Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Lost Colony of Roanoke
Episode Date: May 29, 2023In 1585, Sir Walter Raleigh established an English colony on an island in what is today the state of North Carolina. After a slow start, over 100 people moved to the island to start a new life and est...ablish this English outpost at the edge of the new world. When a ship returned to the colony in 1590, what they found shocked them and began a mystery that remains unsolved to this day. Learn more about the Lost Colony of Roanoke and the puzzle that still challenges historians on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp is an online platform that provides therapy and counseling services to individuals in need of mental health support. The platform offers a range of communication methods, including chat, phone, and video sessions with licensed and accredited therapists who specialize in different areas, such as depression, anxiety, relationships, and more. Get 10% off your first month at BetterHelp.com/Everywhere ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. Visit ButcherBox.com/Daily to get 10% off and free chicken thighs for a year. InsideTracker provides a personal health analysis and data-driven wellness guide to help you add years to your life—and life to your years. Choose a plan that best fits your needs to get your comprehensive biomarker analysis, customized Action Plan, and customer-exclusive healthspan resources. For a limited time, Everything Everywhere Daily listeners can get 20% off InsideTracker’s new Ultimate Plan. Visit InsideTracker.com/eed. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1585, Sir Walter Raleigh established an English colony on an island in what is today the state of North Carolina.
After a slow start, over 100 people moved to the island to start a new life and established this English outpost at the edge of the new world.
But when a ship returned to the island in 1590, what they found shocked them and began a mystery that remains unsolved to this day.
Learn more about the lost colony of Roanoke and the puzzle that still challenges historians on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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podcasts. Episodes are every Monday and Thursday. The first colonies established by Europeans in
North America were the 16th century equivalent of lunar bases. A bunch of people were sent to
live in a place they didn't know or understand, where they were often unprepared for the weather,
and surrounded by native people who didn't particularly want them there.
Just like with space travel, there were several failures before there was success.
Many people are aware of the first permanent English settlement in North America in Jamestown, Virginia, established in 1607.
Jamestown may have been the first success, but it was hardly the first attempt.
The English claims to North America were first made by Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1578.
He was given a very vague charter by Queen Elizabeth I to,
explore and colonize any, quote,
unclaimed Christian kingdoms.
He claimed everything north of Spanish, Florida, for England.
However, he died sailing back to England in 1583.
Gilbert's charter was then split between his brother, Adrian Gilbert,
and his half-brother, the English explorer and sailor Sir Walter Raleigh.
Adrian was given Newfoundland and everything to the north,
which at the time was considered the Plum Territory
because it would have contained the sought-after Northwest Passage.
Walter was given everything to the south.
No one living there, of course, was consulted on any of this.
The charter expressly stated that for Raleigh to keep his claim,
he had to establish a colony by 1591.
In 1585, Raleigh sent an expedition of seven ships carrying 600 men
to establish his colony to meet the terms of the charter.
The first colony was not intended to be a collection of families moving to start a new life.
Rather, it was a military operation with the intent of creating a base
that could be used to harass Spanish shipping.
The expedition encountered problems from the outset.
Ships were separated, supplies never arrived,
and the colony was established had only a fraction of its size.
A resupply ship sent in June was diverted to Newfoundland,
unbeknownst to the men of the colony.
And this made them heavily reliant on the native people who live nearby.
The English spent most of their time trying to find gold and silver,
yet came up empty-handed.
This meant that they had to rely almost exclusively
on the generosity of the Sukotan people.
People. Given how much they depended on locals for their survival, the English managed to
antagonize the native population, making life very difficult for them. In 1586, just a year after
the colony was established, it was abandoned, and the remaining men left for England with Sir Francis Drake,
who had stopped by after a campaign of harassing Spanish ships in the Caribbean. Undaunted by the
failure of the first colony, Raleigh attempted to form a second colony. This attempt wasn't going to be a
military base, this was intended to be an actual settlement with families that could grow into a
prosperous community. There were 115 people who were selected to found this new colony. Most of the
settlers were middle-class people from London, including women and children. The reason why most of them
were willing to undergo this journey is that they held out the hope of becoming the new core of a
landed gentry class in the Americas. The leader of the new community was John White, who was an artist
and cartographer who was part of the previously abandoned colony. The original plan was not necessarily
to settle on Roanoke Island again, like the first colony, but rather in Chesapeake Bay.
