Page

Finding the Founding Newport's Cross

PublicCategorized as Public.

Not yet tagged

 

It was one of the first big lies the English settlers told the native Powhatan people. The cross planted on a small island on the afternoon of May 24, 1607, near the falls of the James by Captain Christopher Newport entered legend almost as soon as the one-armed commodore shoved it into the ground.

Newport told the wary Powhatan that it symbolized the forging of a bond between his people and theirs. Never mind that the wood planks bore the crude legend “Jacobus Rex, 1607” for King James. Newport represented the leading edge of British expansion. The English on that afternoon were, as they perceived the situation, one step ahead of the cruel and hated papist Spanish.*

The night before, the “adventurers” were accorded hospitality through rituals of tobacco smoking, feasting and dance. The English expeditionary force, just a week after beginning construction of James Fort (Jamestown), met with the original residents in a hilltop village called Powhatan, perhaps on the site of today’s Tree Hill Farm, just across the Richmond limits in eastern Henrico. The site may have also been the birthplace of the region’s paramount chieftain, Powhatan. The place was administrated by Parahunt, one of Powhatan’s many sons.

During evening entertainment illuminated by flickering fires, the English prodded their hosts about what was upriver and the distance to the mountains. Parahunt wasn’t keen to answer and he avoided the subject. The river coursed through the territory of the often-hostile Monacan tribe, into a mountainous country called Quirank. Beyond it was what the English sought to interpret as a large body of water—the Indian Ocean. On May 24, 1607, after lunch provided by their hosts, Parahunt and a guide, Nauiraus, led Newport and company to the falls.

 

 3christophercross.jpg
Christopher Newport Cross at Gamble's Hill Park. The park, for decades a favorite place for downtown strolls, would be swapped out and the cross moved twice during the twentieth century. Courtesy of the Cook Collection, Valentine Richmond History Center.


 

The group’s historian, Gabriel Archer, recalled the river as “full of huge rocks.” He saw a large island about a mile away and alongside the river “high hills which increase in height one above another as far as we saw.” The dramatic site overlooking rocks and rapids was near the north end of the present Mayo’s or Fourteenth Street Bridge and occupied by the Southern Railway freight building. This is where First Market Bank headquarters and Morton’s Steakhouse are situated, near the Canal Walk’s turning basin.

The Powhatan tried dissuading the English from further travel. In A Relation of Discovery, attributed to Archer, the writer describes “sitting upon the bank by the overfall, beholding the same” while their native guide, Nauiraus, with Parahunt at his side, began describing “the tedious travel” to be faced if the explorers continued. The village of the Monacan, enemies of Parahunt, was a day and a half away. It seemed best not to rile the Monacan with strange white faces whom the Powhatan’s enemies would assume were sent by Parahunt. Besides, journeying to Quirank would exhaust them and they’d have trouble securing food for such a long journey.

4powhatanrock.jpg
The Powhatan Rock is at the abandoned eighteenth-century seat of the Mayo family located on bluffs just outside Richmond, in Henrico County's Varina District. Five generations of Mayos lived there from 1726 to 1865. Mayo tradition became Richmond folklore that credited the stone as marking Chief Powhatan's burial site. It rests now upon the brow of Chimborazo Hill. This image was made in 1906, the year before the stone's guest appearance at the Jamestown Exposition that commemorated the three hundredth anniversary of Virginia's settlement. Courtesy of the Cook Collection, Valentine Richmond History Center.



The English were eager to push on. Newport, acting diplomat, heeded Parahunt’s advice. But he wanted to indicate the company’s westernmost advance. Newport placed the simple wood cross with the king’s name above and his below. Parahunt well enough understood the symbolism, and angered, he left. Newport explained to those who remained, through Nauiraus, that the cross meant union, not domination.

The party then gave a shout of celebration while the Powhatan looked on. After this ceremony, the English found Parahunt, calmed him and the duped native prince gave them a kind farewell. As the explorers pulled away in their boat, both native and newcomer gave parting cries of friendship.

On June 10, 1907, the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities dedicated a copper cross upon a pyramid of James River granite on Gamble’s Hill at the base of Fourth Street. At that time, it seemed to overlook the general place where Newport had placed his cross.

Judge David C. Richardson, a future Richmond mayor, on the warm, drizzly afternoon said, “From the time when Jacob erected a pillar at Bethel down to the present day, it has been the custom of nations and peoples to mark the spots at which important events have occurred by some enduring memorial.”

The Gamble’s Hill site became a tourist attraction and favorite promenading spot, for the view of the rapids, the industrial might of Tredegar Iron Works and the whimsical turreted and crenellated Pratt’s Castle, made of rolled sheet iron, scored and painted to resemble the stones upon which it sat.

In 1983, after a land swap with Ethyl Corporation, the memorial was removed to Shockoe behind the Martin Agency nearer the probable site. The peripatetic pile and cross were moved once again in 2003 to the bottom of Twelfth Street along the canal walk, even closer to the actual location.

Originally published 2003–07.

*And, in fact, all this happened somewhat later than is noted in most accounts because of the then-ten-day difference between the “Old Style” (Julian) calendar used in England until 1752, and the “New Style” (Gregorian) calendar used ever since. Not to make waves, this book uses the standard dates. Just thought you’d like to know.



© The History Press

Powered by Near-TimeTerms of Services | Privacy Policy | Security Policy |