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Why The Ship Wreck That Saved Jamestown

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The Shipwreck That Saved Jamestown: a Reflection Famine, disease, odor, anger are all experienced while on a voyage to the new world in the seventeenth century. In Lorri Glover and Daniel Blake Smith’s The Shipwreck That Saved Jamestown, the authors’ chronicle the struggles and adventures of the Virginia Company in England. When reading this novel, the main points that stood out most to me was that colonization of America presented a lucrative enterprise and companies will go to great extremes to access the available wealth. The authors of The Shipwreck That Saved Jamestown changed my view on early American colonization in regards to the interactions between natives and Europeans, the abuse of religion, and the harsh conditions settlers endured. One …show more content…

In chapter seven of the novel, the author mentions when trade did not go smoothly, the Europeans killed, and tortured the natives in ways “including cutting of two Indians heads and other extremities” (151). When Francis West unsuccessfully attempted to retrieve corn and other food for a starving Jamestown, he reverted to a barbaric nature and lost control. Before reading this book I never realized how terribly the Native Americans were treated. I knew instances such as the one mentioned above occurred every once in a while but not as regularly as the book makes it out to be. Another instance of a trading expedition gone wrong is seen in chapter four when “they sent a trading party to the nearby village at Nansemond. Martin and Percy never heard from their men again, … they were sacrificed, and that their brains were cut and scraped out of their heads with mussel shells” (97). This instance

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