However, when they arrived on the island, the colonists disembarked, and the expedition's
navigator wouldn't let them back on the ships. So, Roanoke Island it was.
The first order of business was repairing the structures created by the first colonial attempt
over two years earlier. There were 15 men who had stayed behind from the first colony, and it was
found that hostile tribes had killed all 15 of them. Again, like the first colonial attempt, the
colonists bungled their relations with nearby native people. They tried to get retribution for the
15 men who were killed, but ended up attacking a group that was actually friendly to them and innocent of
the attack. As with the previous group, the settlers had a difficult winter and didn't have enough
supplies. Moreover, no one knew they were there as they were supposed to be near Chesapeake Bay,
so no passing ships would bother to stop. The only good thing that the settlers could point to was
the birth of Virginia Dare, White's first granddaughter, the first English person born
in the new world. In late 1587, the community agreed that John White should sail back to England
to plead for more supplies to be sent. So White left the Roanoke Colony on August 27, 1587. When he arrived
back in England in November, he found a country preparing for an invasion by Spain. The Spanish
Armada was being assembled, and preparation took priority over everything else, including small outposts
on the edge of the world. With every ship in England pressed into service, there was to be no immediate
return to resupply the colony. White was desperate to get supplies back to Roanoke, so he managed
to get permission for two ships not suitable for military combat to sail back in April of 1888.
However, pirates off the coast of Morocco attack the ships, where 12 crew members were killed,
and all of the supplies intended for Roanoke were looted. The anticipated battle with the Spanish
Armada took place in August 1588, but the prohibition of ships leaving England continued beyond it.
It wasn't until 1590, three years after he returned to England for supplies, that John White was able to sail back to Roanoke.
He finally arrived back at the colony on August 18, 1590.
When he came ashore, however, what he found was disturbing.
There was no one there.
Everyone was missing.
There were no bodies.
There were no signs of a struggle or a fight.
They had built a wooden palisade around the settlement.
Houses had been carefully dismantled and taken.
away. Everything which could be moved had been taken, and all of the boats that the colony had
were gone. There were only two clues that were discovered. The first was a tree with the letters
CRO carved into it. The next was carved into one of the wooden posts of the palisade. It said
Croatouin. White assumed that Croatowan meant that the settlers had moved to the nearby
island of Croatowen, which is today known as Hatteras Island. White's plan was simple. Set sail in
immediately for Croatouin Island to find the settlers. However, just as luck was against him on
the resupply missions, luck intervened here as well. The ship's anchor cable broke, which endangered
the mission. The ship originally intended to sail to the Caribbean for repairs and then sail back in
the spring of 1591 to resume the search. However, that plan got scrapped when a storm blew the ship
off course. They wound up just returning to England in November of 1590, having never stopped
at Croatowen to find the missing settlers. When White returned to England,
he submitted his report to Walter Raleigh that he believed that the settlers had moved to
Croatouan Island. Raleigh had every incentive to claim that White's report was fact because so long
as everyone thought that the colony still existed somewhere, his royal charter was still valid.
However, by his actions, he seems to have presumed that they were actually dead. In 1595, Raleigh went
on his first expedition to the Americas and never bothered to actually search for the settlers.
He was really searching for the legendary city of El Dorado.
In 1602, he sponsored another expedition, but again, the real purpose was to harvest Sassafras,
whose price had skyrocketed.
The expedition never searched for the settlers anywhere near the island of Croatowan.
In 1603, Raleigh was implicated in a plot to remove King James, which ended his royal charter.
There was one final expedition in 1603 to find the missing colonists, led by Bartholomew Gilbert.
However, he was killed by natives somewhere around Croatowan Island, and the expedition was called off,
and returned to England. In 1607, a new settlement, Jamestown, was established to the north of
of Roanoke Island. One of the leaders of the settlement, John Smith, was captured by the Powhatan
people, and he was then allowed to speak to their leader, Wahan Seneca. Wahan Seneca spoke of a place
where people wore European clothing and lived in houses with walls. Smith intended to launch an
expedition to look for the community, but it never happened. By 1609, 22 years after the last
confirmed contact with the Roanoke colony, rumors had started to spread back in England that
the colony had been massacred back in 1587. But there is no known source for those rumors.
After the 1622 massacre in Jamestown, the narrative surrounding the Roanoke colony was that
it had been massacred. It supported whatever retaliation against local tribes that the English
sought after the Jamestown massacre. As time passed, no evidence of the Roanoke colony ever surfaced.
