John Graye Proctor, Ancient Planter

Is your surname Proctor?

Research the Proctor family

John Graye Proctor, Ancient Planter's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

John Proctor

Also Known As: "Graye"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, Middlesex, England
Death: before July 03, 1627
Pace's Paines, Surry County, Virginia Colony
Place of Burial: Jamestown, James City County, Virginia Colony
Immediate Family:

Son of John Nicholas Proctor and Alice Proctor, "twin"
Husband of Allis Proctor
Father of George Proctor; Robert Proctor; George Proctor, of "Bacon's Rebellion"; John Proctor; William Proctor and 2 others
Brother of Thomas Proctor; Anthony Proctor; Ambrose Proctor, I and Joshua Proctor, I

Occupation: Ancient Planter
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About John Graye Proctor, Ancient Planter

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Proctor-968

Additional Curator's Notes

It is extremely important when working with the Proctor immigrants to Virginia and Massachusetts to trace the line back to England as well as forward to the Colonies. ALL of the immigrants to Virginia were brothers. The Proctors who went to Massachusetts were cousins of some degree to the Virginia family. If you have a Proctor emigre who did not descend from John Nicholas Proctor, look for his destination in Massachusetts. Maria Edmonds-Zediker, Volunteer Curator, 8/18/2011


John Proctor, Ancient Planter, arrived on the "Deliverance" in May 1610. John sailed from Plymouth in 1609 on the "Sea Venture", but was shipwrecked on Bermuda. John paid for his own passage, and established Proctor's Plantation below Falls on the south side of Falling Creek in 1620. After the Easter Massacre of 1622, he resided at or near Pace's Paines, Surry County.

http://www.delbridge.net/seaventure

Massacre of 1622.

John Proctor and his wife Alice had settled in the farthest western stretches of the colony. The area was known as Henrico, again, named after the son of James I, Henry. They had their plantation just up river from the town of Henricus, the second settlement of the English, where Proctor’s Creek met the James River. Today this area is in Chesterfield. Proctor was away in England in 1622 gathering more settlers to join them in Virginia. One was granted 50 acres by the King for each settler that was brought to Virginia.

Across the James from Jamestown, in Surry, lived Richard Pace. He had developed an area called Pace’s Paines. The word paine meant field in 17th century English. Paces Paines was 600 acres on the bluff across the James River from Jamestown. Prior to the famous Indian Massacre on March 22, 1622, Chanco, an Indian boy who had been treated like a son with much respect by Richard Pace, informed the latter of the planned massacre. Pace urgently secured Pace’s Paines then rowed across the river with his wife, son George, and Chanco, to warn the governor at Jamestown. At the fort of Jamestown, the Indians struck from two sides. But with stepped up defenses, none were killed there. In all, 347 settlers of the 1200 at the time were murdered. All of the colonists would likely have been murdered by Chief Opechancanough had Chanco, whose own brother took part in the massacre, not informed Richard Pace. Opechancanough took over the empire of his late brother, Chief Powhatan, who died in 1618. Jamestown would likely have ended up similar to Raliegh’s colony at Roanoke.

After hearing the warning, Alice Proctor, living at the plantation in Henrico without her husband, who had journeyed back to England, did not want to vacate the plantation. She told the authorities she would not leave. Only after the authorities threatened to burn down the house did Alice finally leave to join others in Jamestown. The house did burn during the Massacre.

It is interesting to note that upon John Proctor’s return from England, he was granted 200 acres in Surry in the area known as Pace’s Paines. On February 16th , 1623, a census was ordered, which was known as, "The Living and the Dead". This is how it was known that 347 settlers did not survive the massacre. Also from this census, it is known that, at that time, there were 33 colonists residing on the south side of the river from Jamestown, in Surry. Two of these are noted as Mr. John Proctor and his wife Mrs. Proctor. The Proctors remained in Surry for several generations thereafter.

Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
about John Proctor

Name: John Proctor

Year: 1607

Place: Virginia

Source Publication Code: 9833.25

Primary Immigrant: Proctor, John

Annotation: Date and place of mention in the New World. Extracted from a series of articles published in The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography titled "Virginia Gleanings in England." Records of wills and other biographical information provided. Source Bibliography: WITHINGTON, LOTHROP. Virginia Gleanings in England: Abstracts of 17th and 18th-Century English Wills and Administrations Relating to Virginia and Virginians: A Consolidation of Articles from The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. Baltimore: Clearfield Co., 1998. 745p. Page: 72

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

An Ancient Planter paid for his own passage, that of his wife and children and servants. Joshua Proctor, John Proctor, and Anthony Proctor apparently paid their own passage. However, Thomas Proctor, Ambrose Proctor all served indentures for their passage and head rights were granted for the passage of their families.

Adventurers of Purse and Person Virginia 1607-1624/25

He arrived on the Seaventure 1609

Servants:

Richard Grove age 30 on the George 1623

Edward Smith age 20 on the George 1621

William Nayle age 15 on the Ann 1623

Phettiplace Close on the Starr 1608

Daniell Wattkins on the Charles 1621

In the Massacre there were 347 persons killed out of a total population of 1,240 in Virginia. This is known because a census of the inhabitants, "The Living and the Dead", was taken afterwards on February 16th, 1623. There were thirthy-three persons shown in the censusof 1623 living on the Surry side of the river at that time. They were as follows: "....John Proctor, Mrs. Proctor,...."

Another general "Muster of the Inhabitants of Virginia" was taken January and February 1624-25 (O.S.) and the data shown therein is very interesting for not only were the names of the persons given but also their ages and the ships on which they came. The muster for the "Surry Side" was taken February 4, 1624-25 as follows: ....

Paces Paines, James City

John Proctor, came in Sea Venture, 1607 (1610)

Allis, his wife, in the George, 1621

Servants:

Richard Grove age 30 in the George 1623

Edward Smith age 20 in the George 1621

William Nayle age 15 in the Ann 1623

Phettiplace Clause on the Star 1608

Daniell Wattkins on the Charles 1621

John Skinner, in the Marmaduke, 1621

Colonial Surry by John B. Boddie pps.30-31

John Proctor, an "Ancient Planter" who died in Surry, 1628, also came on the Sea Venture with Sir Thomas Gates. His first plantaion was in Henrico but he afterwards settled in Surry. During the Massacre he was in England, but his wife valiantly defended their house located on proctor's Creek.

