Lost Colony of Roanoke

971 Words2 Pages

For centuries, the Lost Colony of Roanoke Island has been a controversial issue. Many theories exist that explain the disappearance of the colony. Some theories suggest that the colonists left the island to live with friendly neighboring Indians. Others suggest that a hurricane wiped out the colony or that a savage Indian tribe massacred them. The possibility of disease destroying them is also a debated topic. However, evidence indicates that the men and women left behind on Roanoke Island did not die because of massacre, disease, or starvation but went to live with the Croatoan Indians.

In 1587 a group of men, women, and children led by Sir John White set sail for America and landed on a North Carolina island called Roanoke (Shirley 36). However, the colonists arrived in North America at the wrong time of the year. Planting season was too far gone to attempt planting, growing, and reaping food, and the need for food was widespread in the colony (Worth 25). In the months subsequent to the colonists landing, circumstances required that John White would return to England to obtain more food and other much needed supplies. The colonists remained to fend for themselves, and that was the last John White saw of the colonists.

Three points in particular boldly stress the orderly departure of the colonists to live with the Indians. First, the colonists had a close relationship with the Croatoan Indians. This relationship resulted from John White’s acquaintance with a scout named Manteo. One prominent historian says that Manteo and his tribe, the Croatoan tribe, were the only Indians who remained friendly towards the colonists, and as directed by one of their leaders, “the English baptized ‘our savage Manteo’ and declared him lord of R...

... middle of paper ...

...P. “New Findings at the Lost Colony.” National Park July/Aug. 1993:38. Print.

Norman, Charles. Discovery of America. New York: Crowell, 1968.Print.

Payne, Patrick. “Roanoke: Genealogies, Family Trees and Family History Records.” Payne’s Rootsweb Ancestry. N.p., 2002. Web. 15 Oct. 2011.

Quinn, David Beers. Set Fair for Roanoke. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1985. Print.

Shirley, David. North Carolina. Tarrytown: Benchmark, 2001. Print.

Stick, David. Roanoke Island: The Beginnings of English America. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1983. Print.

N.A. “What Happened to the Lost Colony of Roanoke?” N.p., n.d. Web. 5 Oct. 2011

Worth, Richard. Life in the Thirteen Colonies: North Carolina. Canada: Scholastic, 2004. Print.

Yolen, Jane and Elisabet Yolen Stemple. Roanoke: The Lost Colony. New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2003. Print.

Open Document