Nothing indicated that they had survived, nothing indicated that they had been killed.
Whatever happened to the 115 people of the Rono Colony was simply a mystery.
But where there's a mystery, you will find people trying to solve it.
One of the first people to try and solve the riddle was John Lawson.
In 1672, Hatterasks and Croyotowan islands fused together to form Hatteras Island.
Lawson visited Hatteras Island in the early 18th century and met with the Hatteras people who live there.
He found that the Hatteras had influences of English culture, more than what was found in any other
known tribe. Moreover, their elders spoke of ancestors that were white, and some members of the tribe
had gray eyes, which was unknown amongst native people in the region. Lawson theorized that
the Rhone colonists had moved to Croyotowan Island and had assimilated into the Hatteras people.
Lawson also searched the original settlement site on Roneock Island and found some artifacts that
were still there. Nothing else really happened until the late 19th century when archaeological digs
began on the island. After more than a century of searching, there has yet to be anything found
which can conclusively point to the 1587 colony as opposed to the 1585 colony, or potentially
later arrivals, or items which could have been traded with native people. That has left many
professional and amateur historians to theorize what might have happened. One theory is that
everyone moved to another location where they were killed. One version is that they went to
Croatowan Island and another holds that they went to Chesapeake Bay. Either way, they went
somewhere and were killed in a place that no one has ever found. The second theory is one
advanced by Lawson. Desperate to survive, the community simply joined up with a local tribe,
which they eventually assimilated with. Given that it was decades before any serious attempt was
made to find them, by that point, a new generation with mixed ancestry wouldn't have had any desire
to have been found.
The current Hatteras tribe claims ancestry from both the original habitants of Croatowan Island
and from the Roanoke settlers.
Another theory holds that they may have attempted a return trip to England and were lost at sea.
Yet another theory holds that the colonists were the victims of political intrigue,
purposely abandoned by Sir Francis Walsingham, principal advisor and spymaster to Queen Elizabeth.
According to this theory, Walsingham wanted to discredit Walter Raleigh.
He also may have thought the colonists to have been religious separatists who were creating a
colony that was a threat to the realm.
Fiction writers have also joined in providing theories that vampires, demons, and ghosts
were responsible for the missing colony.
The truth is, no one knows what happened to the lost Roanoke colony.
Based on the initial evidence found by John White, it would seem that these settlers had
packed up and moved somewhere else, most probably Croatuan Island.
Where they went and what happened to them afterwards is anyone's guess.
Unless something is found that can be definitively linked to the 15th,
87 colonists. It is unlikely that the fate of the lost Roanoke colony will ever be resolved.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Sharuthi Antipnal over on Apple Podcasts in India. She writes,
A captivating podcast with a global perspective, eager for more topics from India.
Hello, Gary. I am absolutely thrilled to share my enthusiasm for the incredible podcast I recently stumbled upon.
Let me start by saying that it has undoubtedly become my go-to source of inspiration, knowledge, and entertainment.
The podcast host is incredibly talented, and his commitment to delivering engaging content shines through every episode.
However, as a listener who hails from India, I must admit that I'm eagerly looking forward to hearing more about topics from my own country.
India is a treasure trove of rich history, diverse traditions, and countless stories waiting to be explored.
It's vibrant culture, art, spirituality, and innovation to be a perfect fit for the podcast's broad spectrum of subjects.
Introducing more episodes centered around India would not only be a great addition, but also a fantastic
opportunity to celebrate its uniqueness. In conclusion, I kindly request the podcast creators to consider
exploring more topics from India. The vast tapestry of Indian history, culture, spirituality, and
contemporary issues would undoubtedly captivate and educate the listeners even further. I'm confident
that the addition of these topics would only enhance the podcast's already outstanding repertoire.
Keep up the incredible work, and thank you for continuously delivering such phenomenal content.
Happy listening.
Thanks, Sharuthi, and I must say that you are 100% correct.
I think I should do more episodes about India.
And the same is true for many regions around the world.
The good news is that I do have several India-themed episodes on my list for future shows.
And that includes the rise of the Indus Valley civilization, the Ganges River, the partition
of India in Pakistan, and how India became independent, among several others.
However, I am limited to what I know and what I read.
If you or anyone else have suggestions for topics that you think might make for good episodes,
please send them to me. I can add them to the list and begin doing your research.
Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostagram, you two can have it read on the show.