"Mrs. Alice Proctor, a proper gentlewoman, defended her place with great bravery in 1622 and refused to abandon her house and would not leave till officers threatened to burn it down." Tyler's Narratives That John Proctor was in England at the time of the Massacre is shown by the records of the Virginia Company, for on the 17th of July 1622, while present as a stockholder at a court held on that day, was appointed on a committee to devise the best ways and means for aiding the Colonists in their distress. At a meeting held April 30, 1623, he stated he lived "near 14 years in Virginia." In May 1625 he was granted 200 acres on S. Side of James River in Surry. This grant was eveidently located at Pace's Paines where he was living at the time of the Muster previously shown. Va. Co. Rec., Vol. II, pp. 94, 385, 440, 457, 466.

He was a brother of Thomas Proctor, "Citizen & Haberdasher of London", Mrs. Alice Proctor administered on his estate in Surry July 1627. Minutes of Council and General Court, p. 150 Colonial Surry by John B. Boddie p.51

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Sea Venture

The Third Supply was the "Sea Venture" (also called the Seaventure or Sea Adventure) sailed as part of a flotilla of nine ships commanded by Admiral Sir George Somers. Intended destination was Jamestown, Virginia. The On 2 June 1609, "Sea Venture", flagship of the "Third Supply" and eight other ships departed London. On 23/25 July, A hurricane at sea separated the Sea Venture from the other vessels. After four days, she began taking on water. Land was sited and she wrecked between two reefs off the shores at Discovery Bay of Bermuda on 28 July 1609. All of approximately 150 passengers safely made land. Two pinnances were built during the following nine months, the "Deliverance" and the "Patience" from the timber of the ruined Seaventure. These vessels sailed on to Virginia 10 May 1610, leaving two men behind.

Some reports say the two ship had given up and were headed home when they came across more ships under Thomas West, Lord de la Warr, on his way to the colonies, and were persuaded to return on their voyage to Jamestown.

Some reports say 150 landed and 142 left, leaving behind 8 people, some say three men were left on the islands to hold the claim in Bermuda. Fourteen days later, the two ships reach Virginia where only 60 of the other 140 settlers survived.

Also reported May 23, 1610 for the date of arrival of 140 survivors per Coldham pg 3.

19 June 1610 Sir George Somers volunteered to return to Bermuda aboard the "Patience" for supplies for the struggling colony of Virginia.

George Somers returned to in Bermuda, dying there in November of 1610. Captain Matthew Somers returned to England aboard the "Patience" with his uncle's body.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The loss of the Sea Venture On June 2, 1609, the Sea Venture set sail from Plymouth as the flagship of a seven-ship fleet (towing two additional pinnaces) destined for Jamestown, Virginia as part of the Third Supply, carrying 500 to 600 people.[3] On July 24, the fleet ran into a strong storm, likely a hurricane, and the ships were separated. The Sea Venture fought the storm for three days. Comparably-sized ships had survived such weather, but the Sea Venture had a critical flaw in her newness: her timbers had not set. The caulking was forced from between them, and the ship began to leak rapidly. All hands were applied to bailing, but water continued to rise in the hold. The ship's guns were reportedly jettisoned (though two were salvaged from the wreck in 1612) to raise her buoyancy, but this only delayed the inevitable. The Admiral of the Company, Sir George Somers himself, was at the helm through the storm. When he spied land on the morning of July 25, the water in the hold had risen to nine feet, and crew and passengers had been driven past the point of exhaustion. Somers deliberately drove the ship onto the reefs of what proved to be Bermuda in order to prevent its foundering. This allowed all 150 people aboard, and one dog, to be landed safely ashore.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Venture


Virginia Census, 1607-1890 about John Proctor

Name: John Proctor

State: VA

County: Over The River

Township: Virginia Pioneer

Year: 1624

Database: VA Early Census Index


John Proctor, Ancient Planter, arrived on the "Deliverance" in May 1610. John sailed from Plymouth in 1609 on the "Sea Venture", but was shipwrecked on Bermuda. John paid for his own passage, and established Proctor's Plantation below Falls on the south side of Falling Creek in 1620. After the Easter Massacre of 1622, he resided at or near Pace's Paines, Surry County.

Drawn from a twelve-page manuscript, Proctor Family Genealogical Notes at the Library of Virginia at Richmond compiled by Benjamin C. Proctor in 1983, and based on research material collected by the late Dr. Russell B. Proctor. Call # 31905, Genealogical notes collection; # 31905.


By July 3, 1627, John proctor was dead, at which time his widow, Alice, presented the justices of the General Court with an inventory of his estate and was designated his administrator.

Among the debts Alice was authorized to collect on her husband's behalf were sumsowed by a Dutch carpenter and a man who had lost Proctor's small boat ((SR 3112; SH 4; VCR 2:835, 457; 3:611; 4:425-246, 466-467, 552; CBE:40, 59; CJS 2:303; MCGC 12-13, 22-24, 54, 62, 78 150; DOR 1:38)

Source:

McCartney, Martha W. Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 2007; Smith, John. Writings. New York: Library of America, 2007; Dabney, Virginius. Virginia: the New Dominion. New York: Doubleday, 1971.

Source: http://www.houseofproctor.org/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I256...


John Proctor, of Proctor's Creek. In the Seaventure. Wife Mrs. Alice Proctor, allowed administration of her husband's estate, July 3, 1627, JCGC, p. 150.

