traveled long distances in the Pohatan Empire area. Where he was attacked by 200 tribal fighters, Smith and his comrades tried unsuccessfully to defend themselves. Two of John Smith's comrades were killed and he was captured alive. NATO locals arrested Smith and took him to their king. The king tried his best to find out Smith's intentions. He understood something half-heartedly, but because he did not understand the language, something could not be clarified. He did not know what he understood or did not understand. However, the king ordered John Smith to be killed. Smith's head was placed on a rock. The king was about to cut his skull with a stick when suddenly a ten-year-old girl came running and placed her head on Smith's head.



The atmosphere was overwhelming and the hands raised to kill Smith stopped where they were. The girl who performed this tribal ritual to save Smith's life was called Pocahontas, and she was the princess of this empire. She was the king's daughter. The king killed Smith by intervening in the middle of the daughter. Of On the contrary, he later escorted him back to Jamestown in safety, making him his eloquent son. After the incident, the Pokہmon often began to move to Jamestown with food supplies. The supplies ended food shortages in Jamestown and gave new life to the people there. Perhaps this is why the people of Jamestown made John Smith their governor because he had very good relations with Princess Pocahontas and the Pohahattan Empire. As time went on, large-scale trade began between NATO and the British. The tribesmen provided food and other necessities to Jamestown. And in return, the British sold them their weapons and other tools. This pleasant atmosphere of friendship and business lasted for some time but then as Faraz said that ... I have heard that there is an age of matters of the heart too, so the affairs of the hearts of these two nations have come to an end very soon

but how?

The reason for the change of heart and circumstances was that the demand for food items from the British was increasing day by day. But when did the Pohatans have so much food? The reason was that this area of ​​Virginia was suffering from the worst famine for the first time in eight centuries. So the NATO Americans did not have extra food to give to the people of Jamestown. So the relationship between the two began to sour. But to save the relationship, John Smith went to see the King of the Pohantons in the beginning of the Sixteenth Zero Nine. The meeting took place in a very pleasant atmosphere. But when everyone fell asleep at night, Smith's eyes suddenly opened. Someone was sitting next to him, crying. It was Pok پوmon. He cried and told Smith, "My father is going to kill you. If you can, run."

The second time Princess Pohathins came to save John Smith's life, but it was not Smith's protection of the seed of a future superpower.

Which she was doing unknowingly. So Smith and his companions immediately escaped. Jamestown was also alerted and thus everyone's lives were saved.

But after a while Smith returned to England injured. But a new governor arrived from England to settle Jamestown with more soldiers and more people. Yes, in the meantime, relations between the Jamestown and Pohatan tribes had returned to normal. Not the same as before but with the arrival of new governors and new people, the population of Jamestown had increased. It was now beginning to happen that some people from Jamestown would go to the Pohatan tribes and then be so impressed by the hospitality and customs of these whites that they would start living with them. Remember that at that time most of the men who came from England and Europe to settle in Jamestown were not equal to the number of women. Hundreds of friends, the British began to take full advantage of this growing male manpower. They started attacking NATO Americans on the one hand, and on the other hand, those who were fed up with the lack of food and drink left the Pohatan tribes. They used to meet and start living with him. They started calling him a traitor by the people of Jamestown. The fugitives were found, and whatever was in the hands of the people of Jamestown was burned alive or put to death. As a result of these events, Princess Pocahonts and other tribesmen stopped coming to Jamestown, but the result was disastrous in favor of Jamestown. It so happened that in 1690, when the Virginia area was going through the worst famine, there was already a severe shortage of food and drink in Jamestown. In addition, three hundred more people from England came to Jamestown.They did not bring any extra food or drink with them. So everyone looked at each other in awe and said with their eyes in their eyes, "Winter is coming from winter. They were afraid of winter because winter was very severe in Virginia." There was no food, no hunting. Growing something was a long way off. In such a situation, these people started dying of hunger and thirst in Jamestown. One hundred Englishmen died in a matter of weeks. The surviving children ate their pet dogs, cats and even the leather of their shoes to satisfy their hunger. When all this was over, a painful and amazing work was done to sustain life. They exhumed the bodies of their dead comrades and ate them. Even if a weak, dying person's body began to bleed, they would lick that blood. Modern experts have also modeled the face of a 14-year-old girl who died of starvation during this period with the help of a broken skull, after which the settlers removed her body and ate it. This unfortunate girl is nicknamed Jane. This period is called the Staring Time in the history of Jamestown. During this period, the British depression increased to such an extent that many British people left Jamestown and took refuge with the Pohatans, NATO Americans and became a permanent part of their society. When winter began in 1909, five hundred Englishmen lived in Jamestown. Five hundred, but at the end of winter, only sixty, sixty people were barely alive, holding their breath in the snow. When the weather was just right, he left Jamestown and headed for the coast of England. But on the shore they saw a few ships coming from afar. These ships were coming from England. The planes were carrying Lord Delaware, the new governor of Jamestown, and 150 more settlers. They were also loaded with a large quantity of food and drink. The arrival of these ships was no less than good news for the starving British.


