- Wolstenholme Towne
Wolstenholme Towne was a fortified settlement in the
Virginia Colony begun with a population of about 40 settlers of theVirginia Company of London which was located about 7 miles downstream from Jamestown. Named for SirJohn Wolstenholme , one of the investors, it was established about1618 on a plantation namedMartin's Hundred . Housing in Wolstenholme Towne consisted of rough cabins of wattle and daub woven on wooden posts thrust into the clay subsoil.On
March 22 ,1622 , the Native AmericanPowhatan s rose to kill as many English settlers as could be surprised in their homes and fields. From thefall line of the James River toHampton Roads , they burned and looted settlements, killing an estimated 400 colonists.Martin's Hundred, the plantation hardest hit, lost more than 50, perhaps as many as 70. Wolstenholme Towne's death toll was not separated in the death rolls. About 30 miles upriver on the south bank of the James, Sir
Thomas Dale 's new "citie" (sic) ofHenricus was also wiped out in what has come to be called theIndian Massacre of 1622 .In the 20th century, separate groups of
archaeologist s uncovered the sites of both Wolstenholme Towne and Henricus. The former is located on the grounds ofCarter's Grove plantation in the Grove Community of southeastern James City County. The findings were chronicled by author and historianIvor Noel Hume .In December 2007, Carter's Grove was acquired from the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation by CNET founder Halsey Minor for $15.3 million. Per the press release the new owner "plans to use the mansion as a private residence and use the site as a center for a thoroughbred horse-breeding program."
Wolstenholme Towne is now considered one of the many lost towns of Virginia.
ee also
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Lost counties, cities and towns of Virginia
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