Source: "Cavaliers and pioneers; abstracts of Virginia land patents and grants, 1623-1800" by NELL MARION NUGENT



The Sea Venture Copyright 2007 J. Andy Delbridge

In 1608, a year after the English set foot on a tiny island called Jamestown, a supply mission of the young settlement was being planned. This mission, to leave 1609, was to be the third mission, and the largest to date. Jamestown could not survive without these missions, especially during the winter months when food supplies were extremely limited. These missions were instrumental in the founding of Virginia, and therefore, of the English in North America. This episode of history is also of the experiences of the progenitor of a family line, one of the author’s, in this New World. A newly built ship, the Sea Venture, was to make her maiden voyage. Using the science of the day, the ship was designed specifically for the supplying efforts of Jamestown--to transport much-needed supplies and people to the little island on the James River. She was to be the flagship of this very large mission, which utilized a fleet of nine ships. To better understand this mission, a general background of Jamestown prior to this third mission is necessary in order to benefit the reader. It is imperative to understand, not only what was going on in Jamestown just prior to the mission, but to understand how fragile survival of this latest English attempt was at getting a foot-hold in this new land. Many colonization attempts were made prior to Jamestown. All failed to produce a permanent settlement prior to this time. However, with each attempt, knowledge was gained.

The history of England and the New World goes back to before Jamestown in 1607. The familiar story of the unsuccessful attempt of Sir Walter Raleigh of 1587, more commonly known as “The Lost Colony”, was not the first either. The first to cross the Atlantic on behalf of the English was John Cabot in 1497, only five years after Columbus crossed the Atlantic. Cabot’s primary goal was to establish trading routes to the northwest. England was not prepared at that time for colonization. Her commerce was still in her infancy compared to other countries like Portugal, Italy, and Spain. Francis Drake was the first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe, ending his three-year trek in 1580. Thomas Cavendish was the second, completing it in 1586.

In addition to finding more efficient trading routes in a world that was getting smaller, striking out for adventure, starting a new life, was attractive to others as well. There was an unwritten caste system that was in place in the old land of England, the law of primogeniture, which allocated all inheritance to the eldest son. For the younger sons in this Old World, knowing a new land across the Atlantic encompassed unlimited cheap land that could be a genesis of a new life, the prospect of going to this place was attractive. Sir Walter Raleigh first attempted to colonize Virginia in 1585, but that settlement would last less than one year. Sir Francis Drake, after plundering such sites as St. Augustine and Cartagena, enraging the Spanish, moving up the coastline, met with the Raleigh’s men at Roanoke Island. The colonists, discovering that it was more difficult than previously believed to colonize the New World, determined their best course of action would be to ride back to England with Drake. They arrived back at Plymouth, July 28, 1586. This colonization attempt, though losing four men, was not wasted. From the new land, the settlers brought back to England potatoes and tobacco. The potato was then planted in Raleigh’s land in Ireland. The potato and tobacco became very popular. The second attempt of Raleigh, May of 1587, is the attempt that became famous due to the supposed mystery of the settlers’ disappearance. Many know the story of how Governor White left Roanoke Island for England to gather supplies. This was ten days after his daughter gave birth to the very first English person born in the new land, Virginia Dare. Surely it was difficult to abandon his daughter and granddaughter but the fate of the colony rested on new supplies. What White had not counted on was war between England and Spain. The Spanish Armada delayed his return voyage to Roanoke by three years. Upon his return, he found the place deserted with no clue aside from the word “Croatoan” carved on the side of a tree. Therefore, this attempt is known today as “The Lost Colony”.

Each of these attempts of colonization brought knowledge. By the time The Virginia Company of London was initiated, many Englishmen knew basically what to expect and why the past attempts failed. With the war with Spain out of the way, at least for the time being, a more focused effort could go into another attempt of colonization.

The Virginia Company of London was chartered by James I in 1606. No time was lost in preparing for the first expedition. The first voyage of the Virginia Company began on December 19, 1606. Christopher Newport was the captain in charge of commanding the three-vessel fleet. The ships were; the Susan (Sarah) Constant (100 tons)-- Captain Newport at the helm; The Godspeed (40 tons)—with Captain Bartholomew Gosnald; and the Discovery (20 tons) headed by Captain John Radcliffe. On board were 120 men and boys. They were bound for Virginia, the colony that earlier was named in honor of Queen Elizabeth I, the Virgin Queen.

They reached Virginia after four months at sea, on April 26, 1607. On this date they made first landfall in Virginia, at Cape Henry, and erected a Christian cross. The two capes, one on each end of the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, were named after the sons of King James I, Henry and Charles. The orders of the Virginia Company were sent in a secured box, to be opened only after twenty-four hours after arrival in Virginia. These orders included a list of the settlers who would be in the new Council. The names listed were Christopher Newport, Bartholomew Gosnald, Edward Maria Wingfield, John Smith, John Ratcliffe, John Martin, and George Kendall. These members of the Council would elect the first President. The man they elected president was Wingfield. After much debate as to the location they would choose for their settlement, they anchored next to an island that jutted out into the newly named James River on May 14.

They named the island on which they chose as their new home Jamestown, in honor of King James I. The natives were not shocked at the arrival of these white men. The Chiefdom of Powhatan spread down through what is now North Carolina. They knew about the previous attempts and of the Spaniards, further south in Florida. They were, however, were puzzled at many things these colonists did. Why did these people occupy such an invaluable area? The white men settled upon an island with no fresh water springs, full of mosquitoes, and densely forested with trees and high grasses which would help conceal any approaching enemy. The natives would never choose such a location. They brought no women, therefore, according to the native beliefs, must be poor. However the colonists, being sent over by the Virginia Company, were quite optimistic. They knew they would be getting supplies from England on a regular basis. It is important to note that, at that time, they were not sure what happened to the settlers on the previous attempt to settle the New World, on Roanoke Island, some twenty years before. In fact, one of the missions of the Jamestown Colony, towards the end of the next year, would be to send a search party to Roanoke Island to try and locate those Raleigh-sponsored initial pioneers. Later, Chief Powhatan confessed to Smith and the other English that he ordered their massacre based on what his priest told him.

Within a week of landing at Jamestown Newport and twenty others headed up river to the falls of the James River to search for gold. They could go no further than where present-day Richmond is located at the falls of the river. There they erected a Christian cross and claimed the area for England. Meanwhile at Jamestown, with Newport exploring upriver, the natives attacked the yet unfinished fort at Jamestown, demonstrating to the colonists that the natives do not approve of what is taking place.

