- List of Jamestown colonists - Wikipedia
On 4 May [O S 14 May] 1607, 105 to 108 English men and boys (surviving the voyage from England) established the Jamestown Settlement for the Virginia Company of London, on a slender peninsula on the bank of the James River It became the first long-term English settlement in North America [1][2]
- Pilgrim Ship Lists By Date - Packrat Pro
I DO NOT have any secret or additional information Everything I have is listed here These pages represent literally years of work, endless coffee and fingers worn to the bone This data base has been compiled simply in hopes of easing tedious research for other people
- Early ships and passengers to America - Genealogy Village
Prison ships and the old Mill prison, Plymouth England, 1777, p 184, 305, 395
- The Jamestown Records of the Virginia Company of London: A Conservator . . .
The ultimate success of the Jamestown colony led to the establishment of the colony of Virginia, the largest and arguably the most important colony in British North America, and for that reason the records are a critical primary source for early American history
- Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical . . .
“On May 13, 1607, Virginia’s first colonists came ashore on what became known as Jamestown Island The next day, they commenced establishing an outpost they called James Cittie or Jamestown, the first permanent English settlement in the United States
- Early Settlers of Colonial Virginia - Genealogy - WeRelate
The first settlement in what became known as the Virginia Colony was Jamestown, which was founded in 1607 It was set up to be the center of the Virginia Colony's government and commerce
- Jamestown (Fleet), sailed Dec 1606 - WikiTree
She had 71 passengers when she sailed from England with the Jamestown Fleet (for a list of those aboard, see this section of WikiTree's Jamestown, Virginia Colony space page)
- THE PLYMOUTH COLONY PATENT: setting the stage
The Pilgrims sailed, landed outside of the jurisdiction of Jamestown and the Virginia Company of London (being north of northern New Jersey) They landed instead in the territory newly under the jurisdiction of the Council for New England
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