Everything about Werowocomoco totally explained
Werowocomoco was a village which served as the political center of the
Powhatan Confederacy, a grouping of 30
Native American tribes, speaking an
Algonquian language which was formed in the
coastal plain area they called
Tsenacommacah in what is now the
Commonwealth of Virginia,
USA by the late 16th century.
Werowocomoco was located near the north bank of the
York River in what is now
Gloucester County. Across the York River and the narrow
Virginia Peninsula, many of the first English-Native encounters occurred during the establishment of the
Colony of Virginia and its principal settlement at
Jamestown on the
James River beginning on
June 14,
1607.
Although as little as 12 miles away from each other geographically, the two capitals of Werowocomoco and Jamestown and their inhabitants were quite literally many worlds apart culturally. Great hardships resulted for both groups during the first half of the 17th century. In 1609,
Chief Powhatan moved his eastern capital to a more secure site much further inland, and the incursion of the colonist continued until the Powhatan were largely decimated after 1644.
The specific site of Werowocomoco as been long-lost, and is, in modern times, the subject of continuing disagreement. The area near
Wicomico along
U.S. Route 17, is the site of a historical ruins known as
Powhatan's Chimney, has long been traditionally thought to have been the location of Werowocomoco. However, recent studies of archaeological and historical evidence indicate another site further west on
Purtan Bay may have been the location. Further study and research, which included participation by representatives of some of Virginia's surviving Native American tribes, was ongoing as of 2007.
Powhatan Confederacy
The
Powhatan (also spelled
Powatan and
Powhaten) were a powerful chiefdom headed by
Wahunsunacock (the
Chief Powhatan) formed in the late 16th century. When this chief created a paramount chiefdom by conquering much of the coastal plain of Virginia, he called his lands "
Tsenacommacah" and he himself was referred to as "Powhatan", often assumed to be his given name, but actually a place-name (see article
Powhatan). This was his initial headquarters at the village of Powhatan (in the Powhatan Hill neighborhood in the eastern portion of the present site of
Richmond, Virginia). It was name for the location at the
fall line, where there are rapids (or "rushing water") on the
James River at the
head of navigation.
The name "Werowocomoco" comes from Powhatan
werowans (
weroance) "chief" and
komakah (-comoco) "settlement". Werowocomoco was more centrally-located than his original capital as Wahunsunacock expanded the group's territory to encompass approximately 30 tribes and their traditional areas.
Pocahontas and Captain John Smith
Werowocomoco is best known as the location of the well-known and oft-told story of
English soldier and colonist
John Smith's rescue by
Pocahontas after he was captured by
Opchanacanough, the younger brother of Chief Powhatan while foraging along the
Chickahominy River. The captured Englishman was brought to Werowocomoco and brought before
Tsenacommacah (Chief Powhatan).
According to Smith's account, Pocahontas, Chief Powhatan's daughter, prevented her father from executing Smith. However, if it indeed happened at all, it's also believed that this could have been a ritual intended to adopt Smith into the tribe. (Smith made no mention of the incident for over twenty years in his own writings). The story is unclear after 400 years and various dramatic and romanticized versions in book and film.
Capital relocated from Werowocomoco
Despite the general geographic proximity of the two capitals, it has long been clear that they were literally in different worlds culturally. Werowocomoco was abandoned as a capital by Chief Powhatan in 1609, less than 3 years after the establishment of Jamestown in 1607. Because of the colonists, he first moved it to a more secure location further inland on the
Chickahominy River, and later to another location on the
Pamunkey River.
The conflicts between the Powhatan and the ever-expanding English colony decimated the Native Tribes and by the mid-17th century. Surviving Powhatan assimilated into other Native American groups, or were living in designated areas along the
Pamunkey and
Mattaponi Rivers.
Smith describes location
The site of Werowocomoco was lost during the 17th century. The current site of
West Point (a town established at the confluence of the Pamunkey River and Mattaponi Rivers at the headwaters of the
York River) seems to clearly meet a description in writings of
John Smith, and early leader at Jamestown. From there, a distance downstream to Werowocomoco was provided as described as 25 miles. Smith also indicated that Werowocomoco was only 12 miles from Jamestown.
These two figures are in apparent conflict for both of the two locations now thought to have possibly been Werowocomoco. One is located at
Wicomico, the other on
Purtan Bay.
Timberneck Bay, Wicomico, Powhatan's Chimney
It was long thought that Werowocomoco was located near the area of Timberneck Bay, slightly upstream on the York River from
Gloucester Point. The area, which was long called Werowocomoco by the European settlers and their descendants, was renamed
Wicomico when a post office was established there The U. S. Post Office Department rejected John Edwin Hogg's submission of the area's name, "Wowocomoco", as too long. They named the Post Office "Wicomico" instead.