June 21 (22nd according to Smith), Newport left for England, leaving 104 colonists behind (100 men and four boys). By this time John Smith had proven his use in relations with the natives. He was perhaps the best at trading with the natives for the provisions the colonists needed.

By September 10th of 1607, only 46 of the original 104 settlers were alive. In the interim, Gosnald had died. Kendall had been detected planning to desert the colony and was shot. On September 10th, the remaining Council members, Ratcliffe, Smith and Martin, decided to depose Wingfield as president. They elected John Ratcliffe as the second president in Virginia.

In December of that same year Smith, while exploring the Chickahominy region, was taken prisoner by the natives. Everyone knows that he escaped death by Pocahontas’s actions. Being Chief Powhatan’s favorite daughter, even at twelve years old, she had tremendous say. Smith was not out of the woods yet however. His two companions on that exploration were killed. The colonists at Jamestown, upon Smith’s return, January 2, 1608, believed he was responsible for the deaths of their comrades. By this time Ratcliffe had admitted Gabriel Archer (who despised Smith) into the Council. They chose to execute Smith by hanging as a result. Smith was to die the next day. As luck would have it, Newport arrived that next day with the first of the supply missions sent from England, January 9, 1608. Seventy more colonists arrived on board the John and Francis. Christopher Newport, finding only 35 of the original 104 colonists he left behind, spared Smith from his sentence.1 Five days after Newport’s arrival, a fire destroyed nearly all of Jamestown. During this hard winter, many died from exposure and famine as a result.

On September 10, 1608, after being president for exactly one year, Ratcliffe was disposed. John Smith was elected third president of Virginia.

The second supply mission under Newport arrived on September 29th, 1608. Another seventy colonists arrived. This brought the total of colonists at Jamestown to 120, accounting for those that perished. Two females arrived on this second supply mission and, a year later, the first white colonist was born in Jamestown, Virginia Laydon.

In December 1608, Newport left for England again. This time taking Ratcliffe, the deposed ex-president. Newport also took a map and journals of Captain Smith that detail his explorations of the Chesapeake Bay.

In early 1609, the three council members under Smith; Scrivener, Waldo and Wynne, died from accidents. Smith made no attempt to replace these Council members, making him a supreme ruler, answerable to no one currently in this new land. Scrivener and Waldo both drowned in an accident going to Hogs Island on the James. Matthew Scrivener was, at that time, January 1609, the first secretary for the Colony of Jamestown.

During the winter of 1608/09, Smith successfully traded with the Indians for corn that lasted the winter. During the next spring, much work was undertaken, such as building a well for fresh water. Up to that time fresh water was only received from the river. Smith began building a fort south of the river, known as Smith’s Fort, in Surry County.

It was then learned that the old charter had been repealed. It was replaced with one doing away with the Council government and instead making Thomas West, Lord De La Warr, governor. He would be arriving shortly. However, until then, Thomas Gates would fill the role as soon as he arrived in Jamestown. This made Gates the first Virginia Governor.

The third supply mission to Jamestown, consisting of 500-600 people on board nine ships, set sail down the River Thames on June 2, 1609. After a rendezvous with other ships, five days later at Plymouth, Devon, the long trek across the ocean began. The ships were: The Sea Venture, Blessing, Diamond, Unitie, Falcon, Lion, Swallow, Virginia, and Catch. The Sea Venture, the largest of the ships, had 150 people on board, including Sir Thomas Gates, the newly appointed interim Governor. He was to replace John Smith to oversee the Va. Colony until Lord De La Warr, Thomas West, could come at a later date to be the active Governor of the Virginia Colony. It seems as though not much thought went into who sailed in which ship. Because, also on the Sea Venture were the next two most powerful people to come to Jamestown, Admiral George Somers, and Vice Admiral Christopher Newport. John Rolfe and his expecting wife were also on the Sea Venture. This was one of Newport’s five trips (his fourth) he would make between the Old World and the New. George Somers, also onboard the Sea Venture, was admiral of the fleet of nine ships sponsored by the Virginia Company of London. .
Admiral Sir George Somer (1554-1610) was born near Lyme Regis in Dorsetshire, England of modest circumstances. At an early age he took to the sea, and as a captain of the vessel Flibcote, he captured Spanish prizes, bringing them back to Dartmouth. He was to become a large landowner by the time he reached his early thirties.

Somers was a former ship mate of Sir Walter Raleigh, who sponsored two previous tries at an English Colony at Roanoke Island, Virginia (now present-day North Carolina).

By early 1609, cautious optimism was increasing throughout the stock holders of the Virginia Company of London. In that same year, Somers received instructions to command the third expedition to Virginia. He then promptly mortgaged his property and outfitted the Sea Venture.2 It is believed that the Sea Venture, a rather large 300 ton displacement ship, was built by the Virginia Company in 1608, designed specifically for the transporting of settlers to the new world. This was her maiden voyage.

The typical route to the New World was to go south, skirting the western shores of Europe until “the butter melted” 3, which was the common direction for sailing to the Canary Islands. From those islands, with the favorable trade winds, the western direction would take them to the New World. Then, on July 25, 1609, off the Azores, the fleet encountered a “hurycano”, also known then as a fierce tempest.

William Strachey, on board the Sea Venture, wrote: "The cloudes gathering thicke upon us, and the windes singing, and whistling most unusually,... a dreadful storme and hideous began to blow from out the North-east, which swelling, and roaring as it were by fits, some houres with more violence then others, at length did beate all light from heaven; which like an hell of darkenesse turned blacke upon us, so much the more fuller of horror…."4

William Strachey (1572-1621) would later be appointed (1610), by Governor Lord De La Warr, to replace Matthew Scrivener, who drowned in January 1609, as secretary to the colony.5

For twenty-four hours the waves reached the clouds. By the time the sea calmed, seven feet of water lay inside the Sea Venture. Seams in the hull had opened due to the stress on the hull.

Two ships were separated from the other seven ships, the Sea Venture and the Catch. Upon arriving at Jamestown, the people on the successful seven ships mourned the loss of their comrades on board the two lost ships, who were feared lost at sea.

The Sea Venture was badly damaged. With water rushing in the hull, the crew of the large ship began tossing cargo overboard to lighten the ship’s load.

