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Jamestown Settlers Trading With The Indians

Jamestown Settlers Trading With The Indians.jpg Boatbuilding At Jamestown Over 300 Years AgoMiniaturesMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Boatbuilding At Jamestown Over 300 Years AgoMiniaturesMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Boatbuilding At Jamestown Over 300 Years AgoMiniaturesMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Boatbuilding At Jamestown Over 300 Years AgoMiniaturesMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625Boatbuilding At Jamestown Over 300 Years AgoMiniaturesMaking Lime From Oyster Shells, About 1625

Shortly after the Jamestown colony was planted the English adventurers explored the rivers and bays in the vicinity of the settlement, visited many Indian villages, and traded colorful articles to the natives in exchange for foods, furs, and other commodities.

The first exploring party left Jamestown a week after the establishment of the colony. Twenty-four of the settlers sailed up the James River as far as the falls, a distance of about ninety miles. At Arahatteak (near present-day Richmond) the explorers gave the Indians "penny knyves, sheeres, belles, beades, glass toyes &c ..." for mulberries, wheat, beans, tobacco, and a "crowne which was of deares hayre, dyed redd." Before leaving the village Captain Newport presented the Indian chief with a hatchet and a red waistcoat.