|
Tobacco saved Jamestown from
becoming a lost colony
by Paul
Levengood
for Virginia Business
Novermber 2006
Commemorating significant historical
events seems to be a part of Virginians’ makeup.
In 2006 and over the next few years, the state will
celebrate a number of significant events. This year,
the Virginia Historical Society marked the 175th anniversary
of its founding, making it the oldest continuously
operating cultural institution in the South. And the
state is already beginning to gear up for 2011, which
will mark 150 years since the outbreak of the Civil
War.
More immediate, in 2007 of course,
the state will host an array of events to mark the
400th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown, the
first permanent English colony in North America. The
Commonwealth of Virginia has appropriated millions
of dollars in the hope of luring tourists from within
and without the state to celebrate what has been dubbed,
in a gentle jab at Plymouth Rock and the Pilgrims, “America’s
400th Anniversary.”
As important as 1607 was in the history of Virginia
and the United States, one wonders if the quadricentennial
of 1614 will garner any recognition a few years from
now. Historians have long been in agreement that Jamestown
might well have gone the way of the ill-fated Roanoke
colony of 1587 had it not been for an event in 1614 that
gave the colony an economic base on which to survive.
In that year, the first commercial shipment of tobacco
left the dock at Jamestown for England. Virginia would
never be the same.
Early after their arrival in
Virginia, colonists had noted that the Powhatan Indians
used tobacco, which they called “uppowoc,” in
their ceremonies. However, the plant, Nicotiana rustica,
had a bitter, unpleasant flavor to the English palate.
Milder Nicotiana tabacum had long been grown in the
Spanish West Indies, and the limited amount that had
reached England had been enthusiastically consumed.
John Rolfe deduced that he might be able to grow the
imported Nicotiana tabacum, and began experimenting
at his farm near present-day Varina in Henrico County.
In 1614 he had raised and cured enough to fill four barrels
for export to England, where it sold quickly and at a
robust price of three shillings per pound.
For his fellow desperate colonists,
Rolfe’s entrepreneurial
gambit hit like a lightning bolt. Having failed to find
the gold and other treasures envisioned by the backers
of the Virginia Company, Virginia was holding on by a
thread. The immense profits to be had by raising tobacco
literally gave the colony a reason to continue. Soon
every available piece of land was planted in tobacco,
even the cemetery of Jamestown itself. By 1617–18
Virginians had produced 50,000 pounds of the leaf for
export. A decade later, that figure would reach 250,000.
In 1669, 15 million pounds of tobacco would be shipped
to Britain.
Tobacco’s effects on Virginia can hardly be understated.
It pushed settlement farther and farther west, eventually
prompting several deadly conflicts with native peoples.
Tobacco’s labor intensive cultivation caused the
colony to look for large, reliable pools of labor: first
English indentured servants, then African slaves. The
great fortunes of early Virginia, visible today in the
great riverside plantation homes, all came from tobacco.
Even the state’s more recent history is inextricably
intertwined with what King James I called a “stinking
weed.” After the Civil War, tobacco processing
became Virginia’s first significant manufacturing
enterprise. Factories to produce snuff, chewing tobacco,
cigars and cigarettes became the largest employers in
cities like Richmond, Danville and Petersburg until well
into the 20th century. Only in the late 20th century
did health concerns and a drop in U.S. tobacco consumption
cause tobacco to give way as the pre-eminent force in
Virginia’s economy. Tellingly, last year the state
produced fewer than 40 million pounds of tobacco, down
almost two thirds from the amount produced in 1990.
Paul Levengood is managing editor of the Virginia Magazine
of History and Biography at the Virginia Historical Society
in Richmond. He also serves as the program coordinator
of the Reynolds Business History Center, which opened
in July as part of the VHS 175th anniversary celebrations.
For more information, go to www.vahistorical.org
|