For three days and four nights, all men were needed to pump and bail water out of the sinking ship. Using candles, a group of men found many leaks and plugged them up between the ribs of the ship. One rather large leaked eluded them. Tearing up walls of the rooms, searching and listening, they could not pinpoint where a specific leak was coming from. Unable to plug that, the men were divided into groups. Each would bail and pump for one hour, earning one hour’s rest.

With everyone moving slowly due to exhaustion, finally Somers, who hadn’t eaten or slept at all since the ordeal began, with eyes trained onto the horizon, spotted land. They have come upon the dreaded “Isle of the Devils”, Bermuda.

Somers luckily, or by strategy, rested the Sea Venture upright, being hung between two reefs, on 28 July 1609. As Strachey put it,

“…having no hope to save her by coming to an anker in the same, we were inforced to runne her ashoare, as neere the land as we could, which brought us within three quarters of a mile of shoare, and by the mercy of God unto us, making out our boats, we had ere night brought all our men, women and children, about the number of one hundred and fifty, safe into the Island.”  6

Bermuda was officially first settled at this point, and has been continuously inhabited since the shipwreck of the Sea Venture.

Bermuda got its name earlier by the Spaniards. It was more commonly called the Islands of the Devil. It was bad luck to step foot onto her land, which is a good reason the Spaniards, who had already settled Florida and many other places in Mexico, would not go near her shores. The place was believed inhabited with evil spirits and demons. Somers, after outfitting the ship’s longboat with decking from the Sea Venture to help make it sea worthy, sent eight men onward to Jamestown to inform them of the predicament. These eight men were never seen or heard from again.

The other separated ship of the third supply mission, the Catch, was indeed lost and never heard from again. Meanwhile the seven ships that weathered the hurricane intact and made it to Jamestown that summer (1609) added 300 people to the colony. The new settlers were hungry after their terrifying voyage. Nearly all supplies were lost, including much food that was spoiled due to the heat at damage of the storm. Most supplies were on board the Sea Venture, due to her being the largest of the vessels. Arriving on this third supply mission were Captains Gabriel Archer, John Ratcliffe, and John Martin who despised Smith. They were happy to relieve Smith of command. 7

They wanted him gone. Most of the existing colonists agreed with the new captains. Many thought that Smith was too power hungry. He was making deals with the natives, and perhaps trying to marry Pocahontas to dominate the New World. He was wearing buckskins now and many thought he was losing his mind. 8

By late summer 1609, Chief Powhatan was angry with Capt. John Smith, due to numerous broken promises. Smith had told him, on their first meeting, that they were taking refuge from the Spanish ships and would be leaving soon. Now they had houses and a church. Every so often a new ship came with more people...and that summer a fleet of seven ships brought 300 more people to James Fort. Smith had not traded with weapons either, nullifying Powhatan’s plan to gain power over the surrounding nations. Smith had promised that they would stay on the island only. However, people upriver were starting farms inside his nation. Powhatan could tolerate the English if they gave him copper and weapons, but that wasn’t the case. 9

The Fall of Captain John Smith

With the colonists and the natives against him, Smith’s power had to come to an end. The final incident that did Smith in was an injury he suffered from his powder bag. It is assumed someone put a fuse to the bag of powder Smith wore on his belt. The powder exploded. It blew off muscle and flesh in a ten-inch square hole. On October 1st, 1609, Smith left Jamestown for England so that his wounds could be treated.

This injury was very important in that it sent Smith home. His respect as the overall leader may have vanished, but he could still negotiate very well. It was soon evident that his talents as an “ambassador to the natives” was missed. Pocahontas visited James Fort to inquire about Smith. She was told that Smith had died and that she was not welcome at the fort anymore. Not long after, Ratcliffe, who had arrived that summer, and a force of 30 colonials, accepted Powhatan’s invitation of trade and feast. They went to meet with the natives up the York (Pamunkey) River. Neither Ratcliffe nor his men were ever seen again.

The store of corn that was gathered by Smith in September was gone by winter. Smith was no longer there to use his talents for trade and keep good relations with the Indians. The colonials were now imprisoned within their fort. If anyone left the protection of the palisades, many arrows flew towards them. Ninety percent of them died during the winter (1609-1610). This time frame on Jamestown became known as “The Starving Time”. Of the over 500 colonials who were at Jamestown when Smith left in October 1609, only sixty were present in May of 1610.

Down in Bermuda, the 150 occupants of the former Sea Venture fared better. Wild pigs, whose ancestors were perhaps the cargo of a Spanish shipwreck that, too, was beached, roamed the area near where the Sea Venture beached. This pork as well as other food found on the island, made for nice meals of the crew and passengers stranded there. Using Bermuda cedar and wood salvaged from the remains of the Sea Venture, the castaways built two boats over the course of nine months, the Deliverance and the Patience.

A few of the 150 passengers did not survive their stay in Bermuda. Two of them being the wife and newly born child of John Rolfe. Finally, Admiral George Somers and all of the passengers and crew, except two, departed the paradise of Bermuda to complete their mission to Jamestown on May 10, 1610. The two Englishmen left on the islands remained to claim the islands of Bermuda for the crown. The two ships sailed to Jamestown on May 10, 1610, arriving in Jamestown May 24th.

Two members of the party were left behind in Bermuda. One, Christopher Carter, was to become the first permanent resident of the new settlement. He lived on the island until his death. For a time the islands were called the Somers Islands, named after the admiral who brought the sinking ship near her shores.

It can only be imagined what the surviving colonists in Jamestown thought when they saw these two vessels approach. At first sight, it could be assumed these were Spaniards. However, once realizing who they were, the mixed feelings of shock and joy had to surface. These men were thought dead and drowned nearly a year before. Now, here they are approaching Jamestown.

What the crew and passengers of the two newly constructed ships, the Deliverance and the Patience, saw upon arrival to Jamestown shocked them all. The Starving Time had taken its toll during the previous winter, killing 90% of the occupants of Jamestown. The James Fort was in shambles. All the wood inside of the fort was burned the previous winter by the colonials in hopes to stay warm. The colonists were prisoners in their own stockade. They feared venturing outside the walls of the fort. The natives were shooting arrows at all who they saw outside the fort to gather firewood or other chore.