The hearts of those who had lost all their loved ones and all their hopes were filled with the news of this hope, a new life in their bodies. He gave up his intention to return to England and returned to the fortress of Jamestown. It was a desolate settlement when Delaware set foot in Jamestown in 1610. The people here were alive, but looked like corpses. Delaware provided food for the survivors at the last breath, as well as preparing for the war against the Pohatan Empire. He first demanded that the Pohahattan Empire return the fugitives who had left Jamestown with Stargate. Delaware wanted to inflict horrific punishments on these people, but when the Pohtons refused to hand over the white refugees, Delaware sent a contingent to attack them. The soldiers attacked the village of an allied tribe of Pohatans and brutally killed anyone who came in contact with them. Then they grabbed the queen of the village and her two innocent children and put them in the boat and started walking towards Jamestown. But on the way, the mood of the soldiers changed and they threw the two children into the water and shot them in the skulls. The queen was then brought to Jamestown to be burned alive. But in the meantime, the commander of the army took pity on the queen. Instead of burning him alive, the commander stabbed him to death. This was the mercy of this British commander. Now, of course, the Pohatans were not going to sit idly by on such attacks. They could not openly attack the fort of Jamestown because the British had installed cannons there which the locals could not resist. However, the number of Englishmen leaving Jamestown for farming or other work, who were few in number, became easy prey for the tribes.They were killed or abducted by the Pohatans. In addition to the torment of this guerrilla warfare, the supply of food from the Pohtons to Jamestown was also cut off. So the British took the nails of conscience and began to think of adopting the path of peace. But they achieved this peace not at the negotiating table but at gunpoint. They kidnap Princess Pocahontas of Pohatons. The same princess who gave Jamie Town a new lease of life. It so happened that the British hired a local chief to kidnap the Pocahontas. He knew the secret Pocahontas of the house


He took the girl on a British ship under some pretext and she was taken hostage by the British. The year was sixteen hundred and thirteen, the age of sixteen hundred thirteen, and the age of the Pocahonts was about fifteen or sixteen years. The abduction of the Pocahontas is a significant chapter in British and early American history. Because after the abduction, the Pohatan Empire had to bow to the British, end the guerrilla war and restore food supplies. But the British did not stop there. They forcibly converted the Pocahontas to Christianity, gave her the Christian name Rebecca, and married her to John Ralph, an Englishman. However, the British traditionally obtained the permission of the girl's father, the King of NATO Americans, for the marriage. Now obviously her father had no choice but to allow the marriage of a kidnapped girl.

But the girl told Americans who were trying unsuccessfully to find gold a secret secret from a gold, even a gold mine. It was a mystery on which the life and death of the British depended on the centuries to come. This secret laid the foundation for the founding and independence of the United States of America. The secret was the smoke ... Tobacco cultivation. ... Cultivation of Tobacco Before the British settled in Jamestown, the Spaniards who were massacring in South America had learned the secrets of growing tobacco from the Native Americans. Since then, the Spaniards have been making a lot of money by supplying tobacco to Europe. But he did not share the secret of growing tobacco with anyone else. That is why the Spanish invaders had a monopoly on the tobacco trade, which lasted for a century. But after a hundred years, the situation changed. Some tobacco seeds somehow got into the hands of an English farmer who took them to Jamestown in 1612. Friends, this Englishman was none other than John Ralph, who was later forcibly married to the Pocahontas. Until his marriage, John Ralph was growing tobacco on an experimental basis in Gemstown, but he had no success in producing this level of tobacco on a commercial basis.

But now, after marrying Pok پوmon, that has changed. Pocahonts were Native Americans, they understood the local environment and agriculture very well. His efforts soon led to the production of the best tobacco crop in Jamestown. Jamestown now began shipping the tobacco to England, ending Spain's monopoly on the business. This was the time when the small town of Jamestown became a self-sustaining colony for the first time. After that, the line of those coming from England started. Many people from England and all over Europe started growing tobacco in and around Jamestown. As soon as you see Jamestown, a small town becomes a big town rather than a fort. Now let me tell you an interesting thing: in the first eleven years of the settlement of Jamestown, the number of women here was about one hundred or less. These women came to Jamestown with their husbands or parents and helped them with their work. But as the number of men in Jamestown began to increase, the Virginia company, which settled the town, began immigrating women here on a regular business basis for the first time.