The area now known as Wicomico is the site of
Powhatan's Chimney, and is about 25 miles east of present-day
West Point, Virginia, based largely upon the mileage figure provided by Smith. According to Smith's writing (sic):
"Fourteene myles from the river Powhatan is the river Pamunkee, which is navaginable 60 or 70 myles, but with Cathes and small Barkes 30 or 40 myles further.At he ordinary flowing of the salt water, it divideth itself into two gallent branches. On the South side inhabited the people Toughtamand (?), who haue about 60 men for warres. On the North branch Mattapoment, who has 30 men. Where the river is divided the Country is called Pamaunkee, and nourisheth neare 300 able men. About 25 myles lower on the North side of this river is Werawocomoco, where their great king inhibited when I was delivered him prisoner; yet there are not past 40 able men."
However, also according to Smith, when
Jamestown was established by the English colonists in 1607, it was 12 miles away from Werowocomoco as the crow flies. Purtan Bay is about 15 miles from Jamestown as the crow flies. Wicomico is considerably further.
Purtan Bay; ongoing archaeological work
A location some distance from Wicomico on
Purtan Bay was first identified in 1977 as the possible location by Daniel Mouer, an archaeologist at
Virginia Commonwealth University. An associate professor at Virginia
Commonwealth University in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Dr. Mouer collected artifacts from the surface of plowed fields and along the beach. He found fragments of Indian ceramic from the Late Woodland/Contact Period and determined that this area was the "possible site of Werowocomoco.
After years of collecting artifacts at ground level, a later landowner authorized additional archaeological exploration. Between March 2002 and April 2003 archaeologists conducted an archaeological survey of a portion of the property. Initial testing included digging 603 test holes, 12 to 16 inches deep and 50 feet apart, where thousands of artifacts, including a blue bead that may have been made in Europe for trading, were found. There, along with historical descriptions, suggest the farm was the site of Werowocomoco. "We believe we've sufficient evidence to confirm that the property is indeed the village of Werowocomoco," said Randolph Turner, director of the Virginia Department of Historic Resources' Portsmouth Regional Office in 2003.
The Purtan Bay site is less than 25 miles from West Point. However, although far less than 25 miles downstream from West Point, it's only 15 miles distant from Jamestown, and is additionally supported by studying the early mapping evidence. A further consideration is that the Powhatan at the time of John Smith's capture called both what we now call the York River and the Pamunkey River by the latter name, shedding some speculation that West Point may have been downriver from where Smith began calculating 25 miles to Werowocomoco.
Two Gloucester-based archaeologists, Thane Harpole and David Brown, were instrumental in the work at the Purtan Bay site since 2002 and are involved in the excavations there. Starting that year, the Werowocomoco Research Group began excavations at the Werowocomoco site. The Research Group is a collaborative effort of the
College of William and Mary, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, and Virginia tribes descended from the Powhatans. The excavations have identified a dispersed village community occupied from A.D. 1200 through the early seventeenth century. Artifacts recovered during the excavations include Native pottery, stone tools, as well as floral and faunal remains from a large residential community. The Research Group has also recovered large numbers of English trade goods produced from glass, copper, and other metals originating from Jamestown. The colonists' accounts of interaction at Werowocomoco emphasize Powhatan's efforts to obtain large numbers of English objects, particularly copper, during the early days of the Jamestown colony.
It is notable that, unlike some earlier projects, at this site, the archaeologists and other researchers have carefully incorporated ongoing consultation with members of the local
Native American tribes, the
Mattaponi and
Pamunkey, who are prominent among the decedents of the Powhatan Confederacy, as such sites which include burial artifacts are sacred to these tribes.
» "When I step on this site folks...I just feel different. The spirituality just touches me and I feel it." Stephen R. Adkins, chief of the
Chickahominy Tribe and a member of the Virginia Indian advisory board
Gloucester County
Even through the controversy over years of beliefs, Gloucester County has been able to embrace the fact that Werowocomoco and a lot of other significant Powhatan heritage are portions of the county's history. It has been noted that both the newly identified site on
Purtan Bay and the site of
Powhatan's Chimney at
Wicomico, also thought to have been the site of Werowocomoco, are both located within an area that the Native Americans may have considered as Werowocomoco. It has been noted in the minutes of the Gloucester County Board of Supervisors that the village of the chief in the
Algonquian language wasn't a place name, but more correctly translated, a reference to the lands where he lived, and the lifestyle included frequent relocations of various quarters within a general area.
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