On June 7, 1610, after Interim Governor Gates decided to vacate the miserable island and return to England, they set sail down the James River.

Thomas West, Baron De La Warr (Governor Delaware) at that same time, was sailing up the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, approaching Jamestown, having left England April 1, 1610 as the fourth supply mission to Jamestown. The two parties met on June 9 off of Mulberry Island (near present-day Fort Eustis in Newport News). Replacing the interim Governor Gates, Governor Delaware ordered Gates to return back to Jamestown. This new supply mission included new settlers, food, a doctor, and much needed additional supplies. They immediately began to reinforce the fort and other structures. The timely arrival of Lord De La Warr’s fleet impacted the future, not only by saving the colony by its timely arrival, but, by sending Rolfe back to Jamestown. Rolfe began to experiment on tobacco. Eventually he grew a type that would eventually allow the colony to create its own economy, and begin a trading industry. Because of this the Virginia Colony was finally a profitable venture.

Sir George Somers, to help prepare for the upcoming winter, volunteered to return to Bermuda. He set sail aboard the Patience on June 19, 1610 for supplies for the struggling colony of Virginia. Due to several days of bad weather, Somers ended up off the coast of Cape Cod. He eventually made it back to Bermuda. There he saw his two friends that were left there about a month earlier.

While at Bermuda, sick and frail, Somers, sensing his impending death, told his nephew, Captain Mathew Somers, to go back to Virginia after he died to inform the men of Jamestown. He would die there on November 19, 1610, leaving no direct descendants. Captain Matthew Somers, not honoring his uncle’s request, instead returned to England aboard the Patience to claim his inheritance. He had with him his uncle's body. Three men were left on the islands to hold the claim. Legend has it that Somers’s heart was buried at the church they had constructed during the castaway period of 1609-10, St George's church, in Bermuda. After his nephew delivered the rest of Somers’s body to England, he was buried.

By the time Somers’s body made it to England, Newport, Gates, and a shipload of colonists had arrived back in England as well. They had departed for England on May 10, 1610. Gates carried with him a long letter written by Strachey which described the “tempest” at sea, their ordeals and other experiences of the colonists. This manuscript, which the Virginia Company of London did not desire published at this time for fear of reduced funding, caught the attention of an insider of the literary world by the name of William Shakespeare. The famous play entitled “The Tempest” derived from the information Strachey had recorded. 10

As a side note, in 1612, at Sir George Somers's previous recommendation, a new venture company, a subsidiary of the Virginia Company, was formed to finance and manage the colonization of this Atlantic island group. Sixty settlers set sail and arrived on the island on July 11th. Today, the official crest of Bermuda features an image of the Sea Venture battling the great tempest to commemorate the circumstances of the island's founding.

John Rolfe became a wealthy settler, eventually owning several plantations. One was near Sir Thomas Dale’s new city of Henricus, called Varina Farms. In 1614 he married Pocahontas, daughter of Chief Powhatan. Thomas Rolfe was born in 1615. Peace between the natives and settlers resulted, partly, due to this amiable relationship. Many are descended from this family, including the Bollings of Virginia. It is unclear whether Rolfe died as a result of the 1622 Massacre. He died soon after this event.

Massacre of 1622.

John Proctor and his wife Alice had settled in the farthest western stretches of the colony. The area was known as Henrico, again, named after the son of James I, Henry. They had their plantation just up river from the town of Henricus, the second settlement of the English, where Proctor’s Creek met the James River. Today this area is in Chesterfield. Proctor was away in England in 1622 gathering more settlers to join them in Virginia. One was granted 50 acres by the Kind for each settler that was brought to Virginia.

Across the James from Jamestown, in Surry, lived a Richard Pace. He had developed an area called Pace’s Paines. The word paine meant meadows in 17th century English. Paces Paines was 600 acres on the bluff across the James River from Jamestown. Prior to the famous Indian Massacre on March 22, 1622, Chanco, an Indian boy who had been treated like a son with much respect by Richard Pace, informed the latter of the planned massacre. Pace urgently secured Pace’s Paines then rowed across the river with his wife, son George, and Chanco, to warn the governor at Jamestown. At the fort of Jamestown, the Indians struck from two sides. But with stepped up defenses, none were killed there. In all, 347 settlers of the 1200 at the time were murdered. All of the colonists would likely have been murdered by Chief Opechancanough had Chanco, whose own brother took part in the massacre, not informed Richard Pace. Opechancanough took over the empire of his late brother, Chief Powhatan. Jamestown would likely have ended up similar to Raleigh’s colony at Roanoke.

After hearing the warning, Alice Proctor, living at the plantation in Henrico without her husband, who had journeyed back to England, did not want to vacate the plantation. She told the authorities she would not leave. Only after the authorities threatened to burn down the house did Alice finally leave to join others in Jamestown. The house did burn during the Massacre.

It is interesting to note that upon John Proctor’s return from England, he was granted 200 acres in Surry in the area known as Pace’s Paines. On February 16th, 1623, a census was ordered, which was known as, “The Living and the Dead”. This is how it was known that 347 settlers did not survive the massacre. Also from this census, it is known that, at that time, there were 33 colonists residing on the south side of the river from Jamestown, in Surry. Two of these are noted as Mr. John Proctor and his wife Mrs. Proctor. The Proctors remained in Surry for several generations thereafter.

Christopher Newport- After making a fifth and last round-trip voyage between England and Virginia, December 1611, Newport resigned as “Admiral of Virginia”. Later, while under the employment of the East India Company, Newport died of fever in Java in 1617, having never visited Jamestown again. Note: Newport News may have gotten its name, not from Christopher Newport, but by a geographic feature that shares a similar look of a point of land extending out in the Alligator River in North Carolina. On a 1770 map of North Carolina, the point is called Nupernuse Point.

William Strachey’s ring was found in 1997 in the ruins of Jamestown. It was identified by the family seal on it.

