Now the delightful (and also dastardly) secrets of the birth of America
They were shipped in to America’s colonies... but who were these feisty women? Giles Milton visits Jamestown as the Sky TV series returns
The archaeologists had no reason to suspect foul play when they first unearthed the human skull. It looked much like all the others extracted from the clay soil at Jamestown in the US state of Virginia. But when they examined it more closely, they noticed something deeply disturbing.
Knife cuts had been deliberately scored on the front of the skull and the rear had been smashed open with a heavy object. It was clear that Jane – for that’s the name the archaeologists gave to this unknown English adolescent – had been butchered and eaten by her fellow settlers.
It’s a story that doesn’t make it into Universal Pictures’ epic series Jamestown.
The Sky Atlantic drama starring Irish actress Niamh Walsh returns for its second series on Friday. It follows the adventures of the first settlers in the New World. Among them is a feisty band of women who arrived in Virginia in 1619.
But it tells only half the story. Archaeologists working at Jamestown have pieced together the dramatic true story of the first settlers in America – a tale of starvation, murder and cannibalism.
Jamestown is one of the world’s most exhilarating archaeological sites, and one of few open to visitors. You can also visit the adjacent reconstructed settlement, complete with ‘interpreters’ acting out the roles of those first settlers.
I start my visit by meeting Bill Kelso, the Indiana Jones of American archaeology. He has put this forgotten corner of Virginia firmly on the tourist circuit.
He not only found the lost city of Jamestown – America’s Machu Picchu – but has spent the past quarter-century excavating it. ‘I was boating on the James River when I noticed a strange dark band in the riverbank,’ he says. ‘I suddenly realised it might contain the remains of the first colony.’
Kelso explains that Jamestown was for years the holy grail of American archaeology. The fortified town was long believed to have been washed away by the James River. But when he dug a trial trench, he found himself unearthing muskets, pots and bones of the very first settlers.
He has since become something of a celebfor rity. When Queen Elizabeth came in 2007 – the 400th anniversary of Jamestown’s founding – it was Kelso who showed her around.
‘I was worried she’d ask everything back,’ he jokes. ‘If so, I was going to tell her, “Finders, keepers.” ’ The Jamestown TV series depicts the colony as it first begins to flourish, with the arrival of the first women and a dynamic new governor, Sir George Yeardley. ‘We think we’ve located his skeleton,’ says Kelso.
But it is Jane’s fractured skull that caused the biggest stir. ‘We know the first settlers ran out of food,’ says Kelso, ‘and it was a period known as the starving time, when the settlers ate rats and mice.’
The discovery of Jane showed they also ate each other. ‘We never really believed the stories of cannibalism until we found her skull,’ says Kelso.
At the archaeological site you can witness the terrible birth pangs of colonial America, the recently identified skeletons, along with the finest of the two million artefacts unearthed by Kelso and his team.
At the settlement there is a worldclass museum, three reconstructed galleons and dozens of actorinterpreters in period costume to help you make sense of the place.
There is also a great deal more to see in the Historic Triangle of
coastal Virginia. Nearby Williamsburg is little changed from the early 1700s. It is a near-perfectly preserved Georgian town that’s now a living museum.
Actor-inhabitants play out the lives of the colonials who once lived here, all dressed in period costume. Just a few miles along the Colonial Parkway is Yorktown, a miniature Regency town complete with clapperboard houses, a battlefield and an excellent American Revolution Museum.
Yorktown was the setting for a momentous battle. It was here that Charles Cornwallis’s army was trounced by the Americans, paving the way for independence. The battlefield is immense and best visited on rented bikes. As you cycle a trail that winds through forests,
CALLING THE SHOTS:
Actors in costume putting on an artillery display swamps and meadows, a series of historic panels guide you through the unfolding drama.
This is Virginia at its most bucolic: a stunning slice of pristine wilderness. This trio of places lie just a three-hour drive from Washington yet attracts few tourists. It’s hard to fathom why.
It’s not for a lack of amenities: the region has a string of superb restaurants. My favourite was the Williamsburg Winery. The food scores particularly highly, especially the clams, oysters and crabs from Chesapeake Bay.
Universal Pictures’ depiction of Jamestown shows a colonial town with a crowd of dastardly men and headstrong women. It’s tempting to wonder what they would make of modern-day Virginia. One thing is sure. They’d have loved the fastfood outlets and the array of locally brewed beers. And they would certainly have preferred dining à la carte at the Williamsburg Winery than munching their way through poor old Jane.
The new series of Jamestown is on Friday on Sky Atlantic at 9pm. Giles Milton’s latest book, Churchill’s Ministry Of Ungentlemanly Warfare, is now available in paperback. Jamestown Series 1 is available on DVD from €13.99.