Series Editors David J. Voelker and Joel M. Sipress
List of Figures
About the Author
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I. The Big Question
Glossary
II. Timeline
III. Historians' Conversations
Position #1: The Overwhelming Advantages of the English
Position #2: Strategic Mistakes of the Powhatans
IV. Debating the
Question
Introduction
Note on Spelling in Primary Sources
A. Primary Sources
Richard Hakluyt (the Younger), "Discourse on Western Planting" (1584)
Artistic Depiction of a Native Village South of the Chesapeake Bay (1590)
Captain Christopher Newport's Description of Virginia
(1607)
Powhatan's Mantle (c. 1600)
Speech of Powhatan (1608), as Reported by John Smith (1624)
English Accounts of Jamestown's "Starving Time" (1610)
Virginia Company Instructions to Governor Thomas Gates (1609)
Alexander Whitaker, Good News from Virginia (London,
1613)
Edward Waterhouse, A Declaration of the State of the Colonie and Affaires in Virginia (1622)
John Martin, "The Manner How to Bring the Indians into Subjection" (1622)
Virginia's Governor and Council Threaten Revenge against Powhatans (1629)
Treaty between Virginia Colony and
the Powhatan Indians (1646)
Nathaniel Bacon's Declaration in the Name of the People (1676)
Treaty of Middle Plantation (1677)
Robert Beverly's Estimate of Virginia's Native Population (c. 1705)
Linwood "Little Bear" Custalow and Angela L. Daniel "Little Star," "The Colony Saved by
the Powhatan" (2007)
B. Case Study 1: Did Pocahontas Rescue John Smith from Execution?
Accounts of John Smith's December 1607 Captivity (1607 & 1624)
John Smith's Alleged 1616 Letter to Queen Anne regarding Pocahontas (1624)
C. Case Study 2: What was the Strategy behind the 1622
Powhatan Surprise Attack?
J. Frederick Fausz, "Opechancanough: Indian Resistance Leader" (1981)
Frederic W. Gleach, "'The Great Massacre of 1622" (1997)
V. Additional Resources
Index
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
David J. Voelker holds a PhD in US History from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is an Associate Professor of Humanities and History at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, where he teaches early American and environmental history. He serves as coeditor of the Debating
American History series with Joel M. Sipress.
Writing History - William Kelleher Storey and Towser Jones