Chief Powhatan, fathered an estimated 100 offspring, his name was Wahunsunacock but he adopted the name of his tribe as his own title. He then gave that name to all tribes he controlled. 7 His coalition was the largest and most powerful chiefdom along the entire Atlantic seaboard when the English arrived. The tribe had larger enemies. To the North were the Iroquois and Susquehannock. To the West, the Monacan. Below the James River (Powhatan River) was the Nansemond and Meherrin. The Powhatan Nation grew since the late 1500’s (p35). Now it consisted of Potomac River south to the James. It went east to the Eastern Shore and west to the falls. Copper was the gold of the natives. The Monacans had many secret copper mines and were stingy with their materials. If Powhatan could get copper from the English, he then could subjugate the Monacans.

Pocahontas, like all Powhatan people, was given three names. The first, Matoaka, was given at birth. She was given the name Amontute as her spiritual name. Then, her father, father of perhaps over a hundred, Chief Powhatan, gave her the name Pocahontas 6. As we know from history, after her marriage to John Rolfe, she was given the Christian name Rebecca.

Ancient Planters

To be called an “Ancient Planter” described someone of very high status in the colony. This meant that the individual came over before 1616, before “the coming away of (Governor) Sir Thomas Dale” who left Virginia for England, November 1616. They paid their own passage, they owned at least one share of Va. Company stock, they had lived in Va. for at least three years, and they survived the Massacre of 1622. They are the ones who received the first land grants. There are about 149 known Ancient Planters. As Ancient Planters, they were entitled to have 100 acres of free land for each share of stock purchased. It was also enacted by the General Assembly of March 5, 1624 “that all old planters that were here before or came in at the coming of Sir Thomas Gates, they and their posterity shall be exempted from personal service to the wars and any public charge. This meant that their descendants were exempt from service as soldiers and payment of taxes. Living south of the James River, there were only 13 Ancient Planters. Among those was John Proctor. It is noted in Colonial Surry by John Boddie that John Proctor came over on the Sea Venture along with Sir Thomas Gates. Gates was the interim Governor until Lord Delaware arrived. It is also noted that Proctor first settled in Henrico. During the massacre, Proctor was away in England when his wife Alice bravely defended their plantation on Proctor’s Creek. While in England at a meeting he stated he had lived ”near 14 years in Virginia”. In May 1625 he was granted 200 acres on the south side of James River in Surry. This grant was located at Pace’s Paines.

Wreck Site

Excavation began on a wreck site in Gates Bay believed to be the Sea Venture. It was called the Downing wreck, named after the principal researcher/diver, until it could be determined the wreck was actually that of the Sea Venture. It was noticed, in the 1980’s, that she was still lying between two coral about ¾ of a mile out from shore. Bermuda has remained continuously occupied since the great ship went down in 1609.

Primogeniture

As discussed earlier, one motivating factor for men to uproot from the old world was to claim land. For if they were a younger son of their father, or a daughter, they were entitled to nothing in the old system. For most, the advantages of starting anew in a new world were overwhelming. One needed little to no funds to come to the new world. One could pay for their passage or serve in an indenture term upon arriving for a specified time. Once that time was over, a land plot was allocated for the settler. As that individual started and then raised a family, many traditions from the old world were hard to replace. Again, for the second generation sons and daughters, not being the first-born son meant getting little to nothing upon the death of one’s father. Primogeniture remained in effect until Thomas Jefferson ended this practice. (George Washington The Image and the Man 1926 W.E. Woodward. Boni and Liveright New York p.17)

NOTES 1 Virginia Reader Rosenberger p. 67 2 http://www.rootsweb.com/~bmuwgw/seaventure.htm 3 Empires in the Forest: Jamestown and the Beginning of America by Avery Chenoweth and Robert Llewellyn p.21 4 Wright p.4 A Voyage to Virginia in 1609: Strachey’s True repertory edited by Louis B. Wright. The University Press of Virginia. 5 Virginia Reader: A Treasury of Writings From the First Voyages to the Present Edited by Francis Coleman Rosenberger. E.P. Dutton and Company. 1948 p.101 6 Wright p.15 A Voyage to Virginia in 1609: Strachey’s True repertory edited by Louis B. Wright. The University Press of Virginia 7 Captain John Smith: Jamestown and the Birth of the American Dream. Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler. Page 208. John Wiley and Sons, Inc. 2006 8 Empires in the Forest: Jamestown and the Beginning of America by Avery Chenoweth and Robert Llewellyn p.132 9 Empires in the Forest: Jamestown and the Beginning of America by Avery Chenoweth and Robert Llewellyn p.133 10 Virginia Reader: A Treasury of Writings From the First Voyages to the Present; Edited by Francis Coleman Rosenberger. E.P. Dutton and Company. 1948 p.101

Bibliography 1. Andrews, Matthew Page. Virginia: The Old Dominion. The Dietz Press. Richmond, Va. 1949 2. Billings, Warren. Jamestown and the Founding of the Nation. Thomas Publications. Gettysburg, Pa. 3. Billings, Warren. The Old Dominion in the Seventeenth Century: A Documentary History of Virginia, 1606-1689. The University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill, N.C. 1975 4. Boddie, John B. Colonial Surry. Genealogical Publishing Company. Baltimore, Md. 1966 5. Campbell, Charles. History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion of Virginia. J.B. Lippincott and Co. Philadelphia, PA. 1860.