Nineteen Women, Sixteen Hundred and Nineteen Nineteen Women, were sent to Jamestown. These women married local settlers and thus started family farm houses and family life with tobacco in Jamestown. When families were formed, there were also children to be had. Sleeping families began to grow and at the same time tobacco fields began to spread. Now the need for labor for these sprawling fields was increasing. But the landlords of Jamestown were not rich enough to hire laborers from Europe and bring them here and then pay their salaries. Anyway, every Englishman coming from Europe could spread his field as far as he wanted on the endless land of America with his strong arm. So the solution to the problem of labor in this field came from something that became a new problem for the United States in the centuries to come. In fact, it is still America's fault line. The name of this solution was ... Slaves of Africa ...In 1619, a ship from Jamestown hijacked a Portuguese ship with the help of a Dutch ship. This Portuguese ship was used for the slave trade. Fifty black African slaves, including women and children, were taken to Jamestown. Farmers in Jamestown bought twenty black slaves from here. Thus began a long two-and-a-half-century period of slavery on the soil of the United States of America. Because the British initially had very little land in and around Jamestown, many settlers built small farms on their lawns and backyards where they grew tobacco. Then, as the British population began to grow, they felt the need for new lands and began to seize the lands of the Pohatan Empire. By the way, the Pocahontas, the only guarantee of peace between the British and the NATO Americans, were gone by then. Because in 1616, three or four years before the time we are talking about, Pok پوmon moved to England with her husband, John Ralph, and their son. In England, she appeared at the court of King James, where she was received as a royal guest. On the contrary, portraits were made of her in which she was shown in western dress and in these portraits her Christian name Rebecca was written. This adventure shows that the Pocahontas were very important to the rulers of England for the survival of Jamestown. But in 1617, the address of Turp slipped out of the hands of England. On the way back to Virginia, Pocahontas once fell ill on board. He was taken back to Graves-End, England, where he died.

Pocahontas were buried in the same area. However, the history that NATO Americans tell of this girl gives the impression that she did not die a natural death, but that she was probably killed. ۔ Many movies and cartoons have been made on it. An animated film made in 1995 also shows the Pocahontas in love with Jamestown Governor John Smith. So with the death of the Pocahontas, the era of peace between the British and the Pohahattan Empire came to an end. The Pohatan tribes were now free from the blackmail of the British, so they too stood up for the protection of the motherland. They began targeting new British settlements around Jamestown that were less secure.

Three hundred and forty-seven Englishmen, including women and children, were killed in a similar attack at Sixteen Hundred and Twenty-two. Among them was Pocahontas husband John Ralph, who returned to Virginia after his wife's death and lived there. But even this massacre did not stop the British settlement and the British continued to occupy their lands by defeating the Pohatans. In addition to gun support, the British had the support of some NATO Americans who were enemies of the Pohatan tribes. In 1644, the Pohantons fought their last war of independence against the British. It was a decisive battle in which five hundred British and Europeans were killed. But this battle was also lost by the Pohatans and their then king was also killed. In 1646, the Pohatons surrendered in the Sixteenth Forty-Six, and the British enslaved the Pohatons in the name of a peace treaty and took away most of their lands. Thus, in just thirty-nine years, the British, beginning with the small town of Jamestown, occupied much of Virginia in the Thirty-Nine Years. The Englishmen who once crowned the Pohantons king in Virginia have today snatched his throne and land. Today, the only monument to this vast empire is a 1,500-acre site called the Pamun Reservoir. Outside, on a plank-like rock, is the face of this king, the father of the Pocahontas. Some of the remnants of the Pohatan Empire still live in this reservation. Such reservations also apply to other NATO tribes across the United States whose lands were seized by whites, Americans, and Europeans.

Virginia fell to the British, but in 1699, Jamestown fell into disrepair. Yes, Jamestown has now been rebuilt as a monument to the same place that tourists from all over the world come to see in Virginia. There are also models of the three ships on which the first settlers of Jamestown arrived. While statues of the Pocahontas that gave life to Jamestown have been erected in Jamestown and England, this was the story of Mystique Fellows, the first British settlement in the United States of America, which laid the foundation for the establishment of a superpower like the United States. But friends, when Jamestown was in the early stages of its success, the British were setting up another colony in the United States. This colony was so successful that today every tenth American belongs to the same colony. The movement for independence from Britain was originally born from this colony. The story of this colony is actually the story of the United States, which you and I call the USA today.

What was the story of this colony?

How did the slave of Jamestown come to work for this new colony?

How were crops grown in the sand?

It was Thanksgiving Day or the scary Halloween