'Sir Samuel Argall' (baptized
4 December 1580 –
c. 24 January 1626) was an
English adventurer and naval officer.
A sea captain, in 1609, Argall was the first to determine a shorter northern route from England across the
Atlantic Ocean to the
Virginia Colony based at
Jamestown, and made numerous voyages to the
New World. As a sea warrior, he is best-known for actions against the
Powhatan Confederacy, successfully kidnapping the Chief's daughter,
Pocahontas, and in actions against the French efforts at colonization in
New England and
North Africa.
Knighted by King
James I, Argall was less successful in his term as Deputy Governor of Virginia, where he was considered autocratic and unpopular. Like many mariners before and later, he was unsuccessful in his mission of locating a
Northwest Passage to
India. The latter, after his death, proved to be non-existent.
Childhood
Samuel Argall was the son of
Richard Argall, a military man of
East Sutton and his wife Mary, daughter of Sir
Reginald Scott of Scott’s Hall,
Kent, England.
Shorter route to Virginia
In 1609, Argall, a English ship captain employed by the
Virginia Company of London, was the first to develop a shorter, more northerly route for sailing from England across the
Atlantic Ocean to the
Virginia Colony and its primary port and seat of government at
Jamestown. Rather than following the normal practice of going south to the tropics and west with the trade winds, Captain Argall sailed west from the
Azores Islands to
Bermuda and then almost due west to the mouth of the
Chesapeake Bay. His voyage took only nine weeks and six days including two weeks becalmed. This new route enabled the English to avoid enemy Spanish ships and to save on provisions.
Upon his arrival at Jamestown, Captain Argall found the colonist in dire straits. He resupplied the colonists with all the food he could spare, and returned to England at the end of the summer. The help came to the colony at one of the most critical moments in its history, as it began the
Starving Time, during which less than 20% survived. However, without the provisions Argall had left, the colony may have been totally wiped out.
Under Lord Delaware
He arriving back at the Colony in the summer of 1610, when Royal Governor
Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr started a period of aggressive and hostile action of the English against the
Native Americans in Virginia. Lord Delaware, as West later became known, became so ill that in the spring of 1611 he sailed home to England, and Sir
Thomas Dale took his place as Deputy Governor in charge of the Virginia Colony. When he returned to England, Lord Delaware wrote a book, ''The Relation of the Right Honourable the Lord De-La-Warre, of the Colonie, Planted in Virginia'', and remained nominally the Royal Governor until his death in 1618.
Serving under Dale, in March 1613, Captain Argall, who was looking for food for the settlement, sailed up the
Potomac River. There, he traded with the
Patawomecks, a Native American tribe. They lived at the village of Passapatanzy in present-day
Stafford County on the
Potomac River near
Fredericksburg.
When two English colonists began trading with the Patawomecks, they discovered the presence of
Pocahontas, the daughter of
Wahunsunacock, Chief of the
Powhatan Confederacy. According to a book by
Captain John Smith, she had been living there for several years. As soon as he heard this, Argall resolved to get kidnap Pocahontas. Sending for the local chief,
Japazaws, Argall told him he must bring her on board his ship.
With the help of Japazaws, they tricked Pocahontas into captivity. Their purpose, as they explained in a letter, was to ransom her for some English prisoners held by Chief Powhatan, along with various weapons and tools that the Powhatans had stolen.
[1] Powhatan returned the prisoners, but failed to satisfy the colonists with the amount of weapons and tools he returned, and a long standoff ensued. During the year-long wait, Pocahontas was kept at
Henricus, in modern-day
Chesterfield County. While in captivity, the young Indian princess converted to
Christianity, eventually marrying
John Rolfe in 1614. While holding Pocahontas as a hostage had not worked to bring peace with the Powhatans, her marriage did, and era of peace lasted about 3 years.
After the capture of Pocahontas, later in 1613, under orders from London, Argall eradicated a French
Jesuit colony on
Mount Desert Island in
Maine. After the first of two trips to accomplish this, he carried 14 prisoners back to Jamestown.
In the Virginia Colony, as one of the leaders, Argall was viewed as an autocrat who was especially insensitive to the poorer of the colonists. After he served what was considered an unsatisfactory term as deputy governor of Virginia beginning in 1617, Lord Delaware was en route from England to investigate complaints about Argall when he died at sea in 1618. Argall was replaced as Deputy Governor by Sir
George Yeardley in 1619.
Fighting the French, New England, Knighthood
In 1620 he was captain of a merchant vessel which took part in an expedition against
Algiers, which at the time was a French Colony in
North Africa. On his return, he was made a member of the Council of
New England. Later he was named admiral for New England.
On 26 June 1622, he was knighted by King
James I. In 1625, he was the admiral of a fleet of 28 vessels which took many prizes off the coast of
France and in October commanded the
flagship in an unsuccessful attack on
Cadiz.
Argall was never married. He died at sea on or about 24 January 1626.
Source
★
Dictionary of Canadian Biography
''The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants'', Gary Boyd Roberts, 2004, Genealogical Publishing Company
External link
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''