6. Deans, Bob. The River Where America Began: A Journey along the James. Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. Lanham, Md. 2007. 7. Hatch, Charles E., Jr. The First Seventeen Years Virginia 1607-1624. The University Press of Virginia. Charlottesville, Va 1957 8. Hoobler, Thomas and Doroty. Captain John Smith: Jamestown and the Birth of the American Dream. John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Hoboken, N.J. 2006 9. Horn, James. A Land As God Made It: Jamestown and the Birth of America. Basic Books. New York. 2005 10. Kupperman, Karen Ordahl. The Jamestown Project. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA. 2007 11. Mapp, Alf J., Jr. The Virginia Experiment: The Old Dominion’s Role in the Making of America 1607-1781. Universe, Inc. 1957, 2006 12. Price, David A. Love and Hate in Jamestown: John Smith, Pocahontas and the Heart of a New Nation. Faber and Faber. New York. 2003 13. Rosenberger, Francis Coleman. Virginia Reader: A Treasury of Writings. From the First Voyages to the Present. E.P. Dutton and company. New York. 1948 14. Rountree, Helen and Turner, E. Randolph III. Before and After Jamestown: Virginia’s Powhatan’s and Their Predecessors. University Press of Florida. Gainesville, FL. 2002. 15. Rouse, Jr. Parke. The James: Where a Nation Began. Dietz Press, Richmond, Va. 1990. 16. Southern, Ed. Editor. The Jamestown Adventure: Accounts of the Virginia Colony 1605-1614. John F. Blair Publisher. Winston-Salem, N.C. 2004. 17. Stith, William. The History of the First Discovery and Settlement of Virginia: Being an Essay Towards a General History of the Colony. William Park, Publishers. 1865 18. Tyler, Lyon Gardiner. England in America 1580-1652. Greenwood Press, Publishers. New York. 1904. 19. Wallenstein, Peter. Cradle of America: Four Centuries of Virginia History. University Press of Kansas. Lawrence, KS. 2007 20. Woodward, W.E. George Washington: The Image and the Man. Boni and Liveright. New York 1926 p.17 21. Woolley, Benjamin. Savage Kingdom: The True Story of Jamestown, 1607, and the Settlement of America. Harper Collins Publishers. New York. 2007. 22. Wright, Louis B. editor A Voyage to Virginia in 1609. The University Press of Virginia. Charlottesville, Va. 1964

Author’s Genealogical Line from John Proctor of Jamestown down... John Proctor 10gr. grandfather (b.1557 London) John Proctor 9gr grandfather. The Immigrant. Born: Abt 1587, London, England 1 Marriage: Alice before 1610 in London, George Proctor 8g Born: Abt 1621, Pace's Paines, Jamestown, James City County, Virginia Took part in Bacon’s Rebellion. Joshua Proctor Born: 1650, Surry County, Virginia 7gr Robert Proctor Born: Abt 1686, Surry County, Virginia --daughter Sarah b. 1720-1786 Richard Branscome (b.1721), 5gr grandfather d.1775 (married 1744 Sarah Proctor 1720-86 Va.)

______ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/105703713/john-graye-proctor


Birth

John Proctor was born about 1583 to John Proctor and Anne Greye and was baptized in 1586[1] in London, England.
Migration

In 1609, he sailed aboard the Sea Venture[2]headed for the Colony of Virginia. But the ships encountered a violent storm, likely a hurricane. The flagship Sea Venture was separated from the other ships of the fleet and was about to sink when land was sighted. It was Bermuda! The ship was forced to wreck upon the reefs of the island. All aboard were saved, and would be marooned there for nine months.[3] The castaways eventually built two small boats, the Discovery and the Patience, from Bermuda cedar and the rigging of the wrecked ship and escaped to the mainland of Virginia.[4][5]
Plantation at Henrico

John settled at Henrico, far west of Jamestown Island on the south side of the James River. He patented 200 acres on land that abutted north upon the stream that became known as Proctor's Creek.[6]

One of John's neighbors at Henrico was Capt. Robert Smalley, who died in 1621, leaving a will[7] in which he directs settlement of a 1617 debt owed him by John Proctor.

In 1621, John's wife, Alice, arrived, traveling on the George.[8] She would not have long to settle into her new home, when the Indian Massacre of 1622 wreaked havoc and death all around them. Capt. John Smith, in his "Historie," described Alice as a "proper, civil, modest Gentlewoman" who defended her home until the English officers forced her to leave; then the Indians came again and burned the house.[9]
Plantation at Paces Paines

The Proctors relocated a little further down the James River, still on the south side, in what was called Paces Paines (now Surry County). They are found "over the river" in the 1623 census of the "Living and Dead in Virginia."[10][11]

A short time later, a more detailed census was taken, the 1624/25 muster. John and his family are listed as living in Paces Paines, James City:[12]

   JOHN PROCTOR came in the Seaventure 1607 
   ALLIS his wife in the George 1621

SERVANTS
RICHARD GROVE aged 30 yeres in the George 1623

   EDWARD SMITH aged 20 in the George 1621 
   WILLIAM NAYLE aged 15 in the Ann 1623

Provisions:
Corne, 126 bushells; Meale, 2 bushells; Oatmeale, 5 bushells; Fish, 1/2 hundred; Powder, 22 lb; Peeces, 3 and 2 pistolls & 2 petronels; Lead, 45 lb; Armours, 5; Neat Cattell, 7 and 5 Calves; Swine, 9; Houses, 2; Boat, 1.
(Petronel: A portable firearm of the 15th century, resembling a carbine of large caliber.) They were well-armed to defend themselves!
Ancient Planter

John met the qualifications of an ancient planter[13] and was credited with the grant given him in a 1626 report of land grants sent to England.[14]
Business in England

John may have made several trips to England to conduct his business. In 1623, he and three others were given patents for the transport of 100 persons, with provisions and necessities for cultivating their own land. He also agreed to act as an attorney for two London merchants to recover funds owed them in Virginia.[15][16]
Abuse of Servants

On 10 Oct 1624, the Proctors were called before the General Court to answer to charges that they had caused the deaths of two of their servants, Elizabeth Abbott and Elias Hinton. The gruesome details can be found in the Minutes of the court.[17] No mention is made of the findings of the case.
Death

John Proctor died before 3 Jul 1627, at which time his wife, Mrs. Alice Proctor, was allowed administration of her husband's estate.[18][19]

view all 12

John Graye Proctor, Ancient Planter's Timeline

1583
1583
London, Middlesex, England
1615
1615
Jamestown, Virginia, British Colony Americia
1620
1620
Pace's Paines, Jamestown, James City County, Virginia, British Colonial America
1620
Age 37
Jamestown, Virginia
1621
May 1621
Paces Paines, Jamestown, Virginia Colony, Colonial America
1622
1622
Pace's Paines, Jamestown, James City, Virginia, British Colonial America
1622
Jamestown, Virginia
1623
1623
Pace's Paines, Jamestown Colony, Virginia
1627
July 3, 1627
Age 44
Pace's Paines, Surry County, Virginia Colony